Sentences with phrase «relatively small bands»

Ara Norenzayan writes that «up until about 12,000 years ago all humans lived in relatively small bands» (17 March, p...
In fact, there may have been only a relatively small band of people who followed Moses out of Egypt, whereas the Book of Exodus speaks of thousands.
From high to low and back again, teacher attrition in Colorado has stayed in a relatively small band of 3 - 4 percentage points.

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«Though currently a relatively small market serving fitness enthusiasts, wearable bands represent a massive opportunity in the medical and wellness segment.
One major obstacle for widespread application is the relatively small size of the bulk band gap, which is typically around 0.3 electron - volts (eV) for previously known topological insulator materials.
Every engine churns out power and torque, but the beauty if you observe a conventional power - torque curve (see the image below) is that power is obtained only at high speeds and that too at a small band while torque is generated at relatively lower speeds over a larger spread.
A small band of relatively weak characters who are out to win against the odds.
That's in no small part down to the relatively chunky silicone band that surrounds it.
It's relatively small and light, weighing in at just 2.4 ounces with a silicone band, the lightest of all the Fenix models.
In fact, the relatively small range of frequency bands on which it will work may be the most damaging to its potential to be viewed as a flagship, which is generally a title reserved for global devices.
The city is known as the «Live Music Capital of the World» due to the success of the locally produced Austin City Limits television show and for the innumerable numbers of bands that hail from this relatively small city.
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