The statements taken by the HSE (or police in a manslaughter case) are likely to concentrate on the incident and
a narrow topic such as risk assessment rather than consideration of the wider issues.
Not exact matches
«If future studies continue to not find strong longer - term salvage harvest effects on forest understory vegetation,» Knapp said, «the debates about pros and cons of post-fire management could then
narrow to
topics such as snag habitat and woody fuel levels that are unequivocally impacted by salvage harvest.»
Major changes to the test include incorporating more relevant words
such as «empirical» — which the Common Core State standards call «academic vocabulary» — instead of the traditional «SAT words»
such as «sagacious;» including an evidence - based reading section;
narrowing the focus on math
topics to allow for deeper knowledge testing; and eliminating the previous penalty for wrong answers.
Entries consist of a term,
such as «cats», followed by one or more of the following: (1) locator (s) showing where in the publication's content discussion of that
topic occurs (e.g., «77 - 80»); (2) subentries that refine or
narrow the
topic (e.g., «diet»); (3) a reference directing the user to another entry (e.g., «see also wildcats»); (4) editorial notes (e.g., «domestic cats from the subfamily Felinae»).
Such a
topic, of course, could be
narrowed to a single quality - determination, self - confidence, conformity, or motivation.
You have your choice of funds that specialize in
such wide ranging and often
narrow focused
topics as social media, futures of a specific individual commodity like natural gas, biotech, socially responsible investments, specific small countries, and a host of other characteristics.
There is «damn by faint praise» and Dr. Curry is engaging in «validating by faint criticism» by ignoring politically corrupt forces and limiting the discussion to
narrow topics like «The Pause» or using terms
such a «advocacy» rather than spelling out exactly what kind of advocacy we all know she means.
Jane Genova at Law and More recommends a variety of what she terms disruptive strategies,
such as blogging on
narrow niche
topics, getting active in political campaigns and pro bono work to gain access to new clients.
While some fairly short ones address
narrow topics (
such as the 61 - page Coordinated Attack in DUI Trials and the 31 - page Picking Juries in Drug Cases), many address broader
topics and are quite meaty.