Sentences with phrase «means bigger crops»

Not exact matches

Remember that grains are extremely cheap to grow and process compared to other crops, and this means BIG money for giant food conglomerates.
In the end, it is by no means a truly awful piece of work, but the big problem is that it was originally conceived as a short film, and has clearly suffered from the expansion of the narrative that has led to it cropping up on the big screen.
Under that 1981 law, books in the country were sold at a fixed price, which was meant to protect small booksellers from the ravages of big box discount stores and retail chains that were already cropping up even then.
Which really means: bad for the current crop of the Big 6 publishers, whose entire business model isn't about selling literature, it's about moving paper.
I will admit hes big and may look a little mean with cropped ears but i have seen black labs that are more agressive than Ty.
There is a major industry that involves taking GCM output and using that to evaluate local impacts on crops, endangered species, and ecosystems, and often what gives the biggest impact is changes in the extremes, but even the mean climate at a local scale has not been demonstrated to be accurately simulated.
«If a big international firm came in and started building up with just the cream of the crop, that could mean 60 - or 70 - per - cent increases, which would be a game - changer,» says Sweeney.
The 3x optical zoom means you can get more detail from your photos, without the degradation and pixelation of the digital zooms you normally get on smartphones (which is essentially just cropping the image and then making it bigger).
A new cash crop may mean more money for lenders, mortgage fraudsters are getting more sophisticated, and flying robots may be the next big thing in real estate.
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