Sentences with phrase «tricky than dealing»

The mental side of injury can be tricky, some say even more tricky than dealing with the physical side.

Not exact matches

The trickier question is whether the deal is ultimately accretive to the combined operation's earnings — that the merger represents a more efficient deployment of capital than keeping the firms separate.
Before we get to the trickiest sexual questions, based upon what many people are already doing, our book deals with marriage in the context of friendship, men's and women's roles and responsibilities and how to deal with sin so that marriage gets better rather than bitter.
Montero v Chambers: JM is a tricky winger, pacey, lots of skills & quick dribbling, plays regularly CC a young inexperienced player who plays better for us at CB than at RB, hardly ever plays, hasn't got the pace nor the experience to deal with such players 100 % of the time.
Dealing with a speech delay in a tongue - tied toddler is a little trickier than coping with your average toddler speech delay.
Finally, faeces are trickier to deal with than urine.
We share the secret for dealing with this tricky skin type — it's easier than you might think!
One tricky issue states have to address in those plans is how to deal with schools where less than 95 percent of all students take required state exams.
Double page spreads on a tablet are tricky and I think we deal with them better than any comics app out there.
How to avoid big costs of deferred - interest financing deals — No - interest financing is tricky, especially if you have more than one balance on the card.
You might think a cheap holiday to Barbados is a tricky thing to find, but with our selected deals on package holidays and a range of last minute flights and hotels, we make it easier than you imagine.
then that is ethically problematic (more so when dealing with indie developers I think than when dealing with massive corporations — intellectual property gets tricky when it is lobbied for in congress).
Their attack deals little damage, although they can be tricky in groups (though rarely forming any more than three at a time).
If the actual temperature as represented by mesurement A is just as likely to be too high as too low then the data is unbiased and we can average it with other measurements and, given enough such measurements we can even come up with averages of greater accuracy than the individual measurements (though that's tricky and requires further examination of what sort of unbiasness we're dealing with.)
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