Sentences with phrase «too little credit»

Niki, you give your predecessors too little credit.
Other reasons your application response may be delayed include too many recent accounts (think Chase's 5/24 Rule) or too little credit history.
Far too many people have tried to pigeonhole her Mildred Hayes as a feminist icon or straightforward heroine, but that gives the role, and her performance, too little credit.
Although they were exonerated of Shady's charges of plagiarism by their respective institutions, the Field Museum's science advisory council scolded Haas for approving and editing press releases and Web pages that «gave too little credit» to Shady and inflated the couple's role as discoverers.
Equally, too little credit is given for substantial restructuring of Transport for London and investment in the infrastructure.

Not exact matches

If we don't pay attention to what's really going on in our heads, we risk misjudging our peers — by giving them too much credit, or too little — for all the wrong reasons.
That's where the risks come in: If the Fed tightened credit too little, inflation might surge out of control.
But, in the end, the U.S. experience included the major elements of most booms: Too much leverage, too little understanding of risk, too easy credit terms, and then a very sharp reversToo much leverage, too little understanding of risk, too easy credit terms, and then a very sharp reverstoo little understanding of risk, too easy credit terms, and then a very sharp reverstoo easy credit terms, and then a very sharp reversal.
The sarcasm is a little oblique and casual readers are confused, unless I'm giving you too much credit.
They're like Holmes, with numerous strategies sketched out for escaping from the Reichenbach Falls, although that's giving them a little too much credit.
My «giving him too much credit» just goes to show how little faith I've had in Holland to pull off this rebuild.
Mainline Dems are giving the IDC too much credit for things they have little say in.
The issue is a new subprime lending crisis waiting to happen, a practice that HBO host John Oliver blasted over the summer for offering the working - poor, with little or no credit, rates too good to pass up which ultimately leave individuals paying astronomical amounts for used vehicles.
A little dangerous for my credit card too.
Once confined to the heads of 1980's Bride in all her frilly and pouffy Princess Diana-esque glory, the flower crown, or flower wreath headband is now gracing the pages of many of the most stylish wedding blogs and glossy wedding magazines thanks more lately to resurgence of all things 70's and bohemian, but with credit too, to the DIY Bride movement as well as our love for all things a little «rustic».
It turns out we're giving ourselves a little too much credit.
There's perhaps little of Free Fire that will linger too long in the memory after the credits roll, but there's still fun to be had.
Craig deserves a lot of credit for the amount of actual stunt work carried out himself but the rest of the casting feels a little too popular rather than right for the character.
Perhaps Reed and Marvel were responsible for the strongest elements as well, but no matter where the credit lies, there's far too little of what makes Ant - Man super.
A real shame since all the elements were here for at least a decent action flick, too bad there's so little action that the most incurable insomniac might catch about 4000 winks by the time the end credits appear.
The end credits, which go by a little too fast, will surprise a lot of audience members.
(I swear that he's trying to take credit for discovering Howard, which, let's face it, is a little like taking too much pride in discovering mayonnaise.)
From the hot girl in the red Ferrari, to hearing Lindsay Buckingham's «Holiday Road» ring out over the Awkward Family Vacation photos in the opening credits, to seeing one other iconic thing from the original lest I spoil its reveal, the film works hard — maybe at times a little too hard — to earn fans» approval.
The movie has a sequence during the end credits that's probably a little too clever for its own good; although in five years I might see it again and think otherwise.
Though it's perhaps a little too dark at times, and newcomer Neel Sethi's performance is wildly uneven, director Jon Favreau deserves enormous credit for what he's accomplished.
I'll give Alba a little credit here, as she isn't really known for her dancing abilities or her street cred either, but she does a decent job in showing off some impressive moves, and she doesn't really embarrass herself too much in the role as a Black Latina from the tough side of town.
James Cameron declared Genisys the satisfying sequel his franchise has lacked since he turned over the writing and directing reins on 2003's Terminator 3: Rise of the Machines, but don't pay that endorsement too much mind, even if box office king of the world Cameron, who receives a characters credit and nothing more here, has little to gain from it (until 2019, when rights to the series return to him).
That way, you can, let's say, jump out, if a scenario looks a little too hairy, and after your friend has taken care of all the terrorist, you can jump back in to share the credit.
To his credit, he usually does manage to relate these tangents to how he approached a certain scene or moment, but takes a little too long to get there.
Perhaps a more balanced treatment of the script could have made it stick in the mind a little longer, but it fades too quickly from memory once the credits roll.
It's also a setback for erratic screenwriter Howard Franklin (Quick Change, The Man Who Knew Too Little), who picks up his first credit since 2001's Antitrust.
Depp, who shares producer credit and had much to do with getting this scruffy little comedy green - lighted, has toiled too long in the Disney vineyard playing a pirate.
Despite far too many helicopter shots of Manhattan (seemingly left over from the end credits), Stahelski and Leitch direct the hell out of what little story there is — particularly the extraordinary car sequences — but this is one film that could actually use a sequel / sidequel for Kolstad's characters to really let rip.
A little dated when seen today but George Miller has to get credit for getting there first and on a small budget too.
Although the movie probably runs a little too long and occasionally suffers from confusing editing, it is nevertheless the kind of film that stays with a viewer for days (instead of minutes or hours) after the end credits have scrolled across the screen.
He practically bursts with startling facts — a family with a fairly typical credit card debt of $ 7,000, paying 20 percent interest, will spend $ 1,400 a year just to rent that money, without paying back a penny — and disturbing stories of people who bankrupted themselves through many seemingly small mistakes, like buying a newer car or eating out at Applebee's a little too often.
Diaz credits a good teacher with helping her daughter advance two and a half grade levels last year, and she's a co-chair on the new governance council, but she said recent changes were made «too little, too late.»
Jake's enthusiasm led him to compare it to the SLS, but frankly that gives the E63 a little too much credit.
And material quality is a little shoddy too: our test car had a few too many rough, flimsy and sharp plastics to do Alfa's quality men much credit.
If you're a first - time buyer who has little to no credit history, we can help you too!
In the spirit of half - full glasses, I'm going to give him credit for being a little too cagey for his own good, and make the assumption that the BookTango platform is solid and the ASI acquisition is really an infrastructure move, bolstering their digital platform across all of Penguin, and expanding upon whatever positive signals they're presumably getting out of the Book Country experiment.
Sure it makes a few eyes roll when Zuckerberg talks about how Facebook (and Google) get too much credit for their efforts to «connect the second half of the world to the Internet,» but a little applause is probably reasonable for those who can see beyond their own front doors.
As with investment and credit card scams, humans seem all too willing to let others take their hard - earned money and give them little or nothing in return.
Keep in mind, too, that our record low interest rates have little meaning for anyone who doesn't have an almost perfect credit score.
While paying a little more than the minimum every month is good for your credit record (and will allow you to take on more debt at a favourable rate if you chose too), the best strategy for long term wealth building is to pay off your personal debt as quickly as possible — and then start a diligent savings and investing plan.
Since having a higher score takes effort (and possibly money) it's not uncommon to end up in a situation where increasing your credit score isn't worth it, since the benefits are too little.
Using the money from a registered mortgage is often enough to repay multiple loans as opposed to credit card debt which is often too little to offer significant assistance.
We got a little too confident in our own view that credit scores are of limited meaning for undergraduates.
China exports too much, and imports too little, which forces them to import US credit.
Checking your credit score every day might be a little too often.
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