Sentences with phrase «higher levels of difficulty mean»

Its high level of difficulty means that this remains a franchise not suited to everyone, but its sheer quality means it's infinitely deserving of being given a chance.

Not exact matches

Despite the difficulties endured during the era of post-Lehman austerity, commercial and private - sector debt levels are low: Nonperforming loans are below 5 % and the banking system, unlike those of Poland or Hungary, did not have to tackle the fallout from high levels of foreign currency loans, because low interest rates and a stable Czech koruna meant these weren't taken up in large quantities.
The logistical difficulties and considerable expense of long term placebo controlled clinical trials of dietary components mean it is unlikely that high level evidence linked to cardiovascular disease outcome will be obtained in the near future.
In other instances, the content stays at the same level of difficulty across two or more grades, as with recognizing multiple - meaning words, rather than moving from lower to higher levels of difficulty as needed.
Routines in 2 at higher difficulty levels are on par with those seen in music videos and the complexity and variety of moves meant we were often caught grinning our heads off when the choreography matched the song to perfection.
Of course, you need to be up to the task, as higher difficulty could mean more failure, frustration and a stagnant XP level.
Logistic regression analyses were conducted to investigate the mediation hypotheses, using an established 3 - step procedure.48 First, we investigated whether there was a significant bivariate association between a high level of maladaptive parenting (operationally defined as ≥ 3 maladaptive parenting behaviors) or abuse during childhood or early adolescence (by a mean age of 14 years) and risk for suicide attempts during late adolescence or early adulthood (reported at a mean age of 22 years) and whether the magnitude of this association was reduced when interpersonal difficulties during middle adolescence (reported at a mean age of 16 years) were controlled statistically.
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