Sentences with phrase «fairly big lot»

Not exact matches

«From a purely engineering problem, trying to fit a lot of fairly complex information fairly intuitively into an iPhone screen [is] without a doubt one of our biggest issues,» said Uber data scientist Kevin Novak in a 2014 presentation [relevant part starts at 38:30] to a meetup group.
Rutabaga, Celery, Dill, & Smoked Chicken Soup (fairly dramatically adapted from Vegetable Soups from Deborah Madison's Kitchen) 1 3/4 lbs rutabagas (1 truly enormous one, or 2 merely large ones) 2 - 3 tbsp duck fat or lard or butter (I used half duck fat, half butter) 1 big pinch dried thyme 1 bay leaf 2 medium leeks (sliced, white and pale green parts only) 4 - 6 C chicken stock 1 smoked chicken breast (honestly, a plain one is probably fine)(shredded) 1 - 2 big handfuls finely chopped fresh dill 1 bunch celery (the more leaves, the better) 1 child - sized handful salted capers (rinsed and coarsely chopped) ground green peppercorns to taste (honestly, black pepper is probably fine)(lots!)
If you do quadruple it (or more), I would suggest using a really big pan that is preheated for a while, or dividing it into multiple pans — it tastes best when the veggies are cooked at a fairly high heat, and added a lot of them at once to a small pan would bring down the temperature.
Hanzal is only 30, should be fairly cheap, is big, and could contribute a lot with some good, talented wingers.
This game became a real big - boy game — playing a South American team that has a lot of experience, I thought our guys kept their composure when things started to fly, which was fairly good for a young team.
Opening with a torrential rainstorm similar to the one that begins Suspiria, Toolbox Murders is, in fact, a fairly transparent Argento pastiche, though it plays a lot more like the English dub of one of the director's many late - career misfires than like classic Argento: the poor exposition is corny instead of poetically abstract (ditto the chasms in logic); the big bad's motive is maddeningly simple yet inscrutable; and the technique has minor virtues as opposed to being virtuoso.
Assuming that kids don't differ all that much from Boston to Austin, one may fairly wonder what accounts for the big discrepancies — and there's no doubt that state and local implementation practices must account for a lot.
Other than that, its a great car (I was going to say little, you think it'll be little as it looks a bit like a Smart from the front - but its fairly big) particularly if you travel around town, do lots of short journeys etc..
But, and it's a fairly big but, there are lots of areas where Android isn't great when deployed as a desktop operating system.
It's been a fairly busy week for a lot of MMOs with a couple of anniversaries and a big teaser.
Given the last game ended on a fairly big cliffhanger, there is a lot of room to explore the characters and world.
This week has also been a fairly big week for Xbox Live Indie Games - a lot of good, quality games have been released.
I think the biggest similarity between these two games (if there is any at all) is that they both offer a single player mode that can be fairly brief but offer a lot of side content.
A fairly quiet month ahead really with not a lot of big releases for June.
There were passes of several big names including the following: Lot 22, «Landscape with Smoke,» by Richard Diebenkorn that was bought in at $ 750,000, way short of its low estimate of $ 1.2 million; Lot 44, «Jaeger (The Hunter),» by Georg Baselitz that was bought in at $ 75,000, not close to its low estimate of $ 125,000; Lot 45, «Untitled,» a nice, fairly legible work by Willem de Kooning that was bought in for $ 240,000 and had had a low estimate of $ 300,000; and Lot 51, «Paysan Sautant Sur Son Petit Arpent,» by Jean Dubuffet (1901 - 1985) that was bought in for $ 420,000 and had had a low estimate of $ 500,000; Lot 53, «Summertime in Italy # 10,» a quite large and dramatic 1963 Robert Motherwell (1915 - 1991), that was bought in at $ 180,000 and had had a low estimate of $ 250,000; and Lot 54, «Untitled,» a geometric painting by Frank Stella that was bought in for $ 160,000 and had had a low estimate of $ 200,000.
The very strong evidence from Greenland ice and other sources of large, rapid, widespread climate changes in the past, and the fairly clear evidence that freshening of the north Atlantic could trigger a large climate shift, had raised LOTS of big questions, and at the time of Inevitable Surprises, many of those questions were poorly answered.
IMO their estimate of the taxes needed to accomplish this were very low (and discussant Paul Joskow pointed this out in his included remarks, noting that other people estimated these taxes as being 20 times bigger because they assumed that CO2 emissions would grow a lot faster without the tax), but for what it's worth they found a fairly small equivalent variation (loss) of about $ 250 billion (in 1990 dollars) for the U.S. in carrying out this policy.
But it is fairly clear that there isn't a lot of internal growth at the big firms over the past few years.
Big boys, fat cats, «as long as they let me» — it all comes across as fairly by - the - numbers sales shtick from a veteran salesman, but to his credit, he's been banging this same drum since his days as a Smart Money columnist in the mid-90s, and unlike a lot of personal finance gurus Cramer doesn't offer expensive courses in financial miracles or prepaid credit cards.
But, and it's a fairly big but, there are lots of areas where Android isn't great when deployed as a desktop operating system.
a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z