Sentences with phrase «fewer people»

And it has fewer people — 2.2 million — than metropolitan St. Louis.
Fewer people are carrying cash.
With employee cutbacks, fewer people are being asked to carry a larger share of the workload.
So much of the Tim Hortons brand is tangled up in our national identity — and with a hockey player that fewer and fewer people have heard of.
«Businesses will need to hire no people or fewer people,» he said.
With fewer people around, it felt like it was ours.»
The way most Americans pay for college — a patchwork system of loans, grants, and scholarships from colleges — was largely created generations ago, when fewer people went to college and when the pri...
Buying fine art is scary and baffling for newbies so fewer people than those who could afford it and are interested actually do.
This season could be worse, since fewer people are opting for vaccinations.
This will help legitimize your own brand quickly for a relatively cheap price, and hopefully fewer people will see those embarrassing college photos your buddy has on a webpage you can't get him to take down.
Far fewer people know the marshals sell Bitcoin.
Justin Bronk, an air - combat expert at the Royal United Services Institute, said chemical weapons killed fewer people than regular bombs but did so in a «particularly terrifying» way.
Fewer people are retiring with pensions, and 401 (k) balances, on average, are alarmingly low.
While introverts energize alone and prefer fewer people and minimal stimuli, extroverts feed off the energy of a crowd and thrive off a bustle of activity.
The more people selling against fewer people buying since fewer are employed, means a drop in asset prices.
Related to the second point, copying something requires less capital, fewer people and involves less wasted effort.
Most importantly, further eroding civil liberties is likely to fuel what I believe to be the underlying cause of the unrest that's popping up around the globe: a deep frustration with a system that is seeing the world's growing wealth increasingly controlled by fewer and fewer people.
As sectors become better at what they do, they often require fewer people to get the work done.
A new report says fewer people are expected to be using the smartphone for business over the next year.
All of these companies lack data from Africa and Asia, where fewer people have gotten a DNA test.
Repealing the individual mandate means fewer people will sign up for health insurance — 13 million according to the Congressional Budget Office (CBO)-- and the government will pay out less in premium support.
Your actions become magnified, but fewer people tell you the truth.
I'm like that less and I have fewer people like that as a result of doing what I say I will on such a public scale.
But he acknowledged that student debt was a «huge issue», telling the Bright Blue liberal conservative think tank's conference: «If you wanted to say you want to reduce that (fees) then either fewer people go to university or the experience would be less.
Second, around 2 million fewer people would receive coverage through the subsidized «non-group,» or individual market — the focus of both Obamacare and the AHCA.
Traditional television viewership is on the decline, and fewer people are actually going to the movies.
Now that Cara is private, far fewer people need worry about what could go wrong.
Charge people to leave bonds, and fewer people will, so the thinking goes.
Tupperware parties were up, home invasions were down and fewer people were in the mood to tie the knot in 2009.
These one year «deals» have raised AMT income exemptions so that fewer people — mostly with incomes between $ 45,000 and $ 75,000 — will end up paying the AMT.
The IRS audited only 0.84 % of taxpayers in 2015, the lowest level since 2004, and the agency is on track to audit even fewer people this year.
In a statement Tuesday, Qantas Head of Fuel and Environment Alan Milne said the airline ranked poorly because «we use larger aircraft, fly very long distances and have premium cabins that naturally have fewer people on board.»
Amidst layoffs and hiring freezes, many organizations today are looking for more productivity from fewer people.
If you go to an Ivy League school, «there are prestigious companies that will take a chance on you even if you majored in classics or medieval history,» he writes, but «the problem is that while we need lots and lots of people with humanities and social science backgrounds, in today's increasingly anti-intellectual climate, majoring in philosophy is becoming a risk that fewer and fewer people can afford to take.»
Simply put, manufacturers need more people with computer skills and fewer people for hands - on technical work like welding and construction.
Your company benefits because you and your employees could learn how to adopt practices with a number of advantages (such as decreased stress or fewer people needing to take sick days).
(Higher prices more than mitigated that, but fewer people coming to stores is a problem Starbucks needs to lick.)
While fewer people are talking about it, presumably it brings similar performance upgrades to this version, as well.
Even cities in red states, where until recently marijuana legalization appeared to have very little support, are passing laws to make sure fewer people are prosecuted for weed - related violations.
Porcini says this is something that small businesses are better at than large corporations, since they tend to have fewer people and less bureaucracy.
But fewer and fewer people seem to feel that way, and it's gradually eroding our happiness and the quality of our work.
They'll eliminate 35,000 cellular transmission sites, for example, which has to mean fewer people to oversee them.
At the same time, U.S. Customs and Border Protection has patted itself on the back highlighting a 36 percent decline in apprehensions from 2008 to 2010 due to fewer people attempting to cross the border.
However U.S. commanders say the precision weapons used by the air force have meant an overall decrease in the number of civilian casualties from combat operations as fewer people have been killed in ground fighting.
More broadly, there seem to be fewer and fewer people who believe there is anything fundamentally good about the business of technology these days.
At different times, fewer people want to eat there, so they change their price to respond to that.
The long and short of it is that fewer people are willing to pay a premium for lots of channels they never watch in return for a few — HBO and ESPN — that they love.
All the hype around startups overshadows the fact that fewer people are starting new businesses today than at any point since 1978.
And I'm a huge believer that «a few people can make a really big difference» and start a snowball effect.
Think about how few people seem bothered by Donald Trump's business failings — in fact, some voters say that just shows he's a risk taker and a dogged pursuer of the American Dream.
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