Sentences with phrase «farfetched which»

Not exact matches

If this seems farfetched, note the following letter from a girl who had been brought up on sermons which assumed the unfailing efficacy of prayers made in faith.
That led to a rapid - fire array of arguments, those just listed, some looking rather farfetched, which separately or together do not overwhelmingly make the point.
Antoine Griezmann and Robert Lewandowski are claimed to be on the French manager's wanted list, which would seem a little farfetched, but if the club could finally be ready to stump up the necessary cash, it could become a possibility.
While the subject matter is the stuff that good films are made of, and the quality of the direction and acting are worthy of admiration, where The East fails is in the contrivances involved in the farfetched plotline and the unevenness in the thriller elements (such as a scene in which the cell dresses up to the nines to infiltrate a party for pharmaceutical bigwigs that would feel more at home in a Mission Impossible movie) that undermine what could have been a chilling and realistic story of corporations run amok.
Director Ryan Justice takes that warning and carries it to extremes, which may not be all that farfetched.
I mean, these are the events that have led to the conspiracy theory — which isn't quite so farfetched and is supported by some good evidence, some of which we bear witness to here — that the CIA was actively involved in importing cocaine into the United States in the 1980s, and that the agency's activities were in large part responsible for the crack cocaine epidemic.
A somewhat bland supporting cast offers little to make anything but Brosnan interesting, save for a fiery Bill Smitrovich (Ted, Eagle Eye) turn and a scene in which Olga Kurylenko appears to dress up like Velma Kelly from Chicago to begin one of the film's most farfetched of story developments.
If you imagine each of the students in a class with some kind of a handheld computing device, which is not farfetched today — maybe it was five years ago but it's not today — and you imagine a teacher is, for example, teaching a principle in physics and asks the students to predict what would happen to the trajectory of a ball if you're rotating around in a circle and let loose the ball at a certain position.
Even comparisons with 1929 and 2007 are made which, however, seems a bit farfetched,» writes regional director at Sparinvest Karsten Løngaard that were invited to contribute with a comment to the Luxembourg based financial magazine AGEFI.
Unless they just started it after ORAS, took 2 years to make and releasing this year, and then have Gen 7 next year, which doesn't seem too farfetched to be honest.
, which was directed and produced by Sabaah Folayan and FarFetched founder Damon Davis.
For example, there might be a simple counterclaim on a related, or unrelated, matter; or it might be possible to challenge the validity of the right in some way — for registered rights there are usually well defined ways in which this can be done; however, for unregistered rights the terrain is often more uncertain and so more unusual points will often have to be contemplated, (eg, challenging whether or not the claimant exists as a matter of law, and so has a locus standi to bring the proceedings: this last suggestion might seem farfetched, but it has been used successfully on more than one occasion).
It is slowly increasing with the awareness amongst the urban Indians, but health insurance policy is yet a farfetched thing in the villages which comprises of 70 % of our economy, in terms of census.
Most people seem to think it'll be called Android Oreo, which actually wouldn't be too farfetched for Google.
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