Sentences with phrase «so pervasive»

Why is this change so pervasive?
This question is so pervasive that Tech Helpline has published helpful articles on this topic, including these:
It has become so pervasive that buyers and sellers are expecting their agents to make it available to them, and not just Millennials.
Belcher predicts that in a few years green construction will become so pervasive that the term «green» won't even be needed.
mentality is so pervasive that it has actually become a standard for good parenting.
Problems occur when criticism becomes so pervasive that it corrodes the marriage.
But because the problem is so pervasive and there are not enough child social workers, the efforts at prevention are often less effective.
multiple layers of relationships and connections to country are demanding realities of the native title process [in areas] where removals were so pervasive.
For some couples the disconnection has become so pervasive, they are beyond all hope.
The one page resume myth is so pervasive, we wrote a blog post about it.
Since ATS and automated screening are so pervasive today, can we still use functional resumes, in the right context?
«This was the first of a series of events that I am going to host, because gun violence is so important and so pervasive that we can't address all the issues that lead to it or find solutions to end it in one meeting,» Wilson tweeted.
The concept of cheap auto insurance rates as a framework around which to build an advertising campaign has become so pervasive, that it is actually almost meaningless to come across a company advertising cheap auto coverage rates.
In addition to this personal liability insurance, property coverage, medical cost coverage, and more, your comprehensive solution may very well include a stipulation for the circumstance in which damages are so pervasive or severe that you must (temporarily or otherwise) relocate.
The «temporary / permanent» distinction between term and whole life insurance policies has become so pervasive that nearly everyone in the industry buys into the concept without really thinking about it.
Identity theft is one of those threats that's become so pervasive that it's hard not to feel like you've fallen victim to it at the slightest notion of wrongdoing.
Data on 5 1/4 - inch floppies may already be lost forever; this format, so pervasive only a decade ago, can't be read by the latest generation of computers.
Maligning the injured has become so pervasive that in Mandel v Fakhim, 2016 ONSC 6538 the Judge has expressed himself as powerless, frustrated and disturbed by the result.
Has the online world become so pervasive as to warrant judicial notice?
According to the BTI report, «Online presence is now so pervasive, 51.4 % of corporate counsel will stop and think a minute before hiring a lawyer who lacks a credible online presence in addition to their official law firm bio.»
For the fact is that Wolf Block's internal dissension was so great, and the damage to its reputation so pervasive, it never had a chance to recover.
Craig Benjamin says violence is so pervasive it has become normalized.
We can not agree that the behaviour recited by Plaintiff constitutes behaviour that is so severe or so pervasive that it gave rise to a claim for hostile work environment.
Some lawyer stereotypes — such as the image of the lawyer as a shark — are so pervasive that it's easier to embrace them rather than try to erase them.
Social media is so pervasive that ignoring its legal implications is (we think) simple incompetence.
NGUYEN: I would love it if our external providers were on [messaging system] Slack because it's so pervasive in our organization.
Technology has become so pervasive that we don't even see it anymore.
This feeling is so pervasive amongst lawyers that bar associations across the country have set up suicide hotlines.
Today, the problem is so pervasive that 38 % of IT managers list eliminating local.
Second, the ubiquitous like and you know are so pervasive as verbal tics, or space - fillers, that habitual users simply have no idea how much they're indulging in them.
It prevents us from examining why sexual violence is so pervasive, why we fail to stop sexual violence, and what type of participation we all have in condoning sexual violence.
More disturbing than her decision to shut it down is her reason: Her fear that government surveillance of email is so pervasive that she can no longer operate a blog that relies on email tips from readers.
The list is so daunting that one must rate our chances of achieving so pervasive a «socialism» as very unlikely.
Even our creation, and use, of synthetic steroids has now become so pervasive that it too may be detectable in geologic strata 10 million years from now.
Finally, the culture of special interests has grown so pervasive that many Americans feel like it's a hopeless situation in Congress — there's a sense that it's impossible for the common man to get heard through the thicket of lobbyists and campaign financiers.
The Ethical Oil campaign has become so pervasive that their advertisements have even appeared on Oprah Winfrey's television network.
It is so pervasive and persistent and in complete disregard for blog rules and civilised norms of communication — that he needs to be put into permanent moderation and the nonsense filtered out.
Reducing these substances may be easier than cutting emissions of carbon dioxide, which is so pervasive because the vast majority of our energy still comes from burning fossil fuels — as delegates at the talks have been continually reminded by their location in Qatar, one of the world's biggest producers of natural gas.
According to leading experts Will Steffen, Paul Crutzen and John McNeill, in this era, «human activities have become so pervasive and profound that they rival the great forces of Nature and are pushing the earth into planetary terra incognita.
The hostility to pipelines is so pervasive in the northeast that ISO New England takes that bleak view that «no new incremental gas infrastructure will be built to serve power generation.»
That would make you better informed than listening to the repeated nonsense that is so pervasive here.
Plastic is so pervasive in our lives that it can hard to understand just what a problem it presents.
K.O. - A number of critics are addressing the culture of cuteness that is so pervasive in the art world right now.2 Your work moves from the advanced psychological and philosophical material with which you are engaged (like the title of your recent exhibit at West Virginia University, «Ever - Pre-Given,» taken from a 1971 essay by Louis Althusser and Étienne Balibar) to these cute, banal pop motifs, such as the repeated smiley faces in Summer of Hate, 2015.
As curator Margot Norton comments: «Charlesworth's work is part of the growing consciousness in the 1980s that images are so pervasive and they play a role in establishing individual attitudes towards desire or towards sexuality and identity.
Today art festivals — biennials, triennials, and so forth — are so pervasive, it feels as if a major one is happening each week.
For many African American artists, defining a black aesthetic has meant a long and painful attempt to find a place within a dominant white culture, a culture whose ideology and assumptions appear to be so pervasive as to seem invisible at times.
Shore's vision of the ordinary world in full color is now so pervasive that its monumental influences are often taken for granted.
I think it would be hard, if not impossible, to avoid being influenced by these two mediums as they are so pervasive.
Kardon would like to see the «whatever» attitude so pervasive in contemporary painting today give way to a more rigorous, mindful approach.
Where she includes generic text like «mother» or references to Instagram handles or Facebook, Howard actually threatens the lyricism so pervasive in her images.
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