Sentences with phrase «means dealbreakers»

Which means dealbreakers can be hard to spot right away.

Not exact matches

But in 2016, the Mac Pro hasn't been updated with new chips in three years, meaning Apple's most powerful desktop is firmly out of date, which is a dealbreaker for most people who need power — the Mac Pro's core market.
This means your new credit card application probably isn't a dealbreaker if the rest of your financial picture is sound.
Overall, daters tend to weigh dealbreakers more heavily than dealmakers - meaning negative attributes overshadow good ones, no matter how good they are.
You could almost blink and miss this segment right around the one hour mark so it's really not a dealbreaker by any means.
This means that for all the Elantra's goodness, it could be a dealbreaker that the features that could save lives are available to only a small slice of Elantra buyers — especially when Honda offers active safety equipment on all Civic trims, without being grouped with unrelated luxury items.
This is a global marketing thing, and give the choice I'd probably prefer the aesthetic of the Kindle logo, but it's not a dealbreaker by any means.
A typo in a query letter isn't a dealbreaker for me, but the use of one word when you clearly meant another (e.g. «once and a while» instead of «once in a while») or an especially tortuously structured sentence puts my guard up.
That's hardly a dealbreaker, though it does mean that the New 2DS XL loses a bit of its sleekness, resulting in a handheld that doesn't feel quite as nice to hold when shut.
The dealbreaker is that it doesn't come with a remote or button for interaction, which means you must supply your own remote.
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