Sentences with phrase «much more firepower»

Not exact matches

The Fed might have missed one of the last opportunities to move to a more hawkish stance, as if the weakness in «hard» economic numbers persists, the central bank will have no firepower to prop up the economy, making a possible downturn that much more risky for bulls.
West Virginia With much of the Mountaineers» firepower gone, punter Todd Sauerbrun should see more action.
Arsene Wenger's men will hope to pile more misery on the Hammers, with the visitors surely having too much quality and attacking firepower for a team leaking goals at an alarming rate.
Considering we beat Villa 3 - 0 in the away fixture we should have far too much firepower for them back at the Emirates, but with one eye on the Spurs game next week we need to gain even more confidence with a clear win on Sunday....
Arsene is saying we have so much firepower we will sell podolski LOL smh... 3 more years of madness with the mad professor.
Liverpool could well do with more creative talent to help boost their firepower having struggled for goals for much of this season.
They don't have the firepower in them to deliver much more than that really.
But if Merzenich is right, a strenuous approach could do much more than mere fun and games to help the elderly maintain the intellectual firepower of their youth.
Stay tuned for more details as we approach the official launch of the 2018 Wrangler at the 2017 Los Angeles Auto Show, where we'll get the full scoop on November 29, including just how much firepower its 2.0 - liter turbo - four and 3.6 - liter V - 6 are packing.
But if you load up with too much gear your powers will take considerably longer to recharge meaning that you're going to have to decide between sheer firepower and using abilities more often.
R3 feels more natural in this regard, mixing up just the right concoction of enemies in relation to how much firepower you currently possess.
In a culture ruled by virality, pithy memes like #IDontNeedFeminism threaten to have more firepower than sober observations — such as those of the former chief judge for the United States Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit, Patricia M. Wald — that gender inequality in cultures like the legal profession owes less to overt discrimination, and more to «subtle differences in how much more difficult it can be for women to locate and manipulate the levers of personal influence inside and outside the firm, with supervisors, senior partners, and clients.»
While much hinges on how many developers make use of the new SDK, it's likely to give Facebook a little more firepower against its stiff competition.
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