Sentences with phrase «rather laborious»

Thus, writing of law term papers is rather laborious task.
In a picture you get a total and apparently spontaneous impression, whereas the written word (in the European languages at least) takes the eye on this rather laborious journey from left to right — if only we had that painterly power to put it all across at once, to show rather than to tell!
And if you're using a Hokkaido pumpkin, you will even be able to skip the rather laborious task of peeling a pumpkin.

Not exact matches

Neural nets offered the prospect of computers» learning the way children do — from experience — rather than through laborious instruction by programs tailor - made by humans.
Focusing on the principle of arbitrage rather than such laborious implementation, Ponzi explained that he could make a 400 percent gain after expenses.
Stopping just short of overkill, it provides a variety of good, entertaining extras rather than laborious documentaries or cumbersome playback modes.
It was hard for me to believe Hyundai would rather put a long time loyal customer through this laborious and time consuming process and ultimately have to refund the full purchase price of the vehicle instead of simply replacing the transmission.
Available voice command responds to conversational inputs rather than laborious, endless prompts.
And then there's the parallel present, maybe we should embrace the vision that is being set out and let the sophisticated computers on our desks and living in the clouds do more of the work for us rather than imprisoning ourselves in the laborious task of print thinking in a digital world.
I love games that give you this type of freedom as a player, and coupled with Destiny's stellar gunplay, level - grinding looks to be a future source of enjoyment, rather than a laborious chore.
Here we find Eugene von Bruenchenhein's copious photographs of his often topless and apparently game wife; the rather creepier ballerina - doll pictures made by Morton Bartlett, after devoting laborious attention to crafting the dolls themselves; the insouciant intensities of Greer Lockton, revolving around gender reassignment and the refashioning of icons, both cultural (Jackie O.) and subcultural (Candy Darling) through dolls and photographs; and selections from the inscrutable archive of Polaroids taken of actresses on television by the anonymous photographer known as Type 42.
If that is the case here, it seems that the designer made the best of a situation rather than the laborious task (already mentioned here) of stripping everything.
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