Sentences with phrase «little evidence of anything»

While senior candidates can expect an uplift should their role change in scope, whether by the inclusion of greater leadership or regional responsibilities, there has been little evidence of anything other than incremental increases at the senior end of the market.
However until then, there is very little evidence of anything other than consolidation for a move into the upside targets particularly in the DJIA and S&P which are yet to acquire their smaller targets.

Not exact matches

And there's very little scientific evidence to support the benefit of a gluten - free diet in anything except celiac disease.
In that sense, the Fed has the potential to make a huge structural difference in the economic lives of blacks and other minorities by heavily weighting the full employment part of the their mandate relative to the inflation part, especially since there's still considerable slack in the job market, with lower - wage, minority workers facing the brunt of it, and — importantly — little evidence of inflationary pressure (if anything, the Fed has missed their inflation target on the low side for a few years running now).
We're going to let you in on a little secret: Investors focused on economic growth are wasting their time... If anything, the evidence suggests a negative correlation between equity returns and GDP growth... It may be that the best prices can be had in times of low economic growth, whereas we tend to overpay in a growing economy.
Scott Hannah, president of the Vancouver - based Credit Counselling Society, which helps consumers who are drowning in debt, says he's seen little evidence households have learned anything from the financial crisis.
Meanwhile, medal contender Park Tae - Hwan of South Korea was disqualified after winning his heat, though review found little evidence that he did anything to deserve the DQ.
Your baby doesn't need anything more than a little wipe down like I said after birth to get the blood off if there's any or the meconium which is that dark sticky poop and scientific evidence is pointing toward mom should wait at least a week actually to do any type of sponge bath.
However the report said there was little evidence that using incentives within the classroom encouraged anything other than letting badly - behaved children win rewards for mere attendance of lessons.
Furthermore, the committee argued, there is little credible evidence that you can do anything to delay the kinds of memory problems that are often associated with aging.
Of course, if his films are any evidence, von Trier has been orbiting Planet Melancholia for a while now, even before his widely reported battle with clinical depression, and so it's little surprise that the main characters in Melancholia enter the stage with an existential weight on their shoulders that has little, if anything, to do with the world's imminent demise.
Americans for some reason assume that Recovery groups work, when in fact there is little or no hard evidence of their ability to help people recover from anything, as this book will document.
Perusing the user reviews for The Legend of Zelda: Breath of the Wild, there is very little evidence to suggest Horizon «s zealous devotees (I'm sure it has them) have been orchestrating anything of the sort.
And given the Soviet Union's deliberate neglect of «Black Square» for decades, keeping it hidden away in archives, there's little evidence the Americans knew of «Black Square» as anything more than a legend.)
* There is too much conflicting evidence about climate change to know whether it is actually happening * Current climate change is part of a pattern that has been going on for millions of years * Climate change is just a natural fluctuation in Earth's temperatures * Even if we do experience some consequences from climate change, we will be able to cope with them * The effects of climate change are likely to be catastrophic * The evidence for climate change is unreliable * There are a lot of very different theories about climate change and little agreement about which is right * Scientists have in the past changed their results to make climate change appear worse than it is * Scientists have hidden research that shows climate change is not serious * Climate change is a scam * Social / behavioural scepticism measures * Climate change is so complicated, that there is very little politicians can do about it * There is no point in me doing anything about climate change because no - one else is * The actions of a single person doesn't make any difference in tackling climate change * People are too selfish to do anything about climate change * Not much will be done about climate change, because it is not in human nature to respond to problems that won't happen for many years * It is already too late to do anything about climate change * The media is often too alarmist about climate change * Environmentalists do their best to emphasise the worst possible effects of climate change * Climate change has now become a bit of an outdated issue * Whether it is important or not, on a day - to - day basis I am bored of hearing about climate change
It may be asking a for a lot of research to put that together, but I think a non cherry picked set of graphs would be a more credible demonstration that although the earth appears to have been warming at a rate of around 1 degree F per century since the end of the Little Ice Age in the mid 1800s, there's no convincing evidence that this warming is anything other than a natural process.
The evidence of the size of climate zone shifts and the associated changes in atmospheric heights from Mediaeval Warm Period to Little Ice Age to date suggests that the natural solar and ocean induced changes in the effective radiating height are far greater than anything that could be achieved by human emissions.
She would rather hire a graduate with a 2:1 and evidence of extracurricular activities or interests than a graduate with a first with little interest in anything other than...
I suggest that with great frequency the Harper - LeBreton usage («the ministerial usage») of «obvious» signals the speaker's intention to engage in an argument from ignorance, in the sense that they assert something as fact for which they will offer little, if anything, by way of substantial evidence.
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