Sentences with phrase «major error he has made»

Probably hears the rumblings about «the major error he has made in not taking Song back blah, blah etc» and he brings Coquelin, a little used squad player recently on loan, back in yesterday to basically say to the fans STFU about Song.

Not exact matches

As it turns out, the board had to rescind its study because a major error had been made.
It remains to be seen if Klopp can turn things around at Liverpool, but Crooks believes the German has made some major errors in putting together his squad at Anfield.
The quartet of Mike Lansing, Craig Grebeck, John Valentin and Lou Merloni had made only three errors, second fewest in the majors, but Boston's offensive production at the position — a.186 average, two home runs, 12 RBIs and a.240 on - base percentage — had been the weakest in its league.
Wos has shown some improvement at Roma, but still make some major errors.
Although undoubtedly Russia's best goalkeeper, he has made some costly errors at major tournaments such as the 2014 World Cup and 2017 Confederations Cup.
Not that Andrew would listen to me, but I think that he has made a major error.
«Something that would be very useful for the brain is to have information not just about whether there was an error but how big the error was — whether the Purkinje cell needs to make a minor or major adjustment,» Medina said.
CHEESE Because there have been no major benefits during the TWT, I'm wondering if I made some errors in the diet, specifically with cheese.
In a society where it's almost impossible to make any major purchase without a line of credit, we don't have much of a choice other than to accept credit reporting agencies as vanguards of personal lifetime data, knowing full well that an error on their part could literally affect ordinary citizens for the rest of their lives.
In the past few years, the testing industry has repeatedly made major errors in test design, scoring and reporting that have had serious, harmful consequences for students and schools.
You do have to avoid making major errors, which requires a degree of skepticism toward the opinions of your non-expert friends, and modest hostility toward those selling investment products.
They include lack of adequate spatial sampling to leave instrumental noise as the major term, transcription errors which may be avoided with modern automation and inhomogeneities which dedicated climatological networks in some parts of the world have made strides in overcoming.
Hi Phil - if you want to refute José's points - at least here, on this blog, in response to his post - you'll have to respond to the major points he makes, not just nit pick minor errors like the above.
But I'm still open to the possibility that a major error has been made on this fundamental point.
I make no promises as to absence of typographical or minor conceptual errors * (e.g.,... described by the set of points (T1 / 2, T2 / 2, T2 * T1 / (T2 + T1), T2 * T2 / (T2 - T1)-RRB- which has measure zero in that 4d space, the last should have been T2 * T1 / (T2 - T1)-RRB- but, anyone with the time and expertise to carry these balls I'm tossing up in the air forward could easily score some major points.
The major issue with present climate models is that they are based on misinterpretations of SCIENCE and misuse ENERGY, the effort to «minimise error» or «improve correlation» would be vastly assisted if notice was made to what WAS happening rather than attempting to opinion «a fix» (or trying to add another «new component») whilst maintaining the base of that «model» with the flawed «greenhouse premises».
you wrote: «But the research on radiative transfer carried out in connection with heat sensor / seeking systems for military purposes would seem to make it unlikely that any such major error has gone unnoticed.»
If an error is made in the administration of anesthesia, and it results in major complications, a patient may have reason to bring forth a medical malpractice lawsuit.
Dale is correct to point out that you have made a major error.
The major results indicated that children who had been classified as high reactive infants at 4 months of age, compared with infants classified as low reactive, (a) were more vulnerable to the development of anxious symptoms at age 7 years, (b) were more subdued in their interactions with a female examiner, (c) made fewer errors on a task requiring inhibition of a reflex, and (d) were more reflective.
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