Sentences with phrase «hearing much demand»

Vendors haven't reported hearing much demand for offline capabilities, so it's not a development priority.

Not exact matches

Interestingly, the character of Marianne is much less attractive on the pages of the script than the Marianne we both saw and heard on the screen: much more selfish, demanding, even cruel.
They have heard demands for sacrifice of comforts but have not heard much promise of salvation for them.
There is so much for all of us that hides Jesus from us — the church itself hides him, all the hoopla of church with ministers as lost in the thick of it as everybody else so that the holiness of it somehow vanishes away to the point where services of worship run the risk of becoming only a kind of performance — on some Sundays better, on some Sundays worse — and only on the rarest occasions does anything strike to the quick the way that little girl's cry did with every last person who heard her realizing that Jesus didn't show for any of them — the mystery and miracle of Jesus with all his extraordinary demands upon us, all his extraordinary promises.
Late last month, I also heard some funny unusual stories about next season tickets sales... something about demand not being as much as it used to be.
You'd heard all the stories about international soccer stars and their breezy contempt for the press: How Paul Gascoigne of England once belched into a live microphone on Italian TV; how European players will demand as much as $ 10,000 for the favor of an interview; how four months ago Argentine superstar Diego Maradona strafed journalists camped outside his home with pellets from an air gun.
The union leader said the previous Labour government put «too much faith» in the City and demanded the shadow Cabinet «come out of the shadows and be heard».
«From the distributors we've been hearing that they've never seen so much demand
In select theatres and on - demand Friday, Outcast stars one - time Golden Globe nominee Hayden Christensen — who's last five films you probably haven't heard of, much less seen — as an opium - addicted former Crusader named Jacob, hanging out in the Far East.
Ultimately, Facing History and Ourselves hopes to create a society of thoughtful citizens who think deeply about the way they live — when they are riding the subway to work as much as when they hear about incidents of mass violence that demand a global response.
Self - published authors can hire freelance editors to comb their books for typos and grammatical mistakes, but when it comes to structural editing — telling the author the third quarter of a novel is too windy or insisting that the current ending needs to be tossed out entirely and redone, things no writer likes to hear but some writers need to — an editor - for - hire is much less motivated to displease her client even when demanding major rewrites would make for a better book.
I think people would be much more inclined to hear what you're saying if you'd titled this piece something like, «Ebooks Demand A New Kind of Library,» rather than congratulating Harper - Collins for being stupidly heavy - handed and frankly obtuse.
We hear so much about the current «drought» because a) people confuse an increase in demand (increasing population, etc.) with a shortage in supply... and b) because our farmers thought the wet than usual period would go on forever.
Whenever the growth in demand for legal services slows (and it can not get much slower than right now), we hear from many law
Whenever the growth in demand for legal services slows (and it can not get much slower than right now), we hear from many law firm management teams that they are highly focused on expense control... as if this is not an ongoing obligation and these firms willingly leave money on the table during good times.
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