Sentences with phrase «almost outclasses»

Thanks to a recent redesign, Honda's venerable compact car almost outclasses the class.
And the gorgeous day - glo visuals are almost outclassed by the sugar rush of the soundtrack.

Not exact matches

In a time when Manchester United have their weakest team for a decade, Chelsea are «in transition», Citeh are still restricted by the inabilities of Mancini / Platt / Kidd, Liverpool flatter to deceiver - this Arsenal team are incapable of winning any trophy whatsoever.The squad is paper thin as far as real talent is concerned.There are far too many passengers and «dead wood» abounds.Who on earth could do a better job as a manager of a team who are outclassed by Swansea and outplayed by Fulham, cant beat Wolves when almost every other team can!I don't know but sooner rather than later i believe we will find out!But one thing is certain he won't get 7 years of excuses before receiving his marching orders.
Teachout trounced a game - but - outclassed Will Yandik by almost three - to - one, which doesn't sound as bad as 75 percent.
It's almost inexplicable: a summer blockbuster whose human leads are played by Jason Clarke and Keri Russell somehow outclassed nearly every other one of last year's films.
Hyundai are asking R253 900 for the i20 Sport — R12 000 more than the simply superb Suzuki Swift Sport and a mere R3 900 less than Opel's Corsa Sport, both of which simply outclass the Hyundai in almost all aspects.
For some tasks it outclasses almost all other tablets yet it lacks some of the most basic functions offered by every other alternative.
If you placed it beside a phone like the Galaxy S4 it was clearly outclassed in almost every way.
This therapy - unfriendly worldview, amounting almost to a form of popular brainwashing, is sustained by the usual suspects: DSM, which provides a faux legitimacy to artificially constructed psychomedical disorders; Big Pharma's financial, social, and political clout, which vastly outclasses Little Psychotherapy on every measure; direct - to - consumer ads for psychotropic drugs, which turn every TV watcher or magazine reader into his or her own personal psychiatrist; and decreasing insurance reimbursement for therapy, as well as increasing reimbursements for prescriptions, which means that if people want therapy, they'll probably have to pony up for it themselves.
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