Sentences with phrase «generally averse»

Indians are generally averse to online transactions, and finding the right solution for it has been a challenge to many multinationals entering the country.
We're generally averse to «tracking» (deciding early in secondary education who's right for college and who's right for work), so our state policies generally view CTE as an «add on» to, not a replacement for, a traditional high school education.

Not exact matches

Generally speaking, they're more risk - averse than U.S. funds.
I'm generally risk averse, and most great entrepreneurs I know are as well.
Those with a risk - averse mindset generally oppose innovating through experimentation, like rapid prototyping or continual iteration.
Through most of the June quarter our risk - averse approach to fixed - income investing proved beneficial as rates generally increased, although the Greece crisis precipitated a sudden trend reversal at the quarter's close.
Jim Bianco and a few others thought that a Gary Cohn Fed Presidency might introduce a little sanity and downsizing to the organization but the room generally expected the Fed to remain risk - averse and PhD / academia - driven for many years to come.
Earlier studies have found that Catholics are generally more prone to take speculative risks than the average population, while Protestants are more risk - averse than the average population.
«But it's also due to young people generally becoming more risk - averse than they were.
Those amounts nearly doubled in people who took citalopram: They were generally more averse to causing harm, but still preferred profiting from their own pain over another's, Crockett's team reports online today in Current Biology.
Traders, on the other hand, are generally less risk averse because they deal with losses every day; they work with large portfolios of stocks tend to look at the long - term, bigger picture, rather than focusing too much on individual, day - to - day ups and downs.
Generally favoring low - budget and independently - produced pictures, but not averse to working within the studio system (he had a good relationship with Daryl Zanuck), he knocked out a string of genre classics — from «Pickup On South Street» and «Forty Guns» to «Shock Corridor» and his epic autobiographical masterpiece «The Big Red One» — that quietly influenced many of your favourite directors.
Modern authors often choose the present tense to add edginess and immediacy to a story, but the more traditional use of past tense is generally better loved by big publishing companies, who are increasingly risk averse for financial reasons.Tales abound of authors instructed by commercial publishers to rewrite an entire book to change the tense from present to past, before thy'll consider publishing it.
I think in life we're generally conflict averse, so it's hard to remember to lead with the drama when talking about our novels.
We are also extremely risk averse and generally place greater importance on safety than rate of return on investments.
We know that people are generally loss averse, so they tend to feel losses far more than gains.
After determining whether you are in fact a very risk averse conservative investor or a highly risk tolerant «aggressive growth» investor, or a balanced investor halfway between these extremes, an adviser would generally try to match the client risk profile to the stated long - term investment goals; then he or she would find the investment solutions that will achieve those goals without subjecting the investor to more risk than they're equipped to tolerate.
However, working with a publisher has its drawbacks; you are beholden to them, and they are generally risk averse.
But point being is that to bring this game to its full artistic and creative potential requires money, and game industry publishers are generally becoming more and more risk - averse.
Studies on risk behavior or risk - averse behavior have shown that people who are, well, let's just say people who aren't under risk or under stress, they're generally more likely to be risk - averse when they're choosing between two positive outcomes.
«The law generally has lagged be-hind its corporate counterparts, and it's the most risk - averse profession,» she says.
Judge Buller says she is not averse to picking up the phone and calling people the client is having problems communicating with — she has found that judges don't generally have a problem with people not taking their calls.
This paper starts by assuming that judges are generally risk averse with respect to reversal, and that they provide opinions when they believe that their work will be reviewed by a higher court.
Generally, the Strasbourg jurisprudence has been notable for its vigorous protection of political expression, and has been correspondingly averse to restrictions on political activity, such as had impeded pressure groups at British election times in Bowman v United Kingdom (Application 24839 / 94)(1998) 26 EHRR 1.
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