Sentences with phrase «surprisingly long way»

Something as simple as trading on eBay can go a surprisingly long way in showing you're able and agile enough to create your own breaks.
You'll often get a message from your race engineer mid-race to ask if you'd like to keep the current strategy or switch to a new one they've devised, which goes a surprisingly long way toward making you feel like real driver in the cockpit of an F1 machine.
A southern bayou is already different enough to be an interesting location, and the application of colourful and fluffy fungal growths goes a surprisingly long way to make it ethereal.
That little bit of planning goes a surprisingly long way toward getting the most audience reach from your blog content.

Not exact matches

Surprisingly, Mark who has worked with Fortune 500 clients including Microsoft, Cisco, and IBM proclaimed to have been able to grow his business virtually with no business development and in the video below explains how you can too although Mark suggests that patience goes a long way too.
My series is very long because it often takes many examples and careful illustrations to show how different religions use their religious minds in surprisingly similar ways.
Not surprisingly, top of the league Manchester United also top the chance conversion table by a long way converting 21 % of chances.
Surprisingly little research has been done on the subject, and, as such, we're a long way from fixing the problem.
Not surprisingly, MacDougald expects that a gene - targeted treatment for our tubbiness is a long way off.
Not surprisingly, perhaps, the main characteristic of a geoscientist is that she or he is trained to work in many different fields — as long as they have to do with the geosphere in one way or the other.
They're surprisingly filling / satisfying so a few go a long way.
Surprisingly, the long slow cardio workouts that you are doing are not the best way to burn fat.
And in a surprisingly effective way, so long as you understand the «rules» of a Mysore - style Ashtanga class.
surprisingly effective way, so long as you understand the «rules» of a Mysore - style Ashtanga class.
It's clear immediately that The Internship benefits substantially from the palpable chemistry between Vaughn and Wilson, with their affable dynamic going a long way towards establishing a surprisingly (and compulsively) watchable atmosphere.
Yet there are surprisingly few studies that make this link explicitly, and none that ask whether schools that respond to accountability pressure by increasing students» test scores also make those students more likely to attend and complete college, to earn more as adults, or to benefit in the long - run in other important ways.
Also, the seats are surprisingly comfortable and won't abuse your back not even on longer trips, but as you work hard the 1.0 - liter mill, the noise will find its way inside the cockpit.
Surprisingly, body roll is kept to a minimum, with the meaty tires giving way to understeer long before the truck feels top heavy.
Intense, hilarious, provocative, and moving, A Long Way Down is a novel about suicide that is, surprisingly, full of life.
However, it's important to know that hybrid dogs can be hardy and surprisingly healthy, and there's no way to predict an individual dog's long - term health.
However, it's important to note that there is no way to predict an individual dog's long - term health, there is no guarantee that your dog will develop any of these problems, and hybrid breeds tend to be surprisingly healthy and hardy.
The visuals actually look pretty good once everything actually loads, but textures take a surprisingly long time to pop in and it looks pretty barren until they do (By the way, any YouTube videos you see claiming how awful the game looks compared to PC were taken before the textures loads.
The sparse new content takes a surprisingly long time to get through, though, because of the many gates the developer has put in the way of progress.
Surprisingly the smaller ones take way longer than the large ones.
«While we are still a long way off from building the omniscient Star Trek computer, the technology is getting better at a surprisingly fast rate,» Tuttle said.
Samsung's S Health fitness features are surprisingly good: S Health is the required baked - in way to track fitness on the Gear S, but it does heart rate and automatic activity tracking, can log water and coffee intake, and reminds me when I've stayed still too long.
For this very reason, there are plenty of offensive tools at your disposal that you can use to keep the pressure on enemies and chain combos together in a way that will allow you to juggle another player for a surprisingly long amount of time.
It went something like this: hotel check - in, locate room, locate wifi service, attempt connection to wifi, wonder why the connection is taking so long, try again, locate phone, call front desk, get told «the internet is broken for a while», decide to hot - spot the mobile phone because some emails really needed to be sent, go «la la la» about the roaming costs, locate iron, wonder why iron temperature dial just spins around and around, swear as iron spews water instead of steam, find reading glasses, curse middle - aged need for reading glasses, realise iron temperature dial is indecipherably in Chinese, decide ironing front of shirt is good enough when wearing jacket, order room service lunch, start shower, realise can't read impossible small toiletry bottle labels, damply retrieve glasses from near iron and successfully avoid shampooing hair with body lotion, change (into slightly damp shirt), retrieve glasses from shower, start teleconference, eat lunch, remember to mute phone, meet colleague in lobby at 1 pm, continue teleconference, get in taxi, endure 75 stop - start minutes to a inconveniently located client, watch unread emails climb over 150, continue to ignore roaming costs, regret tuna panini lunch choice as taxi warmth, stop - start juddering, jet - lag, guilt about unread emails and traffic fumes combine in a very unpleasant way, stumble out of over-warm taxi and almost catch hypothermia while trying to locate a very small client office in a very large anonymous business park, almost hug client with relief when they appear to escort us the last 50 metres, surprisingly have very positive client meeting (i.e. didn't throw up in the meeting), almost catch hypothermia again waiting for taxi which despite having two functioning GPS devices can't locate us on a main road, understand why as within 30 seconds we are almost rendered unconscious by the in - car exhaust fumes, discover that the taxi ride back to the CBD is even slower and more juddering at peak hour (and no, that was not a carbon monoxide induced hallucination), rescheduled the second client from 5 pm to 5.30, to 6 pm and finally 6.30 pm, killed time by drafting this guest blog (possibly carbon monoxide induced), watch unread emails climb higher, exit taxi and inhale relatively fresher air from kamikaze motor scooters, enter office and grumpily work with client until 9 pm, decline client's gracious offer of expensive dinner, noting it is already midnight my time, observe client fail to correctly set office alarm and endure high decibel «warning, warning» sounds that are clearly designed to send security rushing... soon... any second now... develop new form of nausea and headache from piercing, screeching, sounds - like - a-wailing-baby-please-please-make-it-stop-alarm, note the client is relishing the extra (free) time with us and is still talking about work, admire the client's ability to focus under extreme aural pressure, decide the client may be a little too work focussed, realise that I probably am too given I have just finished work at 9 pm... but then remember the 200 unread emails in my inbox and decide I can resolve that incongruency later (in a quieter space), become sure that there are only two possibilities — there are no security staff or they are deaf — while my colleague frantically tries to call someone who knows what to do, conclude after three calls that no - one does, and then finally someone finally does and... it stops.
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