Sentences with phrase «find sloppy work»

«If I find sloppy work in such a visible place,» says home inspector Karl Champley, «then what does that say about wiring hidden in the walls?»
When the General Accounting Office tried to verify statistics from the Department of Labor on the success of its Job Corps program, it found some sloppy work.

Not exact matches

Once you've found out that sloppy work has led to a poor product, you can either face up to it (but that's inconvenient and painful and maybe expensive) or you can unethically (and maybe dangerously) sweep the problem under the carpet.
Perhaps because when not creating recipes for the blog I am usually a little sloppy when measuring ingredients and the results work out just find.
As for placing the mix in the freezer, this is supposed to chill the mix to a point where it can be handled without getting sloppy — I found that an hour worked for me, but the timing may differ based on your freezer settings.
I agree that everyone needs to find the silhouette that works for their body type — and that throwing something on at the last second that hasn't been thought of as part of the outfit can make you look sloppier or more uncoordinated, but the right cardie can be great.
Peter Debruge of Variety also finds it to be a «lumbering, confused, and cacophonous mess,» but, while acknowledging that it's almost impossible to divorce the film from its production woes, Indiewire's Eric Kohn writes, «It's sloppy and amateurish in parts, but always reaching for something, often resulting in a fascinating half - formed beast working through a lot of baggage: a vanity project about the nature of vanity, centered around one of literature's most famous examples, in the context of the most famous vanity projects of all time coming to fruition.
There are surely some sleazy jobs, and some not worth the $ $, and some people who deliver sloppy work... but you find enough gems to make it worthwhile.
But grammatical and spelling errors make the work appear sloppy and can harm your chances of finding an agent or getting a publishing deal in the first place.
They have no idea how amateurish their writing is (telling, POV errors, sloppy syntax, etc.) and are staggered to find that their work does NOT need a copy edit — it needs a developmental edit and another draft.
Indeed, lawyers who are sloppy or uncaring delegators of work can free up time to watch webinars (assuming they actually watch them with the sound up) but lawyers who are diligent, competent, professional, and decent and in high demand because of those qualities can find themselves lacking the time, especially as year end approaches, to watch webinars of only fortuitous relevance and thereby find themselves in the cross-hairs of bureaucratic cannon.
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