Sentences with phrase «sometimes full court»

Do intense basketball games (usually 3 on 3, sometimes full court)?

Not exact matches

Sometimes the film seems as full of ups and downs and sudden reversals as any match on center court.
The NAEP scores they focus on do not correspond in most of the cases to the relevant years in which the court orders were actually implemented; they ignore the fact that, as in Kentucky, initial increases in funding are sometimes followed by substantial decreases in later years; and their use of NAEP scores makes no sense in a state like New Jersey, where the court orders covered only a subset of the state's students (i.e., students in 31 poor urban school districts) and not the full statewide populations represented by NAEP scores.
Because attorneys have a full schedule before their work day even begins, calls to the office (say when you're in court or meeting with a client) are sometimes missed or forgotten.
The court sometimes orders that some debts, such as debts from court judgments in personal injury cases, be paid in full before a discharge will be granted.
Whereas the Court confirms that the objective of this change and others in the recast Qualification Directive is the full and inclusive application of the Geneva Convention, read in such a way Article 20 (2) might also serve to seal the EU system off from reference to and comparison with any external source of rights for beneficiaries from international protection, similar to the way the Court sometimes uses the provisions of the Charter of Fundamental Rights without making reference to their equivalent in the ECHR.
Many dangerous drug cases are settled out of court but sometimes it is necessary to resort to litigation in order to obtain full compensation.
Sometimes the court's calendar is quite full, which can delay your trial date for some time.
Guardianship is for a relative or kinship carer (or sometimes an authorised foster carer), who is considering seeking long - term full parental responsibility for a child or young person through an order of the NSW Children's Court.
The dockets in metropolitan courts are sometimes busier and more jammed full than those in rural areas.
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