Sentences with phrase «provides huge damage»

And Close to Death provides a huge damage boost.

Not exact matches

This is doing huge damage in terms of taking money that could be invested in companies, in new businesses, but also, it was money that could be taxed by governments in Africa to build roads, provide schools, hospitals, and so on, so this is doing real damage
«Huge cuts to council budgets have left local authorities struggling to provide local services and look after our road network, resulting in crumbling roads, vehicle damage and placing the safety of drivers and pedestrians at risk,» she said.
However, this study has provided proof - of - concept that devastating tsunamis could be mitigated by using acoustic - gravity waves to redistribute the huge amounts of energy stored within the wave, potentially saving lives and billions of pounds worth of damage
Or, the credit debt relief company that you worked with caused you more debt, or damaged credit, than before because of the huge fees they charge while providing little in the way of services.
The power up that it provides to other players can significantly increase the stats of each one and can deal huge amounts of damage to boss monsters.
In other words, besides requiring a huge (environmentally damaging) infrastructure to collect a meaningful amount of such a diffuse energy source as the wind, it is only by chance that it provides power when the grid actually needs it.
- Provides Expenses For Temporary Living: A middle class person usually owns one house and God forbid, if that house is damaged then you not only pay a huge amount for its repair but also incur expense to keep your family somewhere else during interim period which is not cheap either.
It will certainly result in huge damage to your vehicle and at that time motor insurance provides financial protection by taking care of the losses within the scope of the policy.
A more accurate model is: politics is a system that 1) selects against skills needed for rigorous thinking and for qualities such as groupthink and confirmation bias, 2) incentivises a badly selected set of people to consider their career not the public interest, 3) drops them into dysfunctional institutions with no relevant training and poor tools, 4) centralises vast amounts of power in the hands of these people and institutions in ways we know are bound to cause huge errors, and 5) provides very weak (and often damaging) feedback so facing reality is rare, learning is practically impossible, and system reform is seen as a hostile act by political parties and civil services worldwide.
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