Sentences with phrase «project than i guess»

I respect your opinion but if you think the current starting 11 will compete with an improved defending champ in Chelsea and probably a billion dollar joint Manchester reclamation project than i guess well just have to agree to disagree.

Not exact matches

Instead they guessed smaller tasks would take longer than they actually do, and expressed overconfidence about how quickly they could finish larger projects.
The first choice was obviously the Keystone XL project, which would take oil to the Gulf coast, but the cross-border permissions needed to get that off the ground are proving harder to secure than nearly anyone might have guessed.
If the Golden Eagles are a little better than projected (and I have just enough faith in their sophomores, and Hopson, to guess they will be), then eight or nine wins could be on the table.
So I guess this whole project is more for me than you right?
But as we are a people who work by calendar, rather than climate, I guess it's time to starting thinking about fall projects.
What's particularly interesting about those latter two modern heroes is they're executive producers on this movie and I might well guess that Bogdanovich may have more than a little influence on their unique projects and styles.
She has maintained leading lady status longer than anyone could have guessed after The Princess Diaries and has commanded respect in certain prestige projects, from her brief Oscar - winning hysterics in Les Misérables to her focal, semi-tolerable turns in two Christopher Nolan instant classics.
We have turned down more projects than anyone could guess but we have a duty to only build what we feel professional will be a great house.
Climatologists have been spending far too much of their grant moneys toying around with models that include fudge factors for water vapor and clouds that are little more than guesses, making the models almost cartoons, instead of tackling the «toughest part» of the project.
My guess is Jone's model has more than two dimensions and the variance corrected means has something to do with projecting the model back to two dimensions.
You don't need to look much further than the years of delays on the Keystone XL pipeline to see that governments are starting to second guess these big cash layouts on climate - risky projects.
The point I'm trying to make, I guess, is that it is easier to project that there will be more change than otherwise if x, y, z... with some generalized numbers and distances, then it is to say what the change will be in, for example, Albany.
My guess is that a reasonable price on a flat fee project is much easier for the client to gauge than hourly billing.
It was a way bigger project than I really felt like tackling but I guess that is where the procrastinator part came in, I have had this cabinet for years and years.
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