Sentences with phrase «basic niceties»

One of the big criticisms of stock Android has always been that the some of the basic niceties are missing.
For some, this question may only suggest that basic niceties or cordiality; however, for me this question aspires to get at the deeply embedded social identity dynamics that constitute much of our engagement.
I hate the lack of basic niceties like being able to compare equipment in the shops, and I really think Hit - Point needs a new translator that can make something decent out of their weak stories and characters.
Somehow I had gotten into the habit of issuing orders without the basic nicety of «please.»

Not exact matches

And this all started because I was pointing out a problem «we» have... we enjoy niceties while others suffer want of basic necessities.
Free From Gluten is the largest gluten - free store offering everything from basic products like gluten - free flours and xanthan gum to those niceties like Enjoy Life semi-sweet mini chocolate chips (hey, some would say those are essentials!)
All new for 2006, the Mazda MX - 5 Miata Club Spec did away with niceties such as a power roof and leather seats and instead provided just the basics: a manual top, a CD player, a five - speed manual transmission, and a 2.0 - liter, 170 horsepower four - cylinder engine.
It includes the basics plus a few niceties — power windows and locks, a manual driver's seat, Bluetooth, a rubber cargo mat, alloy wheels, and a 6.5 - inch touchscreen infotainment system with Apple CarPlay and Android Auto compatibility.
For example, Project Gutenberg, a major producer of public - domain ebooks, hosts epub and Kindle files that sometimes lack basic typographic necessities like curly quotes; some of those ebooks are automatically generated and can't take full advantage of modern ereader technology like popup footnotes or popup tables of contents; they sometimes lack niceties like cover images and title pages; and the quality of individual ebook productions varies greatly.
The Canadian way is to fall back on a constitutional nicety that flows from one of the basic principles or conventions of the parliamentary system: for a party to govern it must have the confidence of the House.
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