Sentences with phrase «often compensated for»

In addition, absent policy effects, even the increased technological efficiencies in resource use, are often compensated for by increases in consumption associated with the «Rebound Effect» [118,119,120,121].
Historically, the focus on an Outsider artist's biography often compensated for an absence of the artist's voice, especially in the case of artists whose disabilities prevented any conventional form of communication (such as Judith Scott who was a deaf mute who also had Down's syndrome) or when the artist worked outside of public scrutiny (as with someone like Darger).
Nutritionist and WH&F writer Amanda Powell (healthyyumyum.com.au) warns that the missing fat from low - fat or fat - free foods is often compensated for with sugar, which not only pulls the on - lever for the blood sugar rollercoaster, it promotes a tidal wave of insulin that inhibits fat burning and may promote storage of food as flab.
You won't find any low - fat foods here as manufacturers often compensate for the loss of fat with large amounts of sugar and additives.
We often compensate for the lack of meat by eating a lot of soy products, from edamame and tofu to soy meats and milk — all of which is processed, full of preservatives, and often genetically modified.
Although such trainees may eat enough calories at times, they often compensate for those high - calorie days by lowering their calories on the following day or even drastically lowering the calories during the rest of the day when they ate a high calorie meal.
Reduced and fat - free foods often compensate for a lack of fat with added sugars.
Because of its central location and role in stabilizing the pelvis, the pelvic floor often compensates for weakness in other areas.
What the plotting lacks in cohesion and suspense, the production often compensates for in visual appeal.
That often compensates for T - Mobile's so - so network coverage.
They say, «Technological change can raise the efficiency of resource use, but it also tends to raise both per capita resource consumption and the scale of resource extraction, so that, absent policy effects, the increases in consumption often compensate for the increased efficiency of resource use.»
Size and scope often compensate for any shortcomings a typical ultrawide monitor might have.

Not exact matches

To succeed, you have to gain respect, compensate for experience gaps, understand different work styles and, importantly, handle the often raw emotions that emerge when power doesn't correlate with tenure.
More often than not, though, it's incorrectly used to compensate for the underperformance of the remaining marketing mix components whose design and implementation require several weeks.
However, dealers often charge separate fees called processing or documentation fees, which are meant to compensate dealers for their service of crafting a purchase agreement.
Multipliers are frequently used in offsetting to compensate for the risk of failure of the offset measures and the time lag between when negative impacts of the development project are felt and the positive impacts of offsetting come to fruition, often a period of many years.
«I can be wrong more often than I am right, so long as the leverage on my correct judgements compensates for my mistakes» Leon Levy
He rose to top compensation, averaging over $ 25,000.00 per engagement throughout 30 years, often earning over $ 100,000.00 per speech, delivering over 3,000 compensated speeches and seminars, and for 9 consecutive years he was the only speaker with Zig Ziglar appearing on all 25 to 27 SUCCESS Events a year... to audiences of 15,000 to 35,000 people.
Even with large staffs senior pastors often find that the hassle multiplies in proportion to the number of staff, since the senior person must always compensate for the staff's immaturity.
The bearable thing about the crises of integrity that often occur in early and mid career is that there is still time to compensate for what seems to be going or has gone amiss in the working out of the minister's calling.
While we wouldn't expect, say, a roofer to put a new roof on a church without compensation, we often expect artists to contribute to our churches / holy spaces / programs / events without getting compensated for their time.
I often try to compensate for my lack of worthiness with my ball talent.
Often a formulator needs to compensate for those impacts through formula adjustments.
Before I curdled the milk I blended it with a small amount of NUTRITIONAL YEAST, which has a buttery, umami taste and is often used in vegan recipes to compensate for the absence of cheese.
But, he added, in order to close the import - export gap, farmers need help making ends meet during the three transition years in which they must farm organically and often experience lower yields than under conventional methods, but do not yet qualify for the higher price premium of organic to compensate for their losses.
Arsenal need two powerful and right footed central defenders to partner Kosn, for me Mertesacker is very slow to play in the EPL particularly in the big four and this is the reason why Kos often commits fouls, he has to run for every ball behind and tries to compensate the speed of Mertesacker.
As a result, Matić often had to compensate for Fàbregas when Chelsea weren't in possession of the ball, handling the defensive responsibilities for essentially two players.
Being sick is often a reason why young babies don't gain weight for a while and then they tend to compensate.
Don't be swayed by the cheap price or gimmicks of breastfeeding cream, these are often made up of chemical fillers trying to compensate for their lack of quality ingredients.
But to compensate for their painful feelings, they often bully other children.
Many babies compensate for this slight daily drop in mother's milk supply by feeding more often.
Human multiple births can occur either naturally (the woman ovulates multiple eggs or the fertilized egg splits into two) or as the result of infertility treatments such as IVF (several embryos are often transferred to compensate for lower quality) or fertility drugs (which can cause multiple eggs to mature in one ovulatory cycle).
Vomiting often leads to extra saliva too as the body attempts to compensate for dehydration.
Government employees often are compensated for unused vacation time in lump - sum payouts.
And while she often puts in extra hours to meet deadlines or to make up for time away, she compensates by taking time out for personal activities once pressing duties have been met.
It's often assumed that our fine stereoscopic vision and intelligence compensate for our inability to detect a wide range of smells.
Winners compensate for the 70 percent to 80 percent likely to lose money (often all of it), says Stenco.
Indeed, research suggests that it not only remains largely intact but also compensates for diverse impairments in five common conditions that are rarely studied in conjunction: autism spectrum disorder, obsessive - compulsive disorder (OCD), Tourette's syndrome, dyslexia and developmental language disorder (which is often referred to as specific language impairment, or SLI).
Older adults are also often counseled to take calcium supplements to compensate for lower calcium levels and protect their bones from fracturing.
He suspects that it is the combined insults from ß - amyloid and tau that drive the often - dramatic decline: Although the brain may be able compensate for the deficits caused by ß - amyloid, once tau starts to spread, «that pushes you over,» he says.
But in a polyploid organism such as wheat, mutations in individual genes often have no apparent effect, because additional copies of the mutated gene compensate for the loss.
People in Mandena compensate for lost nighttime sleep by napping during the day, often for up to an hour.
• In a bungled attempt at clarification of a letter by Valerie Yule about using concert technology to help older people discriminate dialogue (19 March, p 33), we added a sentence saying that compensating for the difficulty of picking out voices from low - frequency background noise «often requires that the radio or television be turned up to a level unpleasant for younger ears».
«Recruiting a broader region perhaps compensates for the expected impairment that often takes place with age,» says Bhattacharya.
If one copy of one of these genes from one parent is already mutated at birth, the second normal copy from the other parent often can compensate for the defect.
The first step, naturally, is to recognize your weaknesses and learn to recognize when other, often surrounding muscles are compensating for them, so that you can develop a strategy that will make those muscles work harder and get stronger.
Skin can also be oily and dehydrated — and ironically, when our skin is dehydrated, it tends to produce extra oil to compensate for the lack of water — creating a vicious cycle that often leads to frustration.
Often it means your body has been worn down by compensating for something like a shortened trapezius (an effect of craning forward at a computer for years).
Ankle's that are tight and restricted often causes the rest of the body to compensate for their flaws, which results in muscle and joint pain throughout the body.
They often don't drink enough water to compensate for the increased protein intake and get constipated.
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