Sentences with phrase «key juncture»

The phrase "key juncture" refers to an important point or moment that can greatly impact the outcome of a situation or event. Full definition
«In absence of any identifiable relief we see the next key juncture being their full year 2015 result where we see risk to full year 2016 guidance meeting consensus expectations,» he says.
The packager then does all of the editorial and production work for the publisher (with publisher approval at key junctures of the process), and generally ships the finished books directly to the publisher's warehouse.
Sponsors become more important as your career progresses, especially as you near key junctures in your career path or when fewer positions are available, the competition for those limited spots is fierce, and decisions about candidates are not just up to an individual manager.
At three key junctures in Jesus» ordeal he and his mother come face - to - face: at the Sanhedrin trial, at the public flogging and after Jesus falls on the road to Golgotha.
Also absent at key junctures is argumentation itself.
Rather, at some key junctures he jumped headlong into an entirely new function.
To the point, I'm seeing in the financial markets today a parallel with perhaps THE key juncture in the trek to the actual Everest summit.
Bergman's depth and popularity make his work a key juncture at which the meaning of modern existence and religious thought converge.
We did a better job in the second half and the key juncture in the second half was when Eli Wright came into the game.
It «is a key juncture in understanding the problem of women's underrepresentation» on STEM faculties, they wrote in an e-mail.
At a key juncture, Ivy sallies forth on her own, with only her blind faith to guide her or, as her father puts it, «She's led by love.»
When researchers looked to see whether teachers responded to this «Rule of 80,» they found a steep acceleration in teacher retirements right at that key juncture (see «Golden Handcuffs,» research, Winter 2010).
Dr Kevan Collins, Chief Executive of the EEF, said: «We applaud the focus on what we know is a key juncture in children's lives - we want to find out what actually makes the difference in nurturing the literacy and life skills at the end of primary school that are so important for the springboard to success in secondary schooling and beyond.»
For many states, this year will be a key juncture for decisions about the standards — and related exams — before their full weight is felt in classrooms, district offices, and state education departments in the 2014 - 15 school year.
A lot of people chose the latter but over time, many of them «went along,» and didn't speak up at key junctures.
Apple seems to be at a key juncture.
With interest rates certainly having bottomed in the U.S., we are at a key juncture in the bond market.
Blow has you trying to help navigate bubbles from one end of a level to the exit at the end by placing fans at key junctures, and adjusting their power level so that they push each bubble just enough (and not too much) to make it to the end.
Farther along on the second floor, the friendship between Jasper Johns and Rauschenberg forms another key juncture in the history the permanent collection outlines.
Through the Integrated Early Jurassic Timescale and Earth System project (JET), a multi-faceted, international programme of research on the functioning of the Earth system, new data from the old Mochras core will be combined with data from a new core to provide an understanding of global change and quantify the roles of tectonic, palaeoceanographic, and astronomical forcing on hyperthermal (and hypothermal) events at this key juncture in Earth history.
a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z