Sentences with phrase «n't precipitated»

It's just too much effort to make a change that isn't precipitated by something.
As long as they are not denatured by heat, they are not precipitated at their isoelectric points.
Yes, they have had injuries, but it still shouldn't precipitate a drop off like the Terrapins have suffered.
They carried signs declaring «Be Part of The Solution, And Not the Precipitate,» «The Oceans Are Rising and So Are We,» and «Pathogens Are Not Partisan.»
Top that with some serious sleep deprivation, turbulent hormones, and the cultural expectations around bonding, bliss, and being «mom enough,» and you've got another kind of rude awakening on your hands — one not precipitated by middle - of - the - night feeding requests.
They also enable us to document body - size changes in species over time as a result of climate change, and to track the increase and spread of some species and the decline and disappearance of others (and no, their decline was not precipitated by collecting them for museums).
if it is above 45 degrees and not precipitating, get the heck outside.
And ii) Trump as President really could happen (for much the same reasons as the Brexit vote), but now the market (like the GOP) already seems to be moving on to bargaining (& acceptance)... And anyway, a) East Coast - West Coast shame at the idea of a Trump presidency shouldn't precipitate an actual market decline, b) a President who likely ends up isolated from Congress is sure to be pretty ineffectual (as Obama's proved), c) if Trump manages to get anything done, it would probably be stimulative for the market, and d) if Hillary wins... yawn, plus ca change!
The clock ticks as you try to make your way at full speed through an intricate maze and not precipitate into never - ending waters!
That is probably the reason (or one of the reasons) why your comment @ 229 it didn't precipitate a big (ger) discussion.
Fortunately (or unfortunately, depending upon your preference or perspective) we live on a planet where carbon dioxide doesn't precipitate out of the «sky».
The warmer world would keep that extra water vapor in the atmosphere, not precipitate it.
With AOM, excess HCO3 -(at least that not precipitating carbonate) leaves the seafloor, so it is not CH4.
On Earth, water (which is radiatively active as a gas or a cloud) is the only condensable substance in the atmosphere, while the «long - lived» greenhouse gases (mostly CO2, CH4, O3, or N2O) do not precipitate from the air under modern temperature or pressure regimes.
As has been pointed out by some others, water vapor does not precipitate out.
In A Death in the Office, writer Richard B. Schmitt suggests that Levy's layoff was not a precipitating event in his decision to kill himself so much as the last straw.
Children are the innocents in a divorce process; they have not precipitated this event, but this is frequently one of the most significant events in their lives to date.

Not exact matches

While the fire has not directly damaged major oil sands production facilities, it has precipitated major disruption to the industry as companies evacuate employees.
Either outcome — proof that Bitcoin can't work as a currency, or proof that it can — could suck speculative money out of Bitcoin and precipitate a painful crash.
In fact, mutual fund company Hussman Funds, which analyzed events that precipitated the financial crisis, which began in 2007, in this blog post, notes that bear markets that induce recessions are usually twice as long as those that don't produce recessions.
Richard J. Reddick, associate professor of educational leadership and policy at the University of Texas, writes for Fortune that some people of color might be cynical about Starbucks» response to the crisis that was precipitated by a store manager calling the cops on two black men sitting at a table (after a mere couple of minutes of them not buying anything.)
«If you were to look at the possibility of increased defaults, you'd have to see something to precipitate that, something that we're not seeing on the horizon: For example a sharp rise in the unemployment rate,» said Jo Horton, a senior economist at St George Bank.
By paying executives for performance that does not generate real cash flows, Valeant's board of directors created the misalignment that precipitated the executive behavior that got the company into so much trouble in the first place.
While Warby Parker isn't currently holding a formal fundraising process, the demand may precipitate a new financing round that would close quickly, the people said.
The conditions precipitating this change — lower volumes and value of crude oil from Mexico, and increasing demand from Mexico for refined products from the U.S. as prices are rising — may not be the new normal.
However, the decentralized mannequin has additionally precipitated its justifiable share of challenges, some of whom threaten to convey cryptocurrencies to their knees if not addressed.
As a purely financial matter, Netflix's quarterly report should not have precipitated the absolute shellacking that the company's stock suffered after - hours Monday, wiping out about $ 1 billion in shareholder equity.
It is not accidental that Barth's recovery of Anselm precipitated the change in his program from «Christian Dogmatics» to «Church Dogmatics.»
Those who point with alarm to a precipitate decline of the oldline churches and a sudden thriving of conservative ones are not, of course, referring only to numbers.
In view of the author's standing in the intellectual culture that she criticizes, the book should precipitate a lively and better «informed discussion of the culture war in which, like it or not, we are all embroiled.
This very attitude is what precipitated my exit from the institutional church... it wasn't even the fact that they believed it, I may disagree about some of those points and that's fine, it is the demeaning of any other possibility.
Yet may we not claim, observing the precipitate growth of democracies and totalitarian regimes during the past hundred and fifty years, that it is the Sense of Species, which for a time seemed to have vanished from human hearts, dispelled in some sort by the growth of Reflection, that is now gradually resuming its place and reasserting its rights over narrow individualism?
Of course, the pope, because he is the pope, need not respond on the terms or within the timetable set by those who seem determined to precipitate a crisis of authority.
Thus, the kingdom is not already present in this call, but it is near, and this precipitates a crisis of personal decision as to whether one will accept for his life the reign of God.
We see evidence of the enduring effect of this shock throughout the structure of St. Augustine's great work, The City of God, which was not finished until sixteen years after the event that precipitated its writing.
Boston is Boston and, contrary to media hopes for a string of ecclesiastical Watergates, is not likely to precipitate a «domino effect» across the country.
Bernheim took a strong stand on a controversial issue, but it wasn't his opposition to gay marriage that precipitated the scandal.
10:34), is certainly in its context not a justification of the use of military force, but a warning that fidelity to the Christian cause would precipitate peril and persecution.
But it was not that which precipitated a formal quarrel with the papacy itself.
I mean, my departure was precipitated by some events, but it was the culmination of many years of not being able to call it home anymore.
In the turmoil of emergence, however, God's purpose is not that of precipitating chaos, but rather that of luring the universe toward heightened enjoyment and beauty.
Precipitating this latest misadventure was a bloop checked - swing double by Jim Rice that fell in front of Jackson, who, Martin felt, did not hustle after the ball.
Even those who might have regarded Thompson's gesture as little more than a grandstand play could not ignore it — or the issue that precipitated it.
But even if the Frenchman does steer us to the big trophy in the coming months, there are many Gooners who will hope that this will precipitate an Alex Ferguson style decision to call it a day, as he did to most people's surprise (but not Wenger's) after Man United won the league in 2013.
The so - called situational child molester isn't a true pedophile because he doesn't prefer having sex with children; rather, he turns to them for any number of reasons — out of boredom or curiosity, in response to a precipitating stress or simply because he is sexually or morally indiscriminate.
And don't even get me started about Victor Ibarbo and Gervinho, to think that there presence precipitated this move is appalling.
Precipitating water softeners settle out the minerals that make water hard, and are used only in the wash water (not the rinse water).
The impact on mothering skills and attitudes has not been investigated since the work of Newton and Newton, 1950 - 1960.13,24 The physical closeness of mother and infant in the process of breastfeeding allows eye - to - eye contact and precipitates characteristic behaviour described in the bonding process by Klaus and Kennell.25 The physiologic process of let - down when the nipple is stimulated releases maternal oxytocin and prolactin, which enhance mothering behaviours in all species tested and in most species, both male and female.13
Most concussions do not result in loss of consciousness, and some symptoms do not occur until several hours or even days after the precipitating event.
So while infidelity is certainly the precipitating factor in some marriages failing, it's not the reason in most cases.
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