Sentences with phrase «now scrutinise»

Well, we have already told your how the car drives and we now scrutinise every variant for what it has to offer to find the you the best pick.
It can be no coincidence that the House of Lords constitutional affairs committee is now scrutinising the wisdom of one person serving as both justice secretary and lord chancellor.

Not exact matches

I now have 10 theories on entry points and stop loss points to test on other charts and in my demo trading, having scrutinised these charts in this article in detail.
As a result of Animals Australia's investigation in Indonesia last year, new government regulations are now in place that have forced the live export industry to transform itself — adhering to new rules that will make exporting live animals more expensive, more difficult and importantly, more heavily scrutinised.
With the technological advances now, each game and each opponent can be easily scrutinised in detail and preparations can be based on that.
in the situation that now exists arsenal will continue creating goal scoring opportunities and three (frontmen) will each have their credibility as potent and in form strikers scrutinised in the months remaining up to january when alexis eventually leaves.
Ospina's inclusion could open Wenger up to further criticisms however, having been scrutinised in recent weeks after consecutive losses in the Premier League, and now taking the decision to play what has to be described as a weakened side.
The team selection is the big story from this game, with Mourinho's picks now being scrutinised much more intensely than last term.
There is one final chance to improve the European Commission's proposals because they are being scrutinised by the Environment, Public Health and Food Safety committee (ENVI) of the European Parliament right now.
For now there is a danger that we may start to self - censor in the face of the known fact that we may be being scrutinised by powerful and potentially hostile forces.
After five years chairing the Public Administration Select Committee, the independent - minded Tory MP for Harwich and North Essex is now at the helm of the re-vamped PACAC — where he will continue to scrutinise the quality of administration in the civil service and examine constitutional issues, too.
Rifkind, now chair of the intelligence committee which scrutinises the work of the security services, understood the ins and outs of what was likely far better than many.
Now the Ministry of Defence is expected to unveil proposals for a new independent watchdog which will scrutinise defence procurement in order to generate the savings needed by the Treasury.
The select committee system now provides one committee scrutinising each Whitehall department's executive actions and implementation processes in detail.
John Lyon, the Parliamentary Commissioner, will now have to scrutinise whether any rules have been broken.
He was appointed by his party to the select committee scrutinising the work of the Office of the Deputy Prime Minister — now the Department for Communities and Local Government.
He also admits that his observations became such a habit that he now has to consciously avoid scrutinising kissing couples.
Whatever you think, schools are being judged and scrutinised now more than ever about what facilities they are offering to children to fulfill learning criteria in the early years curriculum and this provides a great chance for landscapers to be creative and help in providing teachers with fantastic, unique outside spaces.
Of possible interest to all you specialists out there is Eyes Wide Shut, with the bleak Kubrick non-epic now yours (until it auto - deletes once you've watched it) for 380 MS Points (# 3.20) and a massive 7.2 GB download, should you want to scrutinise Nicole Kidman's skin and nipples in HD.
That a Senate Committee has conducted an astonishingly comprehensive inquiry and brought down such sensible and needed Recommendations will certainly ensure this industry is now on the back foot and being scrutinised like never before.
Except that now it is aided and abetted by those who would be scrutinising it were it not for the fact that sociology has lost any sense of mission, just as political parties, the media, environmentalist activists and a host of scholarly disciplines attempting to justify themselves in terms of «relevance» have lost sense of their mission.
The existence of such projects now means that judicial decisions of countries are no longer restricted to their territories but can now be scrutinised by a global audience.
Some of the biggest legal aid earners are firms that have now been closed down, partly because their work was not understood or scrutinised closely enough by competent people employed in the Government Legal Service who were supposed to work in partnership with those providers.
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