Sentences with phrase «often than in the past»

Labral tears are diagnosed much more often than in the past.
There are many things that I find different in my new role — I no longer get hugs and high fives from children as a daily acknowledgement of the importance of my work, I haven't cleaned up vomit from a floor, and I get to ride my bike to work much more often than in the past.
He pointed out that euthanizations were being performed less often than in the past.

Not exact matches

More than 5,000 migrants, many escaping civil war in Syria, have died over the past 18 months while trying to cross from North Africa, often on flimsy rubber dinghies or crowded fishing boats.
While those big boxes suit some enterprise situations, it's clear that more companies are offloading at least part of their work to cloud providers, which means they buy fewer servers less often than they had in the past.
For the past seven years, growth has serially disappointed - sometimes spectacularly, as in the depths of the global financial and euro crises; more often than not grindingly as past debts weigh on activity
The proposal has generated a great deal of often vitriolic debate over the future of the wheat board, and the C.D. Howe Institute recently weighed in with a report arguing that global grain markets have changed significantly over the past few decades, to the point that the CWB is more often than not a price taker.
For the past quarter century, the answer more often than not has been the Vancouver design firm of Osburn / Clark Productions — specialists in designing and building the most beautiful cabins (please, not cottages) in the most difficult spots.
The price of insulin — a lifesaving drug — has reached record highs as Eli Lilly, Novo Nordisk and Sanofi raised prices more than 240 percent over the past decade to often over $ 300 a vial today, with price rises frequently in lockstep, according to information technology firm Connecture.
The massive boost in unstructured data in the past few years means that businesses need to rely on the raw data more often to reveal the story, rather than parse data through pre-defined filters.
And at least 30 percent of high - frequency wine - drinking Millennials said they had bought wine from Washington, Oregon, Chile, Argentina, Germany, Portugal, South Africa, Greece, Austria, New York, New Zealand or Spain in the past three months — higher than for their Boomer counterparts, often significantly higher.
In any event, even if one explains the fact that the US dollar has crashed in purchasing power in recent times, over a very condensed period of time, by more than 75 %, because it has been one of the strongest currencies in a pool of rapidly devaluing currencies for the past two years, I've discovered that quite often, even presentation of indisputable facts can not sway people to believe something that they simply do not want to believIn any event, even if one explains the fact that the US dollar has crashed in purchasing power in recent times, over a very condensed period of time, by more than 75 %, because it has been one of the strongest currencies in a pool of rapidly devaluing currencies for the past two years, I've discovered that quite often, even presentation of indisputable facts can not sway people to believe something that they simply do not want to believin purchasing power in recent times, over a very condensed period of time, by more than 75 %, because it has been one of the strongest currencies in a pool of rapidly devaluing currencies for the past two years, I've discovered that quite often, even presentation of indisputable facts can not sway people to believe something that they simply do not want to believin recent times, over a very condensed period of time, by more than 75 %, because it has been one of the strongest currencies in a pool of rapidly devaluing currencies for the past two years, I've discovered that quite often, even presentation of indisputable facts can not sway people to believe something that they simply do not want to believin a pool of rapidly devaluing currencies for the past two years, I've discovered that quite often, even presentation of indisputable facts can not sway people to believe something that they simply do not want to believe.
In the past, incidents often focussed on network sabotage rather than data theft.
In the past congressional oversight has all too often been no more sharp - eyed than Edward V. Long's hearings in 1966 on electronic surveillancIn the past congressional oversight has all too often been no more sharp - eyed than Edward V. Long's hearings in 1966 on electronic surveillancin 1966 on electronic surveillance.
Often these beliefs were more widely held in the past than they are in the present.
Communication analysis in the past has often focused on the effects of communication on the user, rather than on the communication process itself.
Scientific theories that have been shown to be «wrong» in the past were at best only shown to be partially wrong, and more often than not the wrong parts were forced upon scientists by religion and the church.
Our discipleship, which often has tended to be moralistic in a legal sense, also needs to be reconceived so that love has the preeminence, rather than the coldly moralistic interpretations of the divine purpose so often taught the past and even today hanging on in many supposedly Christian circles.
In writing recently of Jung's reputation, Floyd Matson has observed that «it is often overlooked that he has consistently turned for guidance to the future no less than to the past....
It is often argued (and I argued this way myself in the past) that if a word is used by a Spirit - inspired author like the Apostle Paul, then rather than «dumb down» the message for our audience, we should educate them about the big words with God saw fit to include in Scripture.
He has made some mistakes but more often than not he has found some real gems in the past and at 50mil for a top striker that athletico were ready to buy i think will turn out to be a bloody bargain...
On a related note: AD seems to passing better and more often than he has in the past.
More often than not, running backs in their early 30s are considered past their prime.
The concern is that he doesn't miss bats quite as often as some of the NPB's finest have before coming stateside — Maeda has struck out 7.4 batters per nine for his career and 7.6 last year — so if he starts allowing more walks than he has in the past, there could be trouble.
Picture this, we don't come out of the gate firing on all cylinders, Wenger speaks of how there wasn't enough time for the first - teamers to build chemistry, several key players aren't even playing because of Wenger's utterly ridiculous policy regarding players who played in the Confed Cup or the under21s and the boo - birds have returned in full flight... if these things were to happen, which is quite possible considering the Groundhog Day mentality of this club, how long do you think it will take for Wenger to recant his earlier statements regarding Europa... I would suggest that it's these sorts of comments from Wenger which are often his undoing... why would any manager worth his weight in salt make such a definitive statement before the season has even started... why would any manager who fashions himself an educated man make such pronouncements before even knowing what his starting 11 will be come Friday, let alone on September 1st... why would any manager who has a tenuous relationship with a great many supporters offer up such a potentially contentious talking point considering how many times his own words have come back to bite him in the ass... I think he does this because he doesn't care what you or I think, in fact he's more than slightly infuriated by the very idea of having to answer to the likes of you and me... that might have been acceptable during his formative years in charge, when the fans were rewarded with an scintillating brand of football and success felt like a forgone conclusion, but this new Wenger led team barely resembles that team of ore... whereas in times past we relished a few words from our seemingly cerebral manager, in recent times those words have been replaced by a myriad of excuses, a plethora of infuriating stories about who he could have signed but didn't and what can only be construed as outright fabrications... it's kind of funny that when we want some answers, like during the whole contract debacle of last season, we can't get an intelligent word out of him, but when we just what him to show his managerial acumen through his actions, we can't seem to get him to shut - up... I beg you to prove me wrong Arsene
Modeste could offer West Ham a lot of power, pace, strength and versatility up front, something the club have often lacked in the past few seasons, with some even suggesting the striker could be better than prolific playmakers Robert Lewandowski and Pierre - Emerick Aubameyang.
Arsene Wenger's unflinching belief in his players and methods has more often than not invited heaps of criticism both verbal and literary vitriol in the recent past and sometimes his rigidity can be his downfall but if the last few matches are anything to go by, he was right about retaining the services of Rosicky even when most (myself included) were calling for his head.
No team's players have been dribbled past more often in the Premier League this season than Brighton (11.6 per game).
Meanwhile, Real Madrid have been plotting a move to lure arguably the best goalkeeper in the world to join their side, but it seems their attempts will be in vain in the next summer as De Gea has claimed often in the past that he is more than happy with life in Manchester.
During the past 50 years, I can't tell you how often a mother or father has come up to me at an LLL gathering and admitted that as a result of being in La Leche League, they were parenting their children so differently than they had originally expected to and so differently from the way they had been brought up.
Though there have been various kinds of parenting that have been considered «mainstream» over the years, the parenting subcultures I most often hear referred to as «alternative» parenting styles tend to be the ones that some folks might describe as being kind of «hippie - ish» in nature: moms who intentionally plan to birth outside of hospitals; moms who breastfeed beyond six months or a year; folks who babywear, especially if they do so more than they use a stroller or continue to do so well into toddlerhood; parents who co-sleep or use a family bed, especially past early infancy; free range parents; unschooling parents, and so on and so forth.
I get a nice quote up toward the front about how videos too often turn out to be little more than a source of amusement for political junkies, but Rawls looks past the generalities to examine some specific examples that have swept the internet and yet yielded little in the way of political results.
This means in real life often the revision of the law stems from public outcry for past malpractices, rather than a deeper appreciation of the philosophical principles behind the law or recognition of the possible benefits from the reform.
Although in the past conflict has often arisen between economically interdependent nations (viz. the previous peak of global trade in 1914), the China - ASEAN relationship is one of fundamental interdependence of production, visible in the prevalence of international supply chaining in manufacturing processes, rather than solely trade and labour movement [i].
And if such a scenario doesn't happen — and Governments implode far less often than frustrated oppositions hope — will any of the new Labour leaders have the imagination and charisma (leaving aside freedom from past «baggage») to build positive electoral enthusiasm for Labour, in the manner for which John F Kennedy provides the paradigm case?»
De Blasio's campaign expenses also show he frequented Bar Toto less often than he has in the past — the filing shows just four expenses related to the Park Slope restaurant that is said to be one of the mayor's favorite haunts.
In the past, women have often found themselves getting a smaller state pension than men due to taking time out of work to care for family members.
At the very least I can understand why a party that wins more often than not in Britain thinks twice about dumping a voting system that has delivered them so many decisive victories in the past.
In carbon dioxide, for example, these multiple isotopes are found more often than expected — a phenomenon called clumping — which leads to a powerful tool for measuring the temperatures at which the molecules formed, now and in the ancient pasIn carbon dioxide, for example, these multiple isotopes are found more often than expected — a phenomenon called clumping — which leads to a powerful tool for measuring the temperatures at which the molecules formed, now and in the ancient pasin the ancient past.
In the past, when faced with losses, they often kept quiet or simply moved their hives to a different farm rather than cause trouble with farmers.
«The climate changed quite often from warmer to colder, and vice versa, but at all times it was much colder than the interglacial period that we have lived in for the past 10,000 years.»
More than 200 bodies a year turn up in the Sonoran, a number that has increased over the past decade as immigrants avoid urban areas and attempt to reach the United States by more remote routes, often through Arizona.
Tretiak has published more than 90 papers in the past 10 years in esteemed scientific journals and is often invited as keynote speaker at international scientific conferences.
Because the link to lung cancer is well known, asbestos is used much less often today than it was in years past.
In the past, because men die of heart attacks more often than women and men have more testosterone, the fear has been that testosterone causes heart problems.
I have often had trouble with colored glosses in the past because my lips much darker than the given model so it never looks the same on me.
I think these issues occur less often today than in the past but it can still be a problem.
And the past in our minds is often one we've rewritten to make better than it actually was...
The interpenetration of reality and fantasy, memory and imagination, and past and present often constitutes an explicit theme in his work — never more so than in The Wind Rises, a biopic of the Japanese aviation engineer Jiro Horikoshi that also seems to function as a kind of vicarious autobiography for the director.
Calling Lincoln an heir to these films perhaps does it a disservice however, for, in the film's often misunderstood prologue and following dream sequence, Kushner and Spielberg openly acknowledge their movie's genial relation to the actuality of the 13th Amendment's passage, theater, and cinematic history itself — and by announcing upfront that they're employing the tools afforded by the arts to re-create past events, they let us know that their aims are somewhat closer to folklore than strict reportage.
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