Sentences with phrase «fall under the curve»

Not exact matches

The refined sea - level curve showed that the site, now 42 meters under water, would have become submerged during sea level rise between 9,700 and 10,200 years ago, long after Naia and the other extinct animals likely fell into it.
What we actually do is take in the center - back or side - back seams just a bit so they curve slightly under the butt instead falling straight from the widest hip point, which is the most efficient and effective way to make anyone's posterior look fantastic.
Yield curve be nimble, yield curve be quick, yield curve go under limbo stick.Okay, no great allusion in the song there, but I sit watching the long end of the yield curve rally as the short end falls slightly.
Regarding the inverted yield curve, the falling rates environment sounds logical, but it doesn't explain the early part of this decade when the yield on the ten - year went from over 6 % down to under 4 %.
Over 4 km long, it curves past resorts, beachfront cafes, wooden fishing boats under repair and quite a few elegant old villas built decades ago by the wealthy expats who fell under Bali's spell.
Under this condition of remoteness, every assamblage of things is transformed into a mere multitude and every multitude, no matter how disordered, incoherent, and confused, will fall into certain patterns and configurations possessing the same validity and no more significance than the mathematical curve, which, as Leibniz once remarked, can always be found between two points thrown random on a piece of paper.
Under this condition of remoteness, every assemblage of things is transformed into a mere multitude, and every multitude, no matter how disordered, incoherent, and confused, will fall into certain patterns and configurations possessing the same validity and no more significance than the mathematical curve, which as Leibniz once remarked, can always be found between points thrown at random on a piece of paper.
Under this condition of remoteness, every assemblage of things is transformed into a mere multitude and every multitude, no matter how disordered, incoherent, and confused, will fall into certain patterns and configurations possessing the same validity and no more significance than the mathematical curve, which, as Leibniz once remarked, can always be found between two points thrown random on a piece of paper.
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