Christine Tan, a portfolio manager at Gluskin Sheff Associates in Toronto, has
found much the same.
But it took only a few minutes on Ubuntu's extensive and well - organized online forums — you'll
find much the same for most major distributions of Linux — to get a simple, step - by - step recipe for the job.
Another study, involving more than 100,000 Americans tracked over 14 years, published this year in the American Journal of Epidemiology,
found much the same results.
If we take a careful look at queer parents today,
we find much the same.
An analysis by The Real Deal of individual contributions by real estate industry players to the presidential election
found much the same partisan alignment — donors strongly favored the GOP.
In the late 1990s, Harvard University economist, Ron Ferguson,
found much the same thing in quite another setting, an upper - class suburb of Cleveland, Ohio, called Shaker Heights.
When identical or very similar questions are posed, and the response categories are the same, both polls
find much the same thing.
More recent, and more sophisticated, «peer effects» research (by the likes of Carolyn Hoxby and Eric Hanushek)
finds much the same.
At first, I thought this was ridiculous, but when I looked into IngramSpark's program,
I found much the same thing.
More recently, Beena Sarojini and colleagues (2012) examined the performance of a new (and supposedly improved) crop of climate models and
found much the same as Zhang et al. (2007).
Not exact matches
A 2016 global fraud study
found that businesses with fewer than 100 employees suffered the
same median level of theft — $ 150,000 — as
much larger companies.
Employees can use this
same service to book days off,
find out about their company's bonuses, obtain information regarding an IT problem and
much more.
Did the results jive with earlier studies that covered a mere decade or two and which
found that personality pretty
much stays the
same?
Businesses want consumers to share their experiences because it can validate a purchase — the
same BrightLocal survey
found that 84 percent of people trust online reviews as
much as recommendations from family and friends.
The
same year, he
founded Carrot Creative, launching a social media agency when no one thought social media would amount to
much of anything.
You can grow without new products — AT&T sold essentially the
same telephones for decades while becoming the world's largest telecommunications concern — but most small companies will
find it difficult to grow at all,
much less rapidly, without a constant stream of new products that meet customer needs.
But the company is hoping to give those investors a boost through a sort of mathematical illusion: A recent study of Acorn's customers
found that people were
much more likely to agree to set aside $ 5 per day than $ 150 per month, even though they'd end up contributing the
same amount either way.
The phenomena is larger than the people: having traveled a lot, I would argue that the entrepreneurs and engineers in San Francisco are pretty
much the
same sorts of people as the ones you'd
find anywhere.
I've got a story in the new issue of Canadian Business magazine about the rise of cloud gaming — or online services that act
much like Netflix do in that they sell streaming access to the
same sorts of video games you'd
find on your Xbox or Playstation.
In October the company promised to deliver pizzas as
much as 15 degrees hotter, by transporting them in new pouches made of the
same thermal insulation
found in ski jackets.
While that sounds obvious, managers are usually puzzled when they
find out that, despite spending so
much time in the
same place, employees don't immediately bond with one another.
I am sure many would - be entrepreneurs are in this
same position: they have an idea they love, maybe a prototype, but have no idea how
much they really need to raise, where to
find the funds and how to prepare for «the ask».
«When you're dealing with something like the bankruptcy issue, where all lenders stand pretty
much in the
same shoes, it shouldn't be a surprise when the smaller and larger banks
find common cause,» said Steve Verdier, a lobbyist for the Independent Community Bankers Association.
Fifty - eight percent of retirees say they would employ the
same investment strategy just before retirement and 35 percent say they would have invested either «
much more» or «somewhat more» aggressively if they could alter past decisions, the study
finds.
I took up the «Train the Trainer» course mainly to empower myself but once I realized just how
much of a difference it made in me as an individual - I
find myself wanting to share the
same with people around me...
You might compare the business to similar businesses in the
same market and
find out how
much other business sell for.
I also
find it fascinating that so many of the great Investors
find similar value in
much the
same authors, such as Benjamin Graham and his brilliant book, The Intelligent Investor.
Instead, you work with private lenders to
find and manage the loans,
much the
same as with other types of lending.
I
find this exact
same challenge — people focusing too
much energy in lower production areas — with entrepreneurs also.
But remember, they are pretty
much like fashion, count yourself lucky if the
same trendy home still can
find fans few years down the road.
I pretty
much follow the
same strategy, except I switch up the order and use the CCC list from David Fish (never really looked at the Aristocrats since I
found the CCC).
To
find out how
much you'll actually be paying, consider running the numbers on a hypothetical trade before the real thing, with the
same payment method, volume, coins and withdrawal.
Much of the Christian church in the United States
finds itself in the grip of the
same phenomenon: people drop by occasionally, but an increasing share of the population searches for spirituality in other ways.
I
find it intersting that you chose to chastise me, but not the original poster, who pretty
much said the
same thing about anyone who would put the «Good Without God» ad on a bus.
Nobody knows for certain what happens when we die, but considering how many gods and afterlives have been proposed in the history of humanity, the chance of the christian god being there to greet us when we die is pretty
much the
same as
finding Anubis greeting us with Ma'at's feather.
I agree that God didn't pursue Adam to smash his face in, never suggested that or alluded to it, but there is no confusion where sin leads and there is no doubt about the consequences off those who love their lives, they will lose it where as those that hate their lives will
find it... So to conclude, Jesus and the father are not two different things, they are both the very
same in as
much as God desires all to be saved and has shown the way to salvation.
Much in the
same way that you would be horrified to
find that your sibling, or parent, or uncle, or one of your mates, had engaged in the sexual assault of anyone, and would feel shame for the behaviour of your relative / friend, so such disgusting actions by Catholics appal and horrify other Catholics.
4
Much the
same can be said of the Western novel, not because the majority of the heroes of novels are «
found» (neither are they in the New Testament parables), but because the lost -
found struggle, the pattern of the individual in search of his or her real identity is the pattern in so many of our novels.
Christianity is about 500 years older than Isam, and Judaism is
much,
much older than Christianity, and yet, with just a little reading one
finds that though each religion has its own holy men, many of those who are revered as prophets or knowledgeable men are the
same person.
Even if all parties were to agree that American republicanism is not classically liberal, or that classical liberalism really is ontologically indifferent, or that the laws of nature and of nature's God are the foundation of constitutional order and that these are the
same thing as natural law — even if, in other words, all parties were to agree to some version of a pristine American
founding harmonious in principle with the truth of God and the human being — returning to the first principles of the eighteenth century isn't
much more realistic than a return to the first principles of the thirteenth.
I watched the show, and am a American caucasin female from a very rural, but not southern area.I
found the show interesting and thought provoking.Just as in our own Judio - Christian religions, women are expected to be somewhat subserviant and makes our American Islam citizens seem pretty
much like any other citizens.I
found this to be a good and humanizing feature.If you love U.S.A., and are a citizen you are the
same as anyone else.Just encourage each other and us, too.
And so I guess, in
much the
same vein, that is why I am
finding it hard to ignore your paid membership while trying to continue to enjoy the free site.
So if you are one of the lucky ones who have
found their «one,» as
much as you want me to experience the
same kind of love and joy you possess, please don't pity me today.
fishon: «I
find it amusing [by some, not all] that I am taken to task for the way you discribe me, but the words and cartoons of the host are, at times, very sarcastic, combative, and accusatory against
much that I believe in, but he is not accused and taking to task for the
same.
I
find it amusing [by some, not all] that I am taken to task for the way you discribe me, but the words and cartoons of the host are, at times, very sarcastic, combative, and accusatory against
much that I believe in, but he is not accused and taking to task for the
same.
«51 Writing in Christianity Today, Episcopal Bishop Bennett Sims makes
much the
same conclusion,
finding in Galatians 5:16 («walk by the Spirit, and do not gratify the desires of the flesh») evidence that an orientation that is not enacted need not be judged sinful.52
In truth, the most recent study one can
find shows that while about the
same percentage identify as Christian (80 %) in prison as in the population at large, a
much smaller percentage in prison identify as atheist (0.2 % of the prison population).
Actually, the most recent study I can
find shows that while about the
same percentage identify as Christian (80 %) in prison as in the population at large, a
much smaller percentage in prison identify as atheist (0.2 % of the prison population).
It is true that one can
find among individual theologians support for an «inerrancy» position throughout the history of the church, but it is also true that these
same theologians often exercise in their exegesis
much greater freedom than Lindsell's or Schaeffer's interpretation of their theory would seem to allow.
To win back the youth vote, the Republican Party will have to do
much more than
find a fresh voice to say the
same thing.