Sentences with phrase «never eventuates»

You're left waiting for the payoff between the story of the ex-girlfriend and Aimee and it never eventuates in a satisfying way.
Even if my current scenario never eventuates into anything, I got to meet someone completely awesome, who I know without any doubt likes me for my personality and that's worth everything in itself.
A major Chinese investor was meant to stump up the equity to support the acquisition, but it never eventuated and month after month the farmers started to lose hope.
I only managed 14 out of 24 which is a poor result compared to others but that's because I was hoping for a few upsets that never eventuated.
But that opportunity never eventuated, and I kinda forgot about it.
9/10 those showers never eventuated.
UPDATE, January 2016: At the end the sub-regional workshop never eventuated, and all the support is going to Nepal on FREL / FRL.
«But damages can be awarded only for harm «actually incurred,» and Plaintiffs allege at most speculative future harms that may never eventuate... Plaintiffs» requested damages award would also violate Defendants» constitutional due process rights by imposing massive retroactive liability for conduct that was legal — in fact, encouraged — at the time it occurred (and still is today), as well as for protected First Amendment activities.»

Not exact matches

This means that the possibility of this or that thing, however specific that possibility may be, never contains the precise particularity that eventuates as that actuality.
But if changes in Christian morals are to this extent inevitable, what never changes is that the returning love for God in which faith by its very nature eventuates always has just such properly moral implications and that they always pertain to acting in the situation in a distinctive way — namely, so as to take account of all the interests affected by our action in order to realize these interests as fully as circumstances allow.
Obviously, it will have to be 20 per cent (ignoring fees) and so there is no way that a comparison between the average return earned by the active managers with the index return will make investors aware that markets have become efficient.1 In other words, the warning light to signal that markets have become inefficient will never light up and so there is no reason to expect that investors will come to a realisation that the flow of investment funds to index investing has gone too far — meaning that the envisaged constraint on the flow of funds to index investing is unlikely to eventuate
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