Sentences with phrase «absorb big hits»

He's grown through his college career and has shown an ability to absorb big hits.

Not exact matches

It is the same tactics Tottenham use against bigger side... They just sit back absorb the pressure and hit them on counter because they have quality attacking players such that Dele, Kane, Erikson Dembele....
The fluid absorbs the impact of light blows, but big hits can send the brain ricocheting off the walls of the skull, damaging cells throughout the brain.
The small bumps are of no hindrance as they are increasingly absorbed, while the bigger hits are controlled by second - stage springing.
The suspension did an excellent job in high - speed situations and even seemed to have a slight edge over the Tacoma in terms of absorbing the bigger bumps and hits.
Chief among them is the lower cost of acquisition, thanks to the big depreciation hit the first owners willingly absorb.
After a series of frustrating phone calls, Rue learned 10 of her funds carried DSCs, and a clean break would cost her $ 6,500 — a far bigger hit than she was willing to absorb.
The molecule will first use the heat energy in expansion and on cooling will again condense and sink because heavier, and it will cool when its heat expanded volume flows to colder air which absorbs the heat, the internal kinetic energy of vibration, which if strong enough will pass that heat to another colder (which is why visible light is not a thermal energy, it is not powerful enough to move a molecule of matter into vibration, it takes the bigger heat wave, longwave infrared, aka thermal infrared called that because it is the wavelength of heat)-- that is how convective heating warms the fluid gas air in a room, by circulation, in the rise and fall of molecules as they expand and condense, not by heat energy propelling molecules to hit other molecules..
But as much as sending the IRS a bigger check hurts like hell, higher earners can economically absorb such a hit better than a lower income earner with much less disposable income.
«The message is pretty clear: Newer and better buildings will continue to absorb, but you're going to be taking a big hit on the older Class B stock,» said Stephen Smith, managing director with Jones Lang LaSalle.
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