Sentences with phrase «too much merit»

Thus I don't give too much merit to «nipple confusion».
I think some people put too much merit in the small part of the squad interaction they see.

Not exact matches

For now, it embodies many of the issues that the Arab Human Development Report blamed for the region's intellectual malaise, among them lack of freedom and dysfunctional, authoritarian governments whose security services have too much say; the triumph of who - you - know advancement over merit - based promotion; and poor communication between researchers within the region.
One fault of Arcade Fire's more recent albums is that they carried too much fat, would have benefitted from more ruthless editing and essentially had longer running times than the content merited.
Some of the art direction is interesting, but this is much too talky and unoriginal to merit attention.
Older kids will probably make fun of it for being corny, and adults familiar with Herbie might feel there is too much déjà vu in the scant story to merit making yet another sequel.
Elsewhere, Thanos — emoted by Josh Brolin, augmented by CGI — strains to be the villain the saga merits, with one great moment (tears sliding into the grooves on his face) but too much standing about speechifying.
Perhaps he put in too much, as the downfall of Basic comes from being too ambitious, contorting itself until it becomes too difficult to follow for first time viewers, and not really entertaining enough to merit a second viewing.
Böse and Kuhlmann debate the merits of what it is they are a part of, realizing only too late that Germans taking Jews hostage three decades removed from the end of WWII likely won't go over well with much of the world.
I went with the higher grade because I thought too much of the movie looked good to merit the lower grade.
She is simply too much of a cypher to really become involved in her journey toward something resembling emotional and psychological maturation (or, the film suggests, only the outward appearance thereof) on its own merits.
I think too often when we consider which games should be considered «the best» we focus too much on serious debates of artistic merit and complexity of mechanics that we lose sight of what games really are: ways to pass the time and bond with other people.
The C 350e isn't the perfect small executive saloon - there's still too much of a compromise accompanying the hybrid powertrain - but it definitely merits consideration if you're doing the maths on your next company car purchase.
Some things consider when thinking about reform: the unique impact of student loan crisis on people with «hidden» disabilities like ADHD; existing loan commitments not factoring into FAFSA calculations; and if a student with the academic resume that my daughter has can't get any aid because the government says her mom makes too much money, then what exactly does it take for student success and merit to really matter?
The status menu is reasonably complicated too with a large number of symbols and numbers littering the screen to denote things such as your merits (only briefly explaining merits replace experience points to level up), the happy face denoting your virtue (still not entirely sure what virtue affects since many people still don't trust me despite having maximum virtue), the happiness levels of each territory (I assume this means citizens will revolt when unhappy but again, not very clear) and much more.
I'd unlocked sufficient weaponry and tools within the first hour or so that made it easy enough to play through the entirety of the game with no fuss, so it's not vital that you seek out the best equipment possible — I mean, snipers merit themselves on their «one hit kill» approach, so a new gun won't change that too much.
The game does hold it's merit as a fun time, but the dedication required to perfect it may be too much for some players.
I do wonder if the «proxy error / too much proxy uniformity» critiques might have more merit than he acknowledges... but knowing nothing about statistics I was hoping to get your take.
Judges place too much store in the merits of early case planning and budgeting because they have no understanding of the messy early stages of most commercial litigation.
In many ways, it seems firms are trying to distract associates away from focusing too much on partnership, which can be handed out as much for market factors as personal merit.
A criticism often levelled at merit - based pay models is that lawyers will put too much focus on competing with each other instead of competing with rival firms, further complicating the challenge of striking the right balance to best attract and retain talent.
There may be various reasons you would not accept the case for full representation, including a case falling outside your area of expertise, requiring too much of your time, or lack of merit.
With respect, I think both Alberta courts which have heard this application have focused too much attention on the merits of the Ernst claim rather than on whether the AER / ERCB has satisfied the test to strike under rule 3.68.
The Court's reduction of the punitive damages award from $ 100,000 to $ 15,000 could be taken, without too much reading between the lines, as some indication that some members of the court were somewhat skeptical --(I'm bowing to the spelling checker and not typing «sceptical», regardless of the homononym) of the merits of the claim that plaintiff was, in fact, misled.
In my opinion the only protection from becoming too bogged down is to focus as much as one can on only the case merits, without involving any feelings.
Don't push too much: Think about why you're negotiating — is it because you genuinely think that the position merits a higher rate, or are you negotiating for the sake of negotiating?
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