Sentences with phrase «large degree since»

Not exact matches

Since a person essentially is what he does and can do, his habitual occupation to a large degree determines his character.
And they are popping up all over the place since, to a large degree, creating a megachurch just takes marketing and money.
(Moltmann, p. 17) Since experience can not be reduced to concepts, a theology that takes experience as its starting point must be a narrative theology, as is biblical theology, to a large degree.
Women without college educations are dramatically less economically dependent upon their husbands than they used to be, while the economic dependence of women with college educations on their husbands remains high because although both men and women with college degrees have seen surging incomes since the 1970s, most women with college degrees experience large income penalties for leaving the work force for a while to raise children, while women without college degrees don't face those kinds of income penalties in their far less skilled jobs.
On December 1, 2009, two astronomers submitted a pre-print suggesting that the planet's extreme axial tilt (an obliquity of 97 degrees) may have resulted from the presence of a large moon that has since been ejected from orbit around the ice giant by the pull of another planet during the orbital migration of the giant planets early in the formation of the Solar System.
Since it was founded in 1994 — at a time when Miramax ruled the American indie business — Fox Searchlight has operated with a remarkable degree of autonomy as part of the larger Fox entertainment empire.
Even a relatively small amount of debt can become a large burden, since students have to begin paying back the loans six months after they leave school, whether or not they have a degree.
Aside from the Great Depression, every other recession since that time, the banks, insurers, etc., may have had a large subset under stress, but not to this degree.
However, since the mid-seventies, the public view and the potential appreciation of the hot aesthetic in visual art has to a large degree been suppressed.
Since a large number of students are accomplished artists and earn a living, Transart's concept is ideal to work toward a degree and to expand one's artistic career in addition to having a job.»
Questioning the effects of a rapidly evolving culture on «our sense of self and identity as well as on art's form and larger social role» — as the exhibition claims to do — has been a concern of varying degree within the arts since the early modern period and will likely continue to have new permutations every generation.
What is clear is that uncontrolled emissions will very soon put us in range of temperatures that have been unseen since the Eemian / Stage 5e period (about 120,000 years ago) when temperatures may have been a degree or so warmer than now but where sea level was 4 to 6m higher (see this recent discussion the possible sensitivities of the ice sheets to warming and the large uncertainties involved).
Since humans began burning fossil fuels on a large scale, the global average temperature has risen 1.4 degrees Fahrenheit (0.8 degrees Celsius), with most of the increase occurring since Since humans began burning fossil fuels on a large scale, the global average temperature has risen 1.4 degrees Fahrenheit (0.8 degrees Celsius), with most of the increase occurring since since 1970.
Air temps in arctic are almost precisely the same as the average for the past 50 years — So it is unlikely air temps have created ice loss — BUT CONVERSELY — the increased open arctic water SHOULD be affecting the arctic air temp - but is not (large expanses of 1 degree C arctic water make it difficult for air temps to drop to minus ten C — but since that is what is happening, then in fact there must be much more cold air around to create «normal» arctic temps for this time of the year)
Since science done in the past, say pre-1999, must all be incorrect if they used historic temp series prior to such large adjustments and you could not compare data from old report to new ones since the past temps have changed nearly a degree in adjustments sSince science done in the past, say pre-1999, must all be incorrect if they used historic temp series prior to such large adjustments and you could not compare data from old report to new ones since the past temps have changed nearly a degree in adjustments ssince the past temps have changed nearly a degree in adjustments sincesince.
So [edited] I think that the results of Vecchi and Soden do put a dent in the hypothesis that human industrial emissions are largely responsible for the observed increase in Atlantic tropical cyclones and that they will have a larger impact into the future [edited]- Chip Knappenberger to some degree, funded by the fossil fuels industry since 1992
There is some uncertainty in the water vapor and cloud feedback strength, but this is not a serious uncertainty since water vapor and clouds are constrained by the Clausius - Clapeyron relation, and since the SW and LW radiative effects of clouds cancel each other to a large degree.
To claim that the global avg temp might as well have decreased 0.7 degrees as increased 0.7 degrees since preindustrial times flies in the face of basic physics, namely that the planetary temperature is governed (a.o.) by the planetary energy balance, and that this balance has substantially changed over the past 100 or so years due in large part to anthropogenic climate forcings, with a bit of help from natural climate forcings.
Which means that having a large network will naturally make you climb search results rankings (since you're more likely to be part of the 1st or 2nd degree connections of the searcher).
Since the mid-90s, women have obtained a larger share of college degrees than men and increasingly earn as much or more than their partners, especially in the middle, working, and lower classes (Glynn 2012).
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