Sentences with phrase «entirely supplanted»

Just 6 months after launching, the Galaxy Note 8 was almost entirely supplanted by the new Galaxy S9 +.
In all of the regions I mention above, industry has either begun to or has entirely supplanted these traditions, as it has in Westernized, «First - world» nations.
«The ancient Egyptian attitude towards Nubia took root in their minds, until by the end of the century it had entirely supplanted the old notion of Nubia as the well - spring of civilization,» Adams writes in Nubia: Corridor to Africa.
Solar photovoltaic and wind power are rapidly getting cheaper and more abundant — so much so that they are on track to entirely supplant fossil fuels worldwide within two decades, with the time...

Not exact matches

Although it has been supplanted, the original Apple Watch isn't going away entirely.
They will therefore maintain that there is existential truth which can not be expressed in the language of discursive terminology, and which therefore requires an entirely different language, indirect and allusive, but such as can not be supplanted or explained away.
Shadow (fangirl idol # 1) is entirely absent from the story, and inserting Jet to supplant him, even if for one game, was probably not a good PR move.
In 1922 Thomas Edison proclaimed, «I believe the motion picture is destined to revolutionize our educational system and that in a few years it will supplant largely, if not entirely, the use of textbooks.»
After all, Trump's stance would be entirely consistent with the Obama administration's «pen and phone» approach to teacher evaluation, Elementary and Secondary Education Act waivers, school discipline, campus sexual assault, supplement - not - supplant, and much else.
Sometimes it seems important that they have a certain level of revenue so that they can serve the public and while «green» technology might be able to supplant a real percentage of energy needs, if it were to supplant it entirely then funds required to keep the overall system established might be missing.
Now, the argument that search algorithms are attempting to supplant thinking (thus the cry of infantilization) is not entirely lost on me.
Additional differences among the various proposals concern the relationship of globalization to programs for study abroad; 36 connections with existing programs that educate foreign students; the creation of unique «institutes» or «centers» within the law school's institutional structure (or sometimes elsewhere in the university) to develop, staff, manage, and operate such programs; needs and opportunities for «specialization» by faculty and «concentration» by students, and other matters.37 With perhaps the single exception of McGill University's extraordinary program, however, hardly any proposals seek entirely to supplant instruction in domestic law.
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