From our perspective, it makes sense to think about the participants who pre-ordered as
successfully avoiding some of the problems associated with eating on the run.
Not exact matches
Although Whitehead has
successfully avoided the traditional
problem of evil by his dipolar doctrine
of God, he seems to have presented us with another
problem of evil in the sense that God is not only unavoidably implicated in the actions
of finite occasions, but to the extent that pleasure is realized by occasions God derives enjoyment in his consequent nature also.
An infant must learn to attach and suckle properly at the breast during the first few days
of life to
successfully establish breastfeeding.1,, 2 Early oral experiences that require sucking mechanics different from those required for breastfeeding are believed to contribute to the development
of improper latch and subsequent breastfeeding failure — a
problem described as nipple confusion.2 — 4 The avoidance
of pacifiers was included as 1
of 10 steps for successful breastfeeding in the 1990 Innocenti Declaration on maternity services and breastfeeding, and many experts recommend that mothers who are breastfeeding
avoid exposing their infants to artificial suckling experiences including use
of pacifiers.5 — 7
The chances
of confronting with fake profiles and getting into
problems is
successfully avoided.
The use
of Unicode characters for all text content
avoids this
problem, allowing content to
successfully meet the minimum requirement for Level A.
The group's broad investigative, trial and appellate experience provides early resolution
of potential criminal
problems; the ability to deal directly with regulatory and government agencies to
avoid the harmful consequences
of government action, where possible; and, if necessary, the ability to
successfully defend companies or their management at trial.
With insurance that is specifically designed for the needs
of tenants in Manteca, you can
successfully avoid some major
problems.
Fact: Breastfeeding directly from the breast offers significant benefits over bottlefeeding expressed breastmilk for both mother and infant, including, among others: infant jaw development, infant control
of milk flow, psychological attachment
of infant to mother, health benefits for mother that pumping the breast does not achieve, infant's ability to feed on demand, the stimulation and maintenance
of mother» smilk supply that pumping alone can not achieve (and some women can not
successfully pump), avoidance
of problems such as that some babies will not move back and forth easily between bottle and breast, nutritional variation
of milk during the breastfeeding, that it's cheaper and
avoids the need for a variety
of feeding equipment, and that breastmilk from the breast is always fresh and free
of contaminents.