Sentences with phrase «count on what»

The price keeps going up at the end of each term and is usually not guaranteed, so you can't count on what it will increase to.
Of course, you know to always be prepared to treat low blood sugars, and that means having sugar or snacks on hand at all times because you can't count on what you'll be able to find or buy.
Citing «great hydrologic and climate uncertainty,» one expert quoted by CSM puts forth a new climate wisdom that has as yet to catch on widely: «We can't necessarily count on what we saw in the past as the judgment of where storms are going to be in the future.»
Never count on what your athlete needs being available where you are going.
Considering the legal world is being restructured and you may not be able to make big dollars as an attorney (as opposed the world in 1998) you can't count on what your income will be.
From there I'll count on what seems to happen organically... many of you will buy and read my other books on Kindle, and on other ePub formats (such as the B&N Nook and Books for iPad).
Whether they lead schools, develop new programs, become superintendents, or lead national reform, they will all count on what they learned at HGSE and the people they met there to succeed.
Indeed, right now, the warning to the public from those in charge seems to be: Don't count on what we're telling you now, because it's likely to change tomorrow.
Nation states were clearly unable to solve certain problems on their own and therefore an effective European policy could count on what Eurocrats used to call a «permissive public consensus.»
But I didn't count on what you said above about the taste.
Higgins, who will be leading the society's effort to implement the report's recommendations, is counting on what she calls «the growing pressure and desire from a lot of directions» to instill in policymakers a sense of urgency.
Perfect partnering Our behavioural recommendation engine is studying your activity (e.g. views, favourites and winks) in order to get a clear idea of what you're actually looking for — and not just counting on what you say you're looking for, which can be two very different things.
The Gibsons could, for instance, be bitter about having to pay $ 600,000 for a relatively small townhouse, but instead they're counting on what they have going for them — their combined incomes of $ 160,000 a year, the $ 190,000 they have in the bank, and Tony's generous pension.
Given the scale (in the old Bell System days), we had to install things that worked, not counting on what our R folks might invent.

Not exact matches

Without quantifying the issue, McDonald's said it «continues to focus its efforts on driving guest count growth» in what it called an «increasingly competitive» fast - food market.
The idea that «trying» is what counts — regardless of results — is a dreary commentary and a cheap excuse foisted on the real doers and the winners by sad sacks and also - rans who just can't cut it.
And what counts as legal can not always just be looked up, in part because so much depends on prosecutorial discretion.
«I can't count the number of times I brought the CEO of a company along on [consumer] interviews and it changed their entire view of the company vs. what was in their reports.»
«I feel like from what you've been able to do so far on your own, I'd count on you to keep going without having to give up a big chunk of equity that I would need.»
Economists and reporters will seize on non-energy exports because those are what the Bank of Canada is counting on to revive economic growth.
Counting your blessings might not feel like the most natural move on days when the world feels hostile and gray, but neuroscience shows that if you can manage to consciously shift your attention to what is going well in your life, you'll begin to physically rewire your brain to make it easier to maintain optimism in the future.
It zoomed into hydrogen, only to put on the brakes in the mid-2000s after regulators found that Shell vastly overbooked oil reserves, a scandal that prompted Shell to refocus on what it saw as the part of its business that really counted.
It's unfortunate to see that many entrepreneurs fail because they count too much on what they think is going to work.
The African nation of Zambia, for instance, has only enough food available to provide its population with 1,870 calories on average, per day, according to a striking global map in the October issue of National Geographic — and in truth, in much of the world, such calorie counts offer an inflated view of what's actually accessible to most citizens, due to widespread poverty, civil unrest, natural disasters, corruption, government mismanagement, food - distribution failures, and other issues.
But, when it comes to computers it's what's on the inside that counts.
Just focus on what is most important to you, not whether the Internal Revenue Service will count it as a donation.
Market strategists and portfolio managers maintain that folks should look past those lofty valuations and focus on what counts: A powerful, steady forward march in profits that should deliver near double - digit returns, or even better, for years to come.
What counts as high - quality paper will differ from person to person, depending on the values they hold.
Moreover, what counts as «political» is encompassing an ever greater group of activities, ranging from which websites a company's ads pop up on to who its customers are.
Being an expert in our field of work is imperative to the customers who are going to count on us to know what we're doing and what the next steps will be going forward.
Lindsay Lohan is following the referendum pretty intently right now, tweeting frantically about what is happening on a pretty much count - by - count basis.
As many users have pointed out, Twitter doubled the character (from 140 to 280) count at a time when there is rampant hate speech and a general tone of confrontation and dissonance on what is a relatively small social media platform.
What's more, employees overall at The Best Workplaces to Retire From are 10 % more likely to report they can count on peers to cooperate — an increasingly important feature of high - performing, innovative organizations.
And, in case it wasn't obvious, if you're asking your own amateur employees to do the job on their own time and dime, you can count on getting what you pay for.
«What we want you to be able to count on as a consumer is that we're there for you in this journey of wellness.»
«Yet what I didn't count on was the uncertainty of life, and what uncertainty can do to a person.»
Yes, most people haven't jumped on board the #DeleteFacebook bandwagon, but it's what happens next that counts.
What if the Starbucks or Safeway you were counting on to bring customers your way suddenly closes down?
It's what Sony and its competitors are counting on with their respective products.
But quick and substantive corporate tax reform is what the markets are counting on when they pushed the S&P index up 10 % since the election.
Still, what you see in the old plant outside Baltimore really is different from most other companies, on at least three counts.
And you'll want to count on your team to stand their ground no matter what the odds are.
While it may be true that it's what's on the inside that counts, burger joints around the country are finding that the outside shouldn't be ignored, either.
At close to half a billion dollars, it was well beyond the outer limits of what investors had ever paid for a publishing company of Wired's size — never mind one whose operations were on track to lose $ 11 million that year (not even counting a onetime $ 20.5 - million write - off to put the company's disparate assets under one corporate umbrella).
Sound management of your work life is the cornerstone of controlling your calendar, and to this end Vanderkam proposes we adopt a stricter outlook on what actually constitutes work: «any «work» that is not advancing you toward the professional life you want should not count as work.
But, as with many things, it's what's on the inside that counts most.
Rather than packing in fluff to inflate word count, we focus on what we, as traders, would want to know.
People are counting on you to be present every day — regardless of what is going on after hours.
We look for structure and routine, so we know what we can count on and what we can control.
Chinese policy makers are learning that their words don't count for much and that they will be judged on what they do.
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