Sentences with phrase «idiosyncrasies which»

However, these are people businesses with personal idiosyncrasies which are often causing or exacerbating the problems which fall outside the normal remit of a corporate rescue team and it is here where we feel that both we and mediation can add value.
Each has their own idiosyncrasies which become more difficult to understand and work with as one gets older.

Not exact matches

According to the film, it's apparently all about Seattle and you had to be there, but simultaneously we the audience are supposed to care about this experience which is only Seattle idiosyncrasy.
quirks are human idiosyncrasies, oddities of behavior, QUARKS are subatomic particles of which there six.
But by and large the interesting selections of respects in which to interpret things are determined by culture, minutely modified by personal history and idiosyncrasy.
We can go in with all the ideology in the world but our kids will have behaviors, idiosyncrasies, & unique needs which will (and must!)
«The greatest pressure we can put to bear on Iran to change the behavior is a collective pressure,» a goal which was to be achieved by continuing to work in conjunction with other nations, as opposed to adopting the Trump idiosyncrasy of acting unilaterally.
It sends up the quirky idiosyncrasies of local and national politics; writer / director Alex Crowley, who was Boris Johnson's former political advisor, had a rich source of material from which to draw.
Future studies could flesh out the significance of the «Russ - ome's» idiosyncrasies by comparing them with the Human Connectome Project (HCP), which Poldrack has served on the advisory board of since it launched six years ago.
While extreme gait anomalies may indicate muscle imbalances, which may require orthotics, most foot idiosyncrasies can be overcome with appropriate shoes.
She quickly becomes fascinated by his idiosyncrasies, which are equal only to her own.
It's impossible to not like «The Dude» and Walter, which complement each other in their weird idiosyncrasies.
At the risk of further estranging myself from De Palma geeks, I must admit I rather enjoyed watching a Body Double without Armond White guilt - tripping my subconscious — which is not to say that Looker circumvents an auteurist reading altogether, but the idiosyncrasies that betray it as «Crichtonian» (like a novelistic conceit that starts off each new act with a placard indicating the day of the week *) are less than venerable and thus hardly lend themselves to an apologia.
The Greatest Showman's sentimentality brings to mind Robert Altman and Alan Rudolph's Buffalo Bill and the Indians, or Sitting Bull's History Lesson (1976), which is the greatest, least sentimental film ever made about the political origins and secret idiosyncrasy of American show business.
It is a riveting study of the ways in which the idiosyncrasies of body language - the tilt of a head, a generous laugh, a rigid stare - and the delivery of a line can drastically alter the banality of language.
Everyone here transcends their typecasting, including slacker balladeers Mark and Jay Duplass, who make a bid for mainstream success (two words: car chase) without precisely abandoning their idiosyncrasies, such as their camcorder - honed / derived aesthetic — which establishes a cinematic grammar that allows for shabby but essential angles like a shot of Segel's hair poking up from behind a vending machine.
The screenplay credited to Pulitzer - Prize - winning playwright David Lindsay - Abaire follows the broad strokes of the novel's plot without nurturing enough lively idiosyncrasy to make the story come alive, which ironically is what Inkheart is all about.
It's worth remembering that the aesthetic tendencies of somebody like Lynch, however striking or fascinating they are in practice, aren't in and of themselves sources of depth or substance; his style is a consequence of the emotional logic of his films, not the other way around, which is to say that his idiosyncrasies of form are warranted by the material.
The latter is called Omi — German for «grandmother» — by the family; she only speaks German, which is the kind of idiosyncrasy that practically screams out, «This will be an important plot point later!»
After all, even if the authors attempted to draw a representative sample — which they did not — the idiosyncrasies of such a small sample would preclude any ability to generalize.
They were selected not so much for the eloquence or polish of their prose — some of them in fact have never written fiction — as for the idiosyncrasy of their voices, which should be sure to amuse, inspire, disturb and outrage.
The is one quite significant (and annoying) idiosyncrasy with the S5.1 that we also noted on the S5.5 and it revolves around the positioning of the devices power and volume buttons — both of which are on the left hand edge.
The deeper you dig to find what would have worked best in the past, the more you mirror the idiosyncrasies of the past, which does not then reveal the long - term principles that generally work, over intermediate - term periods.
Spending time getting to know your pet's habits, idiosyncrasies, likes, and dislikes provides a valuable starting point to which you can compare any changes.
Except it's chess with close to a thousand possible pieces, almost all of which are unique, with gaming idiosyncrasies borne out of the parent anime series that birthed them.
It explained: «This balance is perfectly reflected in the idiosyncrasies of wood - letter typography and the crafted production of letterpress, which sits at the heart of the new brand identity.
The pairing of Marcel Broodthaers and Hanne Darboven in a single text would seem to favor the former's methods, which lampooned and utilized the idiosyncrasies and serendipities of surface and contingency that brought about such a pairing in the first... Read More
Other pieces, like «Untitled (05 - 07),» which is suspended from the ceiling just above «Untitled (Ren Screen),» were created by Rezac over a decade before Address, but still give the impression that Rezac had the idiosyncrasies of the Ren's space in mind: «Untitled (05 - 07)» is an inscrutable arrangement of cast bronze cones, cylinders, and planes.
With these pieces he is able to collect and reappropriate items in a new and unique way, creating a fused landscape which highlights idiosyncrasies that we may not see or notice in the world and their connection to our subconscious.
His observing eye focuses on the human body with all its idiosyncrasies, and on the sociocultural environment in which that body is embedded.
The pairing of Marcel Broodthaers and Hanne Darboven in a single text would seem to favor the former's methods, which lampooned and utilized the idiosyncrasies and serendipities of surface and contingency that brought about such a pairing in the first place — which is to say the occurrence of two contemporaneous exhibitions in two major German institutions by two artists who dealt with issues of archive, text - as - image, and art - as - work just as these tropes have re-emerged as the historically available «next - big - thing.»
Among his principal bodies of work are A Map of The East, (published by David R. Godine and Thames & Hudson), which explores the character and idiosyncrasies of Japan, China and Southeast Asia; and Wounded Cities (published as a book by Steidl in 2008), which explores the «mental wounds» that were left by the terror attacks in New York in 2001, and other attacks in cities around the world.
«Its going,» wrote Franz Schulze for Art News, «will remove one of the more provocative idiosyncrasies in Chicago art -LSB-...] The Wells Street shows itself, which means the work of singularly devoted group of young painters -LSB-...] bound together in idiom and attitude -LSB-...] Wells Street will be missed; not because its members have as yet arrived at coherent realization of objectiveness, but because the objectives are worthy and unique in the local scene.»
In the early 1970s, Goodnough began shifting toward Color Field painting, usually executed in acrylic and oil, to which he added his own idiosyncrasies.
Burn injuries of every degree can result in serious health issues, none of which are without their own idiosyncrasies.
• whether the knowledge about the client which the employee gained was of a confidential nature, or involved an intimate knowledge of the client's particular needs, preferences or idiosyncrasies;
As does favouring local idiosyncrasies over national norms in an area which has no necessary local content — and where national norms are actually available!
Guilermo Torrealba feels that the Peruvian legislation closely follows those of Colombia and Chile apart from minor considerations which are an integral part of every country's idiosyncrasy.
Criptonoticias has speculated that Surbtc's launch of ethereum and bitcoin trading in Peru may have been motivated by the ease with which the company could adapt to Peruvian regulation — which Torrealba described as closely resembling the legislation of Chile and Colombia, excluding minor «considerations peculiar to the idiosyncrasy of each country».
Instead, it «reflects what psychologists call a «shared coordinative structure,» which includes how we harmonize our gaze and body sway and the little mannerisms and idiosyncrasies of how we speak.
Instead, it «reflects what psychologists call a «shared coordinative structure» which includes how we harmonize our gaze, body sway, and the little mannerisms and idiosyncrasies of how we speak.
Industry players joke about the idiosyncrasies of both Simon and General Growth, which reflect the personalities of David Simon and John Bucksbaum.
He noted that mortgage lending, which relies on set formulas such as debt - to - income ratios are easier to teach robots than the specialized knowledge of a real estate pro: «You need to know all the idiosyncrasies of your local neighborhood, or at least you should.»
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