Not exact matches
Mostly, it was because I have many interests, but
also, I was afraid to
narrow my
scope and miss out on potential clients and opportunities.
I would propose to not add more sub-questions but if you think the
scope is wide enough but yet
also narrow to open more questions instead of adding sub-questions...
The size and duration of the studies that do exist are
also very
narrow in
scope.
Investigators can
also use RNA assays to
narrow the
scope of a project before ordering expensive antibodies.
Philanthropists have become so enthralled with urban «no excuses» models that «we must
also ask whether philanthropy's role in shaping this sector... has excessively
narrowed its
scope and constrained its possibilities.»
The House
also passed legislation (HB 1044) related to charter schools yesterday, but unfortunately their bill was much
narrower in
scope.
Getting approved before looking at houses can
also help you
narrow the
scope of your home search, allowing you to only focus on homes within your approved mortgage budget.
For example, to increase the U.S.'s renewable energy capacity to 17 % would require installing 162,000 megawatts of power — a six-fold increase in our existing capacity.14 This would
also require the installation of thousands of miles of new transmission lines from the upper Midwest to the South, costing as much as $ 93 billion and taking decades to complete.15 Given the
scope of this task,
narrowing policy options to renewable energy alone creates an unnecessary obstacle to a transition to clean energy.
I
also really wanted to learn about what partners and senior associates did to fill their own pipelines and how broad or
narrow the
scope of their practices were.
Like her Dutch colleagues, she
also concluded that the asserted design right was not necessarily invalid but
narrowed its
scope in light of prior art.
As much as crisis events motivate improvements, they
also tend to
narrow the
scope of addressable change.