Sentences with phrase «hold much significance»

While the following study on the merits of plowing may not hold much significance for the majority of us, it does hold clear implications for many farmers in the U.S. and, more significantly, the millions living in Asia and Africa.
In the film, the whole Ya - Ya concept doesn't really hold much significance at all; it's just a side quirk in an overly familiar story about mother - daughter understanding — or, should I say, misunderstanding.
This doesn't hold much significance for business owners, because it doesn't show how the owner's equity is grown.
In Germanic and Celtic cultures, the ash tree held much significance.

Not exact matches

If disruption theory is correct, Tesla's future holds either acquisition by a much larger incumbent or a years - long and hard - fought battle for market significance.
For all this, fans gave him the nickname «Bitcoin Jesus», a Biblical charge that seems to hold as much significance now, even as his standing in the community has changed.
As meaningful as my marriage is and as much as I am in love with my husband — my marriage is not — no, it CAN NOT be the only relationship that holds «significance» in my life.
Everyone will be talking about it over the next few weeks, but how much significance do the nuptials of Wills and Kate actually hold?
Spurs are still holding out hopes of catching Leicester City and, with United very much in the middle of a scramble for the last Champions League position, tomorrow's game is of huge significance for both teams.
That postmark probably holds as much significance to the residents of Buffalo Grove as «Beverly Hills, 90210 «does to the denizens of that affluent section of Southern California.
Talk to activists in Brighton and you'll realise the old dividing lines of the 1970s don't hold as much significance to today's generation.
Luckily, this is often of little significance, since money can be stored without risk of loss at a bank for much of the game, or if the party holds the very useful strongbox.
Chalkbeat's Matt Barnum writes that, under ESSA, schools «across the country are about to be held accountable for student attendance — attaching stakes to a measure that previously had much less significance and increasing the risk that schools will try to manipulate that data.»
But how do I accurately put into words just how much that game means to me, just how much it changed me, shaped me... How do you describe that overwhelming feeling of warmth that comes over you when you talk about something that holds so much significance to you?
Luckily, this is often of little significance, since money can be stored without risk of loss at a bank for much of the game, or if the party holds the very useful strongbox.
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