Sentences with phrase «lesser status»

The field filled up fast at a place that's often an opportunity for players with lesser status or priority.
We anticipate that this will be more or less the status quo for 2017, with prices remaining depressed but not to the level experienced in the 2015 to 2016 period.
Property prices and the cost of living are not horrendous (like sydney), so the city seems a little bit less status - oriented, than sydney or perth.
Translation: Of course it is, among buyers who are less status conscious.
Facebook ran an experiment on almost 689,000 users in which it tweaked the algorithm running their news feed to display slightly more or slightly less status updates from friends that contained positive or negative words.
Why not look to leagues with less status than the premier league and the spanish league?
For these reasons, rehabilitation, protection, and deterrence have a lesser status in punishment than retribution: they are secondary.
Even so, Ruether balks» at claiming a historical precedent that might perpetuate a lesser status in Christianity for the female divine dimension.
He didn't say «Alex Ferguson, Jose Mourinho, or even Sam Allardyce» to indicate his lesser status — no — he's put himself right in there as though that's everyone's natural list for the top three managers in England.
She has considered applying for Israeli citizenship, which would cement her status as a citizen of Israel rather than the lesser status of resident in the city.
For the unmarried woman, there was less status, slightly more freedom, but in most cases, money or property left to her would be administered by a male guardian who could dispense it at his whim.
Continuously moving one's head with constant ducking and darting eye movements indicates someone under threat and of a lesser status.
Rockwell and Realism in an Abstract World examines the forces that inspired the relegation of narrative painting, and especially the art of illustration, to a lesser status by mid-century.
It's not necessary for artists — actors in this case — to be elevated into a starry celebrity; they can be pushed away by demoting them to a lesser status than that enjoyed by the critic, as was done for much of the life of theatre in the west.
Worse, it leaves us with the problem that one of them will be viewed as having less status than the other.
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