Sentences with phrase «really big fields»

If one looks at the size of the oil fields discovered one also finds that all the really big fields were discovered years ago and smaller and smaller fields are being discovered in recent years.

Not exact matches

«This is a world where you have young leaders who don't necessarily have a deep expertise in a field, but are asking really big and bold questions,» says Hayes.
«It was a big ask for those players to stand up to some of the pressure and deal with the quality football Steaua played, and I'm really delighted for them that they've come off the field with a good result and we now top the group whatever happens in the final game.
You habe to remember Joel and HB are big buddies and have fromed a really strong bond on and off field.
What is being called «tanking» in MLB is really just teams looking at the reality of their situation, both on the field and on their books, and realizing that dropping an extra $ 30MM on payroll for a FA or two will probably only add a couple of wins and it won't be enough to compete with the big market, big spending clubs.
With such options available to us and restructuring of the club, now is the time to seriously look at post Wenger, we may be slipping in sporting terms but we have a big draw off the field in the fact we are getting people in who are / will push for spending and be in the area to really push for us to spend.
Penn State has a lot of big targets on the outside, but where they really killed teams was in McSorley's ability to throw the ball to the back shoulder on go routes to either side of the field.
And if you really want to resort to the idea that a player who has «never seen an NFL field» is automatically a bigger roll of the dice than a player who has played in the NFL, does nt that then apply to ANY player in this draft?
Time for some brutal honesty... this team, as it stands, is in no better position to compete next season than they were 12 months ago, minus the fact that some fans have been easily snowed by the acquisition of Lacazette, the free transfer LB and the release of Sanogo... if you look at the facts carefully you will see a team that still has far more questions than answers... to better show what I mean by this statement I will briefly discuss the current state of affairs on a position - by - position basis... in goal we have 4 potential candidates, but in reality we have only 1 option with any real future and somehow he's the only one we have actively tried to get rid of for years because he and his father were a little too involved on social media and he got caught smoking (funny how people still defend Wiltshire under the same and far worse circumstances)... you would think we would want to keep any goaltender that Juventus had interest in, as they seem to have a pretty good history when it comes to that position... as far as the defenders on our current roster there are only a few individuals whom have the skill and / or youth worthy of our time and / or investment, as such we should get rid of anyone who doesn't meet those simple requirements, which means we should get rid of DeBouchy, Gibbs, Gabriel, Mertz and loan out Chambers to see if last seasons foray with Middlesborough was an anomaly or a prediction of things to come... some fans have lamented wildly about the return of Mertz to the starting lineup due to his FA Cup performance but these sort of pie in the sky meanderings are indicative of what's wrong with this club and it's wishy - washy fan - base... in addition to these moves the club should aggressively pursue the acquisition of dominant and mobile CB to stabilize an all too fragile defensive group that has self - destructed on numerous occasions over the past 5 seasons... moving forward and building on our need to re-establish our once dominant presence throughout the middle of the park we need to target a CDM then do whatever it takes to get that player into the fold without any of the usual nickel and diming we have become famous for (this kind of ruthless haggling has cost us numerous special players and certainly can't help make the player in question feel good about the way their future potential employer feels about them)... in order for us to become dominant again we need to be strong up the middle again from Goalkeeper to CB to DM to ACM to striker, like we did in our most glorious years before and during Wenger's reign... with this in mind, if we want Ozil to be that dominant attacking midfielder we can't keep leaving him exposed to constant ridicule about his lack of defensive prowess and provide him with the proper players in the final third... he was never a good defensive player in Real or with the German National squad and they certainly didn't suffer as a result of his presence on the pitch... as for the rest of the midfield the blame falls squarely in the hands of Wenger and Gazidis, the fact that Ramsey, Ox, Sanchez and even Ozil were allowed to regularly start when none of the aforementioned had more than a year left under contract is criminal for a club of this size and financial might... the fact that we could find money for Walcott and Xhaka, who weren't even guaranteed starters, means that our whole business model needs a complete overhaul... for me it's time to get rid of some serious deadweight, even if it means selling them below what you believe their market value is just to simply right this ship and change the stagnant culture that currently exists... this means saying goodbye to Wiltshire, Elneny, Carzola, Walcott and Ramsey... everyone, minus Elneny, have spent just as much time on the training table as on the field of play, which would be manageable if they weren't so inconsistent from a performance standpoint (excluding Carzola, who is like the recent version of Rosicky — too bad, both will be deeply missed)... in their places we need to bring in some proven performers with no history of injuries... up front, although I do like the possibilities that a player like Lacazette presents, the fact that we had to wait so many years to acquire some true quality at the striker position falls once again squarely at the feet of Wenger... this issue highlights the ultimate scam being perpetrated by this club since the arrival of Kroenke: pretend your a small market club when it comes to making purchases but milk your fans like a big market club when it comes to ticket prices and merchandising... I believe the reason why Wenger hasn't pursued someone of Henry's quality, minus a fairly inexpensive RVP, was that he knew that they would demand players of a similar ilk to be brought on board and that wasn't possible when the business model was that of a «selling» club... does it really make sense that we could only make a cheeky bid for Suarez, or that we couldn't get Higuain over the line when he was being offered up for half the price he eventually went to Juve for, or that we've only paid any interest to strikers who were clearly not going to press their current teams to let them go to Arsenal like Benzema or Cavani... just part of the facade that finally came crashing down when Sanchez finally called their bluff... the fact remains that no one wants to win more than Sanchez, including Wenger, and although I don't agree with everything that he has done off the field, I would much rather have Alexis front and center than a manager who has clearly bought into the Kroenke model in large part due to the fact that his enormous ego suggests that only he could accomplish great things without breaking the bank... unfortunately that isn't possible anymore as the game has changed quite dramatically in the last 15 years, which has left a largely complacent and complicit Wenger on the outside looking in... so don't blame those players who demanded more and were left wanting... don't blame those fans who have tried desperately to raise awareness for several years when cracks began to appear... place the blame at the feet of those who were well aware all along of the potential pitfalls of just such a plan but continued to follow it even when it was no longer a financial necessity, like it ever really was...
And while Coquelin has not tried to hide from the fact that our performance was nowhere near good enough, he has declared that all of the players have treated it as a big wake up call and have been working really hard all week to put things right on the training field.
A speed guy forces teams to play a Safety deeper than usual which is what helps Aggy and Ertz in the middle of the field, it also helps open up running lanes because you really spread your D into having 4 levels of guys instead of 3 (This actually helped out on a few of Ajayi's big runs when he first arrived).
«We've got some new additions in the center of the midfield, some guys we think are going to be really important this year and certainly think Tyler's next steps are in the middle of the field to really establish himself as a big - time player there,» Marsch said.
Even if they are comfortable with 2 - 0 advantage, Bavarians wont allow any leisurely in their rows, and Bayern Munich coach Jupp Heynckes has promised to field his strongest side to the pitch.Expectations are big, of course its a quarter - final of Champions league, and if they manage to procede further Spain giant with controversy coach Real Madrid is expecting them in semi-finals (Real won away match with 3 - 0 against APOEL, and really thats the end for APOEL).
But «the biggest thing about my stay at Columbia University was the daily interactions with really top scientists in the field,» he says.
«I think that this microbial biodiversity is an emerging field, and Canada can make a really big difference,» Keeling says
Because nobody really knows where the next big biological breakthrough will come from, or what next area of math biologists will want to use, a young person who wants to try a life at the interface between these two exploding fields should go to a place with many interactions between the two groups, and where there is a focal point where the two groups can come together.
«When we get really excited about a field, one of the big, major investments and efforts that everybody has to get behind is getting the data that we need,» he says.
Steve: There is a story in the book about him going back to Ethiopia after many years — the political climate there made it impossible for Johanson to do any field work in Ethiopia for a while — and when he got back and announced to the customs official that he was the discoverer of Lucy, that was like a really big deal.
James started his career as an investment banker, but he had studied health economics, which is a really interesting field because we're looking at not just economics but we're looking at how do people spend their money to live longer, and feel better, and to stay well, and decided after a year in banking that he wanted to work with integrative medicine or functional medicine, and he founded something called Evolution of Medicine, which is an eCommerce platform that lets doctors manage their practices better with customized tools and things like that so they can become more functional doctors, just to make it easier for the transition to come from basically a trained representative of Big Pharma.
I don't want to sound like I am against the medical field because I know lots of really smart doctors know and preach the truth and that aren't addicted to the prescription drug pushing machine of Big Pharma.
In the comedy field there is continued adulation for Modern Family and The Big Bang Theory, despite not being really comedically relevant anymore.
This isn't really the medium for big action CGI - laden climaxes, although admirably, an elemental on - field challenge between Justin and Alex (which clearly aspires to a Harry Potter Quidditch match in visuals) isn't so bad.
Thank goodness, then, that the remaining field will be filled out by almost universally beloved picks — 22 - year - old breakout Timothée Chalamet, craft - defining veteran Daniel Day - Lewis, and in our big swing, Get Out's Daniel Kaluuya, who earned both the Golden Globe and SAG nominations that suggest he's really in the race.
Comments from some recent users of this book should help convince you to buy it: As an advocate of the What Works agenda, I think this book really is a wake - up call A fantastic insight into the potential for using documents in research Nails twenty years of research in twenty minutes Worth every dime Every student in my class has been told to buy this book... and it's easy to see why Shines a great big light on the power of documents in research Surely this is the best book in its field First class I kept referring to this book in my presentation last week and the audience was ecstatic Education research, usually has little effect on me... Until now... This book is formidable Crushes the concept that education research is rubbish... fantastic insight Blows you away with its power and simplicity Huge reality check, senior school managers at good schools tell the truth, other's don't, won't or can't, and their students suffer.
Historically, philanthropy has played a really big role in Australia — not only in education, but in the medical fields, environment and so forth.
Positive comments from some recent users of this book include: Most schools are full of documents and data... Dr Slater is among the first to show how they can be used to compare what is said on paper and in interviews... The results will shock you... Dr Slater is a successful high school teacher and an award winning author... and here's why... Fantastic little book, punches well above its weight... Makes it seem so simple... the art of the genius... As an advocate of the What Works agenda, I think this book really is a wake - up call... A fantastic insight into the potential for using documents in research... Nails twenty years of research in twenty minutes... Worth every dime... Every student in my class (6th form) has been told to buy this book... and it's easy to see why... Shines a great big light on the power of documents in research... Surely this is the best book in its field... First class... I kept referring to this book in my presentation last week and the audience was ecstatic... Education research, usually has little effect on me... Until now... This book is formidable... Crushes the concept that education research is rubbish... fantastic insight... Blows you away with its power and simplicity... Huge reality check, senior school managers at good schools tell the truth, other's don't, won't or can't, and their students suffer.
«She really wants to be big,» said her mother, Ladonna Williams, watching C.J. from the deeply furrowed fields of the sweet potato farm that's been in the family for four generations.
I'm actually interested in a really wide range of what we call input quality measures, and I think one of the biggest challenges for the field is to pinpoint the specific features of input that are most beneficial for children's language learning at different points in early childhood.
And yet, I don't think those come even close to the biggest challenge we face, because our field doesn't like to talk about what teachers really need in order to address what I have seen to be the biggest challenge in so many classrooms.
But with indie publishing running so much of the industry now, the playing field is really evened out and a lot of the big mojo that used to hit the bestseller lists is being seen in fiction — which often doesn't report to these lists, or authors are selling lots of copies of all of their books, as opposed to one, singular title.
My experience and understanding in the field of real estate tells that a small investor can not really compete with these big players head - on in real estate investment while they are rapidly investing capital into all sorts of real estate markets.
The recent story of Big Paul: In the South Field was one that really got me.
If you really want to spoil your cat, consider getting her a Holiday Field Mouse and / or a Holiday Big Sky Mouse as well.
Pokemon Go really did come out of left field to become not only the biggest mobile game of 2016, but also one of the most enjoyable ones as well.
, you are lying on the floor of your place looking up, a small draft runs through the room, between the door and the window, and all things seem perfectly still, wind only disturbs concrete in imperceptible ways, or it may take millions of years to be noticed and, as the air runs through the space, all your plants move and all is animated and all is alive somehow, and here are the thoughts of all men in all ages and lands, they are not original with me, and that wind upon your plants is the common air that bathes the globe, and we have no ambitions of universalism, and I'm glad we don't, but the particles of air bring traces of pollen and are charged with electricity, desert sand, maybe sea water, and these particles were somewhere else before they were dragged here, and their route will not end by the door of this house, and if we tell each other stories, one can imagine that they might have been bathed by this same air, regrouped and recombined, recharged as a vehicle for sound, swirling as it moves, bringing the sound of a drum, like that Kabuki story where a fox recognizes the voice of its parents as a girl plays a drum made out of their skin, or any other event, and yet I always felt your work never tells stories, I tend to think that narrative implies a past tense, even if that past was just five seconds ago, one second ago was already the past, and human memory is irrelevant in geological time, plants and fish know not what tomorrow will bring, neither rocks nor metal do, but we all live here now, and we all need visions and we all need dreams, and as long as your metal sculptures vibrate they are always in the Present, and their past is a material truth alien to narrative, but well, maybe narrative does not imply a past tense at all and they are writing their own story while they gently move and breathe, and maybe nothing was really still before the wind came in, passing through the window as if through an irrational portal to make those plants dance, but everything was already moving and breathing in near complete silence, and if you're focused enough you can feel the pulse of a concrete wall and you can feel the tectonic movements of the earth, and you can hear the magma flowing under our feet and our bones crackling like a wild fire, and you can see the light of fireflies reflected in polished metal, and there is nothing magical about that, it is just the way things are, and sometimes we have to raise our voice because the music is too loud and let your clothes move to a powerful bass, sound waves and bright lights, powerful like the sun, blinding us if we stare for too long, but isn't it the biggest sign of love, like singing to a corn field, and all acts of kindness that are not pitiful nor utilitarian, that are truly horizontal as everything around us is impregnated with the deadliest violence, vertical and systemic, poisonous, and sometimes you just want to feel the sun burning your skin and look for life in all things declared dead, a kind of vitality that operates like corrosion, strong as the wind near the sea, transforming all things,
It's clearly also politically really relevant right now that we go beyond this fear of pooling knowledge, because I think, of course, we can only solve the big problems of the 21st - century if everybody collaborates; if all the fields collaborate; if we bring all the competencies together.
There is a tremendous disconnect between what most people (especially here in the US) think that the state of the scientific knowledge is, and what it really is — partly, I think, because it's hard to grasp just how big the field of climate science is, partly because of organized disinformation campaigns orchestrated by the likes of Senator Inhofe, Exxon and Massey Energy, and informed by the tactics (and sometimes funding sources) of the tobacco denial movement, and partly because who really * wants * to believe in a big, tough - to - deal - with danger to the well - being of our kids and our society?
The basic stuff, like you said, names, addresses, things that you're able to really isolate that they should fit within certain parameters, that's where we now pulled from Watson to allow it really take the, [you 00:37:10] want to say, maybe the free form text, a text field, the bigger text fields.
And the really cool thing is that these tools level the playing field between the bigger law firms and the smaller ones.
For Stephanie Hare, a tech expert who has worked in the data field, the Cambridge Analytica story raises big questions over a lack of accountability: «What is really striking here is the absence of any oversight.»
An internship is an internship and regardless of your company being big or small you'll get great hands - on experience, a resume builder, networking opportunities, and an opportunity to really decide if you want to continue to pursue that field after graduation.
With all the options for LinkedIn fields to fill out (experience, education, coursework, volunteering), your profile can get really big, really fast!
But, if you know what do you want and if you are really a good specialist in this field — this administrative assistant resume samples are really a big treasure in your case.
Her cover letter was about 3/4 of a page, but in that space she not only showed determination and solid understanding of the job and what she would really need to overcome to achieve our goals, but she told us of her excitement about the job, her passion for the field, and her grasp of the bigger picture.
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