Sentences with phrase «yet privy»

Even if the seller or broker isn't yet privy to how the technology works, a few phone calls to experts at companies like BitPay or Propy Inc. could pave the way for a bitcoin newbie to make his or her first major transaction with digital money.
Pro forma, then we might expect Glassbridge to have an equity deficit of about $ 1.60 per share post reverse share split and Nexsan spinoff IF NOTHING ELSE HAPPENED IN THE 4TH QUARTER (which of course it did, but we're not yet privy to this yet, so this is all a bit fictitious).

Not exact matches

Yet despite leaked emails that show that the State Democratic Party and Cuomo's top aide were privy to the mayor's plans to support Senate candidates, there does not appear to be any investigation of the relevant county committees or any representatives of the State Democratic Committee.
Separately, Corbyn said that he had not yet made up his mind whether he would kneel in front of the Queen when he takes part in the ceremony that will make him a privy counsellor.
A year is a long time, and yet not a lot has happened in that span — at least, not much that the fans have been privy to.
Appearing in Dwight's story, a returning character here played by Josh Brolin rather than Clive Owen (this is set before the character's facial reconstruction), her incredibly nude titular (stop your sniggering) dame to kill for manipulates everything within her sights and beyond; audiences may be privy to Ava Lord's motives, yet her alluring screen presence threatens to lull you at every turn.
While trying to address this concern, we've come to see how important and fundamental a task it is to clearly explain the differences between print books and eBooks, as many publishers are yet to become privy to this knowledge.
If you are an accredited investor, you get to have access to some potentially very rewarding, yet potentially risky investments that regular investors just aren't privy to:
New Zealand has yet to sort out where the Treaty of Waitangi fits within the structure of the New Zealand legal system, notwithstanding important dicta in the Privy Council in New Zealand Maori Council v Attorney - General, a case in which the present Chief Justice appeared as counsel for the Maori Council.
The facts as we know them today do not fit the «absence of law» or «barbarian'theory underpinning the colonial reception of the common law of England... Yet the supposedly barbarian nature of Indigenous people provided the common law of England with the justification for denying them their traditional rights and interests in land, as Lord Sumner speaking for the Privy Council said in In re Southern Rhodesia (60)(1919) AC 211, at pp 233 - 234:
In dealing with many developers as part of our real estate development sales and marketing services, I have been privy to the latest methodology behind bringing luxury condos into a complicated, yet incredibly fast - moving market.
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