Sentences with phrase «because of amalgamations»

Technically, the discipline is overstaffed because of amalgamations.

Not exact matches

He said, «we had known that sooner or later this would happen, because it is an amalgamation of strange bed fellows that formed the APC that people like Atiku felt he could support its course, yet today they have betrayed him and they will all betray you if you don't leave them», he declared.
The Oscars continue to mean something because they're given by an amalgamation of people from different crafts who work together to actually make movies.
See what I did there??!» We get it Mendes, you're riffing off earlier properties; now go home, you're drunk.If the latest Bond feels like an amalgamation of other Bonds, that's because Mendes fails to distinguish homage from originality.
Because, bottom line is many of the small schools are in decline, not only because of changing family size and amalgamation of farm sizes and so on, but the closing down of industries or the economic base, as well as the rationalisation of government human seBecause, bottom line is many of the small schools are in decline, not only because of changing family size and amalgamation of farm sizes and so on, but the closing down of industries or the economic base, as well as the rationalisation of government human sebecause of changing family size and amalgamation of farm sizes and so on, but the closing down of industries or the economic base, as well as the rationalisation of government human services.
The large bronze exoskeletal constructions are mesmerizing not only because of their algorithmic complexity (mathematics permeates their every millimeter) but also because of their fluid amalgamation of organic and manufactured lines.
In the case of this painting the curved form is an amalgamation of the Kikkoman Soy Sauce bottle, the Head & Shoulders shampoo bottle, and the red Solo cup: all objects that due to their ubiquity are taken for granted in spite of (and sometimes because of) their elegance and simplicity.
Golub's first mature works — cobbled amalgamations of body parts — looked to antiquity and pre-Columbian art for impetus: the former for its majesty; the latter because of its abrupt distillations of form and unyielding frontality.
But there is a third group of independent charity schools, which will soon come up for amalgamation or closure, because neither they nor their advisers have yet seen the writing on the wall.
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