Sentences with phrase «little use in»

But during traditionally slower months, many practitioners reason that there's little use in trying to find customers.
One might think that job boards would be of little use in such a competitive market, just a direct path to the black hole of resumes.
(A wallet provider would be exempt if they did not exchange bitcoin for fiat, but those types of services would have little use in the Philippines.)
If your plan does not even fully accomplish that goal, there is little use in paying the premium.
The assumption of a global annual average increase in the coming decades +1 C and +2 C, is of little use in defining changes in climate impacts at the regional and local scale, which are so dependent in how large scale circulation features would change in the coming decades.
It really is an astonishing letter and admission that the historical record is of little use in estimating temperature trends in the US, supposedly the best in the world.
Storing ice for air - conditioning is useful in sunny Spain, but little use in grey Britain.
For mature or decaying eddies linear theory is little use in predicting the steering level.
Steve, all praise to you and your work, but you are correct in your assumption about your readers thinking that tree rings and temperatures are a forced marriage with strange offsprigs of little use in climate change analyses.
Superlatives such as this are generally of little use in criticism, but every so often you see something that reaffirms your love for art, reminds you how it is truly constituted and reveals why it is so hard to come by.
Dreadnoughts have been made completely obsolete as we don't shoot at structures any more, triage carriers have little use in a war that doesn't need battleships, and you don't need supercapitals to counter enemy capitals if they aren't fielding any.
As with any reptile species, there is little use in selling them if you opt to not stock all the accessories and feeders expected of returning customers.
If I diagnose and start treatment in January, there is little use in waiting three months for the next treatment.
The INCOME APPROACH is used in the appraisal of rental properties and has little use in the valuation of single family dwellings.
Word isn't even available for the iPad, so it's kind of ironic that a book meant to help you compose * for * the iPad might be of little use in composing * on * the iPad!
These have been left out of Amazon's latest ereader — judged of little use in a single - function device — but some people will appreciate being able to listen to music and load books onto a microSD card rather than forever relying on the 2 GB internal memory.
He graduated from Columbia University with a bachelor's degree in Visual Arts, which has been of little use in his professional career but looks pretty nice on the wall.
But if they vary only a little, one would expect them to be of little use in predicting future outcomes.
Many education organizations are vocal in their opposition to the emphasis on standardized tests in current policy, believing that they narrow curriculum, cost too much, and are of little use in improving student learning.
But his extraordinary range, which has enabled him to play Jackie Robinson in one movie and James Brown in the next, has been put to little use in Black Panther, where he runs the gamut from dignified to resolute.
Of course there's little use in planning until you have the menu sorted.
iPS - generated neurons, he says, may be of little use in replicating the fate of motor cells buffeted by a lifetime of drug exposure and other metabolic and environmental influences.
However, calcium suspended in place, is of little use in memory experiments unless it can actually be detected.
Again, the U.S. Isn't going to seriously attack them in anything less than global breakdown, so there's little use in trying to idly use force as a threat.
The logic behind this (as I remember it from one of Clegg's speeches) was that by the time the child reaches 18 years old, a lump - sum windfall may deliver a short - term benefit but will be of little use in the long - run if they had a poor education.
Christ the divine concept as the object of much Christian internal disagreement has proven to be of little use in allowing a unified code of ethic to represent the Christian belief system.
Also, because of their physical deprivation and spiritual dimming, they tend to feel that they are of little use in the world.
However, as it has no miraculous capabilities, it may be of little use in translating HS's barf-fests.
Nostalgia for the 1960s is of little use in understanding the plight of our cities.
While the image of the large homogenized denomination is of little use in modeling the unity of the church on a world scale, this version of conciliarity has, I think, considerable potential as a model for what we might eventually seek at the global level.
There is little use in giving one's personal goods to others if it leads to a heart puffed up in vainglory: for this reason, the one, who knows that God «sees in secret» and in secret will reward, does not seek human recognition for works of mercy.
We were theologically literate — the subtle dialectics of Lutheran theology required doctrinal astuteness — and we had little use in our piety for emotionalism or enthusiasm.
A set of policies that can not withstanding constructive criticism now will be of little use in a general election.
Financial therapists say there's little use in trying to ignore your emotions when the stock market bounces up and down.
There are many wild cards unique to particular products, or perhaps simply little used in particular industries, with which you can make your product stand out.
Their language is similiar to smart tsinghua students I have met, thngs like «Indeed blah blah» are perfectly good English grammar, but kind of little used in the last 20 years except by smart young china grads.
Coconut flour is definitely absorbent, but there's so little used in this recipe that it should still be a very pourable batter.
And scientists on both sides of the Atlantic are currently focusing on the kernels of food - grade sorghum, aiming to bring this gluten - free grain, little used in food formulations - into mainstream foods products such as breads, biscuits, pizza crusts and noodles.
EPUB - format more powerful, than FB2, more approached to the paper original, but unfortunately a little used in Russia.
The findings using iRF are largely irrelevant because iRF is little used in observational studies, which generally use ERF and / or RF values.
Accordingly, although, as in the case of litigation in England, recoverable costs in ICC arbitration can be very significant, as they include the costs incurred by parties in presenting their cases such as legal fees and expenses (whereas legal fees and expenses are not normally recoverable in litigation in e.g. France, Japan or the United States), the Sealed Offer has been little used in ICC arbitration until now.
The disciplines brought to bear in e-disclosure are known to the firms who handle large, multi-jurisdictional litigation and, in particular, litigation originating from the US, but is often unknown or little used in smaller cases, and sometimes a complete mystery to lawyers and clients alike.
While little used in law librarianship, storytelling has the potential to transform the way law librarians convey legal research techniques and legal information to law library patrons.

Not exact matches

Levi's new process uses lasers made by a Spanish company called Jeanologia to finish the jeans in as little as three steps.
A ready - made solution could be implemented faster, even if the company had little expertise in actually using it.
We have talked a good game about installing new software and applications, some of which are even developed in our own city, and using those to provide for more advanced traffic management but we've done very little.
We'll figure he means type 2 diabetes, in which the body makes too little insulin or can't use it effectively.
In other words, as much medical data as there might be, little of it arrives «clean» enough for use.
As Andreessen explains, using this technique means that» [e] ach time you do something, you get to write it down and you get that little rush of endorphins that the mouse gets every time he presses the button in his cage and gets a food pellet.»
Neuroscience shows that consciously counting your blessings actually rewires your brain for greater positivity, so why not use that dead time stuck in the conference room (or on that pointless call) to practice a little gratitude?
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