Sentences with phrase «reaching the shore long»

Not exact matches

From selling merch out of his van on the sunny shores of southern California, to creating a billion - dollar international fashion brand, UGG Founder Brian Smith embarked on a long road to reimagine advertising and intuitively reach savvy consumers.
Investments in innovation and automation are critically important for shoring up competiveness; today's weak dollar and lower interest rates may mean such capital improvements are within reach with long - term benefits for those who take action now.
Not long after we finally reach shore, we find ourselves gazing at the ocean again.
Peter Bromirski, of the Scripps Institution of Oceanography at the University of California, San Diego, says that seismic listening stations provide a long - term record of how the amount of energy reaching the world's shores is changing with climate change.
After a long wait, Alfa Romeo Giulia is ready to reach US shores and help the Italian brand reach is old glory.
Even if the Dell Streak 10 Pro is launched this week, it will probably take longer to reach our shores here.
Mainstream tourism with its plush resorts has long before reached the shores, drawing millions of travelers today and yet, Krabi has still managed to retain its local flavour.
El Anclote is a point break that reels over a rounded rock reef (deep enough to not pose a threat at all) creating a ride that can be long, very long, easily reaching the 500 meters on a good day and if riding it all the way to the shore right by the second jetty.
Tales of Graces f is the latest game to reach European shores and is also somewhat of a surprising evolution for the long enduring series.
In When you reach the middle of the Causeway Bridge, you can not see the north or south shores of Lake Pontchartrain, deep blues and muted greens echo the vast expanse of that brackish lake, while dusty greys and shades of concrete recall the long, 24 - mile stretch of bridge that connects the two shores.
Although not articulated, could it be because a judge might think that Sir Stanford, seeing the whacking long sentence given to The Bern, might vote with his feet and what is left in his off - shore accounts, and flee to a hidden but free rest - of - his - life somewhere beyond the reach of the law?
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