Sentences with phrase «more matter of»

As mentioned, ceramic / porcelain tile can be self - installed; it is more a matter of whether you want it installed well.
I think colors are more a matter of taste.
Keeping pace with Corporate America This evolution in the thinking of software users in reality may be more a matter of a change in the firms and who is heading them up.
It's not that it wouldn't work, it's more a matter of timing and finding the optimal balance between cost vs value.
For many tenants, late rent may be more a matter of habit rather than anything else.
Consequently to what extent is there a reasonable perception that the impetus behind the «redetermination hearing» was likely more a matter of politics than a reasonable application of the Law?
«The decisions are more a matter of the merits of the sponsor and the REIT's ability to satisfy advisors and investors.
Although she admits the gap has been closing recently, she believes it is more a matter of the rest of the nation improving rather than the Southeast slowing down.
It's more a matter of taking stock of the issues you need to work out as a team.
It may be much more a matter of finding your way back to one another or working together on anything that has gone wrong in the marriage overall.
It is more a matter of how one answers the question.
As for handwritten or keystroked — it's more a matter of personal preference though some feel a typed letter is more professional than a hand - written one.
But that's more a matter of Android politics and procedure than it is in the Google Play edition devices themselves.
«In the case of mobile VR games so far, it's more a matter of there being a lot that get a moderate number of downloads,» Randy Nelson, Sensor Tower's head of mobile insights, told Business Insider in an email.
In an interview with Wired this week, Zuckerberg said it was more a matter of when, not if.
However, a relatively low tax rate could reduce objections within the EU nations themselves and make it more a matter of how much companies pay than whether they pay something at all.
Although we originally intended to upgrade the bias lighting on both the HDTV and workstation after establishing that bias lighting relieved our eyestrain and other issues (which it absolutely did) we've found our simple DIY solutions have worked well enough that any major upgrades or enhanced DIY projects are now more a matter of cosmetics and perfectionism than necessity.
Fortunately, it costs nothing as an option when you go to customize your machine, meaning its less an «upgrade» and more a matter of preference.
The big concern for using your renters insurance to cover borrowed items is more a matter of protecting your insurance «reputation» than with the coverage itself.
Owning a «dangerous breed» makes insurance carriers leery because they believe it's more a matter of «when» the dog will attack rather than «if», according to Howard Bergstein, president of independent insurance agency, Erich Courant & Co..
Unfortunately, car accidents are less a matter of «if,» and more a matter of «when.»
Another criticism is that some no - fault jurisdictions have among the highest automobile - insurance premiums in the country, but this may be more a matter of effect than cause (e.g., the financial savings from no - fault may simply make it more popular in areas with higher automobile - collision risk, or high insurance rates may cause more drivers to go uninsured, increasing the attraction of a no - fault system).
The difference between bail in immigration and criminal terrorism cases is more a matter of degree than a difference of kind.
For these couples, their divorce is not so much a question of making parenting and financial arrangements, it is more a matter of evening the score.
Mastering flat adverbs is not a matter of memorizing a rule (sorry, lawyers) but more a matter of recognizing proper usage.
Lord Denning suggested as much in Bater: «[t] he difference of opinion which has been evoked about the standard of proof in these cases may well turn out to be more a matter of words than anything else.»
Unfortunately, an implied power is more a matter of assertion than a matter of certainty, and registration committees often lack many of the express powers of inquiry and discipline committees.
Unfortunately, an implied power is more a matter of assertion than a matter...
At the end of the day, it's more a matter of personal and professional satisfaction for myself and my firm (and possibly good publicity too!).
Ma argues in the linked article that innovation is even more a matter of courage than a matter of brains.
Legally the situation is different here, because that would be direct discrimination, which can not be justified, although the difference is more a matter of legal artefact than deep logic.
A paper he published in the October issue of Environmental Research Letters (full article in pdf here) concludes that Beijing's claims to air quality improvement over the past decade may be more a matter of hot air than blue skies.
Support for vehicle fuel efficiencies was again more a matter of supply security than environmental defense.
Ultimately, however, human - made climate change is more a matter of morality than a legal issue.
[E] xperts say the real reason China underreported the amount of coal it's burning is probably more a matter of bureaucratic inefficiency than underhanded plotting.
It's more a matter of density rather than viscosity.
It's more a matter of what physical processes are included — SCMs are specifically designed just to look at externally - forced changes.
However we know we can not possibly achieve that so it is more a matter of seeing how wrong we can be.
It's more a matter of saying we don't know what affect humans are having on the climate.
My take away from the NYT article this Sunday on Kulluk is that the issues were more a matter of Shell's internal risk management systems breaking down than the need for better weather forecasts.
As usual with the green press, it is more a matter of weaving together a series of half truths, omissions and advocacy, than of outright lies.
It's more a matter of scoring points than anything else, and as such, exacerbates scepticism, thus being counterproductive.
Their production of the gas powered Noble gave them a great head start, in that it was more a matter of adaptation of a vehicle, rather than trying to develop something from scratch.
I think it's more a matter of the physics of the situation, and the sky is just too big a lab and the experiment still ongoing to get exact results and there are these pesky «internal» feedbacks — such as water vapor and clouds.
It's more a matter of having somewhere useful to walk towards.
However, given what we are seeing in terms of current climate trends and the paleoclimate record, such a name would seem to be more a matter of wishful thinking than an apt description of the processes involved.
Now it's more a matter of «Urban GHG hot spots» (as per those satelite visuals on CO2 and CO emissions via NASA I posted recently)
It is probably more a matter of human nature.
I'm not sure any of you have really addressed the issue I raised, which is more a matter of simple logic than a technical issue, but I'm grateful for the effort.
One way or the other, it's clear that moving to a world that is resilient against hard knocks from a world of «rubble in waiting» — as one Caltech seismologist calls many cities in quake hot zones today — is more a matter of awareness and will than wealth.
a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z