Sentences with phrase «something of a conundrum»

It can also pose something of a conundrum when it comes to furnishing and decorating.
This leaves conservatives in something of a conundrum when they fear that progressives are fighting for practices and policies that undermine religious liberty, personal responsibility, property rights, or social cohesion.
This directional asymmetry — the «arrow of time» — is something of a conundrum for theoretical physics.
But if you're trying to meditate in the more orthodox, hard - way - in style — to tune in rather than out; to be here, right now; to wake up into reality — you run into something of a conundrum.
The Kalahari Desert looks like a desert, by all appearances is a desert, and yet it's something of a conundrum because it is, in fact, not a desert.
Google's Pixel C brings high - end performance to Android, but with a steep price, this powerful 2 - in - 1 tablet presents something of a conundrum.
Almost since its inception in 2012, when Twitter co-founder and former CEO Evan Williams launched it as a blogging service, Medium has been something of a conundrum.
However, the lack of growth in hourly earnings is something of a conundrum (average hourly wage growth was flat month - over-month in June and up over the past year by just 2 %).
In fact, it's always been something of a conundrum that one of the world's great engineering nations only has had one significant legal AI company until now.
Carroll himself has been something of a conundrum to our post-Victorian sensibilities.
a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z