Sentences with phrase «kind of assumptions go»

What kind of assumptions go into that book value?
There's all kinds of assumptions going through their head.»

Not exact matches

«There's no assumption that there's some kind of blocking going on,» he said, which is all the more reason to put as much concrete, steel, and other radiation - absorbing building materials between you and a blast.
Right now, however, doors are slamming and voices are raised upstairs, so I think I'd better go put my own assumptions about children and parenting, if not education right now, into some kind of forceful action.
The assumption that we make is that the universe in its expansion is fairly homogeneous; that one part is pretty much exactly the same as any other part, same physical rules, same basic kind of expansion of time and space, going on everywhere.
If you are taking her out, you could just ask her about what kind of places that she wants to go with you rather than making an assumption and deciding it by yourself.
It will also allow her to feel comfortable with the fact that you are not making any other kind of assumptions that might go along with a sleepover, and it should keep any temptations on your part or hers from being acted upon too early in the dating process.
(Again, all kinds of assumptions of similar sales and who knows what's going to be happening in publishing in 21 years.
Whilst on one level it makes sense that Smith would want to keep up with Jones (he says, trying to spin a combination «keeping up with the Joneses» / Alas Smith & Jones crack out of the shaky assumption that everyone will understand Amazon also goes by the name Jones, which it doesn't), e-readers on the whole aren't exactly the kind of thing that Smith's regular customers would likely go for, by its own admission: CEO Kate Swann describes the chain's base as «lighter book readers», with figures showing the average Smith customer buys just three books a year, with particularly strong showings from non-fiction and children's books.
And there is a funny sort of thing goes on you know, whereby it's yeah, I suppose it's a herd kind of mentality and an assumption.
All reasonable assumptions, particularly the «this is what we can charge if everyone goes digital and the audience doesn't grow and still retain some kind of profit» which I hadn't really considered, but should have.
Before the advent of the science of genetics this kind of assumption that the «apple doesn't fall far from the (championship) tree» would be all a buyer could go on.
Not only did they give you a new direction, but they were also critical of the kinds of assumptions that went with what gesture was, and the idea of direct painting.
I am kind of a reductionist empiricist by nature so I don't see anything wrong w / playing around w / oceanic fertilization, under the assumption that it can't go * too * bad * too * quickly.
I am not at all surprised that statisticians like this kind of stuff, but the errors are not in the statistics (for the most part), but in the underlying assumptions — and statisticians are not necessarily going to see that.
One of the things that's interesting is we are very, I think we parent very much as partners but it's one of those things where I'm kind of unaware where I make assumptions in things, but what I really am aware of is I know that she carries guilt over not being around for the kids all the time, that I don't have because there's no cultural expectation that dad is going to be around all the time, so the fact that I want to or don't want to is kind of like my choice, but for her there's all this expectation around what it means to be a mom and what kind of care you're supposed to give and I know that it's there and it weights on her.
But that kind of effort and risk assumption is the sort of thing grown - up firms do: they understand that Sales requires going many extra miles and that the potential payoff is worth it.
The analysis of what I'll call the «Susskind School» is predicated on the assumption that there's going to be some kind of radical change in the delivery of legal services — without ever identifying quite what that radical change will look like.
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