For
less severe falls, use of an ideal dynamic rope means «you are going to be able to recover more quickly,» Milton says.
Not exact matches
The company, which also publishes Scotland's Daily Record and regional titles including the Manchester Evening News, saw print advertising revenues drop 17pc across the four months but said the
fall was
less severe at 15pc in the second half of the period amid «improved national advertising performance.»
Interestingly, and likely because of their flexibility and their uncanny ability to right their body and relax during
falls, cats that
fall from heights over seven stories typically sustain fewer and
less severe injuries than those that
fall from heights between two and seven stories.
«But the recession in Canada has been far
less severe than that of the United States, where the travel market
fell 16 % in 2009.
As the climate changes in response to global warming, longer and more
severe droughts are projected for the western US The resulting dry conditions will increase the pressure on groundwater supplies as more is pumped to meet demand even as
less precipitation
falls to replenish it.
While the courts remain slow to conclude that a dog bite or a
fall from a horse is unlikely to cause
severe injury, there is certainly scope for a defendant to argue in
less obvious cases, such as, for example, a claimant being knocked over by a dog, that the damage was not likely to be
severe and that consequently the claimant has failed to satisfy the requirements of s 2 (2)(a).
The subjects with ADHD in the longitudinal studies generally
fall into 1 of 3 main groups as young adults: (1) approximately 25 % eventually function comparably to matched normal controls; (2) the majority show continued functional impairment, limitations in learning and applying knowledge, and restricted social participation, particularly poor progress through school; and (3)
less than 25 % develop significant,
severe problems, including psychiatric and / or antisocial disturbance.31 It is unclear what factors determine the long - term outcomes.
«Confidence has double - dipped in the last two recoveries (in early 1992 and early 2003) without the economy
falling back into recession and the June pullback in confidence is far
less severe than either of those two episodes,» according to an RDQ research note.