Sentences with phrase «remarkably little said»

Not exact matches

Despite a mounting body of research showing that high rates of divorce and out - of - wedlock births pose serious threats to the well - being of children, mainline Protestantism has had remarkably little to say in recent years about the nature, health and prospects of the family.
Clinton's camp says the FBI had remarkably little evidence to go on when it sought a search warrant on Oct. 30 to look for classified emails on a Dell laptop belonging to Anthony Weiner, the estranged husband of longtime Clinton aide Huma Abedin.
«We know remarkably little about these camel crickets, such as their biology or how they interact with other species,» Menninger says.
Because little force is needed to scoot around the waxy globules, they'd make «remarkably quick» valves and plugs for nanotechnology, says Mahadevan, or similar wax could be used to encapsulate chemicals in easy - to - move parcels.
Variola is unique because it has such a history with human populations, but researchers know remarkably little about where it came from or when it jumped into human populations, said Duggan.
«We've seen, for example, that interval training is remarkably effective at lowering glucose levels in people with diabetes,» Dr. Little said in an interview.
If the Darwins» «rough patch» becomes a metaphor for the science - religion debate that his book accelerates, the movie has remarkably little to say about it.
Andrew Rosenheim, Chair of Judges, Kindle UK Storyteller Award, said: «It is a remarkably diverse shortlist, ranging from a non-fiction chronicle of one man windsurfing around Britain's coast to historical fiction that provides an intimate view of a little - known king, Henry VII.
However, remarkably little has been said or written about the people who will feel the impact most — the poor rural people of developing countries — and even less attention has been given to how they can contribute to slowing its advance.
Andrew C. McLaughlin is said to have claimed that Fiske's work was «altogether without scientific standing» and «little more than a remarkably skillful adaptation of a very few secondary [sources.]»
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