Sentences with phrase «often superseded»

Apple's influence with labels and content holders has often superseded geographical boundaries, as it offers music, movie, TV show and book downloads in more countries around the world than any other.
Most troublesome, he said, was that within the new adolescent society peer groups often superseded adult authority in shaping behavior.
One topic has often superseded what is going on in theaters over the past few weeks, and that is the potential merger of some of Fox's properties with Disney.
Despite gameplay being often superseded by lengthy fits of dialogue, Guardian Signs is often considered the best of the Pokémon Ranger games thanks to its sharp looking visuals and the ability to summon Legendary Pokémon.
YOUR FALSE ACCUSATION AND ITS IMPLICATIONS This is an egregious error, a product of always a «constant vilification without checking your facts» in which attacking colleagues often supersedes getting it right.
That means you already should be started cutting expenses in the areas where «want» so often supersedes «need.»
The «Similarities and Differences» in these artists» creations are not immediately apparent, but each has a personal vision that that often supersedes their imagery.
The goal in politics often supersedes the stated reasoning and I don't think that most would claim that anti-science attitudes are confined unilaterally to conservatives.
Unfortunately, the media's need for sound bites and traffic - generation often supersedes providing pragmatic value to the job - seeking audience.
In contrast, in individualistic cultures, where there is a high degree of focus upon personal autonomy, individual needs often supersede the needs of the group.

Not exact matches

I can't really accept that since these people often go on to live productive and well adjusted lives, often as not superseding their pasts.
Often these orphanages are funded by generous donations, foreign aid budgets and visits from church groups but the supply supersedes the «demand», therefore keeping children in homes and sometime kept intentionally undernourished.
The word is most often used for the great universal systems that arose two and a half millennia ago to supersede the local religions of the earlier epoch.
In matters of K — 12 education policy, state boards of education have traditionally been the focal point for policymaking, but recent decades have more often found governors and legislators driving reforms that state boards and state superintendents would not likely have undertaken on their own — and sometimes superseding those boards and superintendents in direct control.
Dana asserted that the mudarabah structure had been superseded by other structures, such as a leasing arrangement called ijarah, though in Islamic law as in other legal families, there are often multiple permissible ways of achieving a goal, not just one.
Often it is this notoriety that supersedes content allowing artists like Prince to scrape in near $ 150,000 at auction houses for sarcastically altered, oversized screenshots.
In recent years, the chronological hang has often been superseded by the themed gallery approach — Tate Modern went down this road.
But these analogies are superseded by something far more crucial in the work, namely the complex, often contradictory painting space that Ferris carves out in her strongest paintings.
I simply don't have the copious free time it takes to keep pointing out (a) that the poster has superseded the abstract and (b) an extrapolation is not a forecast, nor a projection, a prediction, a prophesy, nor any other kind of statement about a future real world, only about a future mathematical world which need bear no relationship to reality (as is often the case about mathematical worlds).
By the time research results are published — often many months or even years after CMIP output is generated and becomes available — most model developers are already working on newer model versions that supersede the previous CMIP contribution.
a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z