Sentences with phrase «everything draws power»

It's not so much that everything draws power from the battery specifically, but that everything is one big circuit.

Not exact matches

«With the political race already drawing substantial media attention and potential candidates doing everything in their power to gain the support of the public at large, regulation of the hedge fund industry is a topic that will likely receive significant attention throughout the campaign period.»
A second contribution Parmenberg has made to theology lies in the implications he draws from his well - known understanding of God as the power that determines everything.
It will be dependent in everything on faith and on the holy power of the heart, for it will no longer be able to draw any strength at all, or very little, from what is purely institutional.
For decades, that revenue has successfully drawn semiconductor research out of academia, through factories, and into chips that have powered everything from a 1960s mainframe to a 2012 iPhone 5.
There's a sensation of power that you draw from the way the interior screens flicker into life and the Titan rises from the ground, ready to stomp forth and blow the shit out of everything.
The big draw is its unique art style — each characters are paper thin, crayon colored, animated little scribbles («rakugaki» is the term for artistic doodles in Japanese) who hop around maniacally and do anything and everything in their power to destroy the others characters.
In his third solo show at the gallery, Haendel explores the power of the heroic in portraiture — playing with issues of masculinity, power and gender in a series of works that depict everything from powerful men to teenage girls riding rodeo to a monumental portrait of Hillary Clinton (his largest drawing to date).
Back in 2009, at the United Nations (UN) Framework Convention on Climate Change, nations around the world drew a hypothetical line in the sand, pledging to do everything in their power to prevent the world annual average temperature from warming an additional two degrees Celsius (3.6 °F)- known as the Copenhagen Accord.
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