His tricks simply come down to one word — discipline.
|
|
" DeVos continued, "It does come down to individual kids.
|
|
It could all come down to this one insane superpower.
|
|
The recent splits come down to a number of reasons.
|
|
"It's going to come down to the end," Tulowitzki said.
|
|
Whether that matters to you can come down to taste.
|
|
Our motivation here has always come down to helping humans.
|
|
I'll come down to earth to spend it with you.
|
|
Volunteers from California come down to help build the houses.
|
|
It had come down to this: safety versus the game.
|
|
It can always come down to a point or two.
|
|
It could come down to which defence is more ruthless.
|
|
In Iowa, it actually does all come down to turnout.
|
|
So it really does come down to you, and humanity.
|
|
Or maybe your decision will come down to simple aesthetics.
|
|
The vote is expected to come down to the wire.
|
|
And finally, it may all come down to Trump himself.
|
|
I asked him to come down to the Ephin shop.
|
|
We were up there, and we've come down to this.
|
|
It can even come down to body language, some say.
|
|
It may also come down to cost for some consumers.
|
|
That's going to come down to pricing, connectivity and apps.
|
|
Much of the push will also come down to Azar.
|
|
In the end, it really does come down to messaging.
|
|
But they don't let the water come down to us.
|
|
To state the obvious, it will come down to turnout.
|
|
But it probably will come down to a snail vs.
|
|
It's just going to come down to curating these images.
|
|
Fortunes come down to gold as much as luck, here.
|
|
Much of Atlanta's success will come down to Dennis Schroder.
|
|
But the choice may have all come down to timing.
|
|
The variations come down to just one thing: facial expression.
|
|
Whether that happens may come down to who blinks first.
|
|
"It may come down to user preference," said Dr. VanZile.
|
|
The cloud shapes one visualized come down to earth. God.
|
|
The great foot has come down to stamp on you.
|
|
Much will come down to the will of the majority.
|
|
It may come down to who has his ear last.
|
|
And we know this will come down to the economy.
|
|
And that, as they say, will come down to turnout.
|
|
For Disney, success might just all come down to execution.
|
|
But many of the crashes come down to reckless driving.
|
|
If the election does indeed come down to Trump vs.
|
|
Now, seemingly, it's come down to this: whatever it takes.
|
|
But the decision shouldn't come down to fund fee alone.
|
|
"It's going to come down to executing pitches," Ventura said.
|
|
Troutbeck wonder why their son hasn't come down to lunch.
|
|
The nature of diversity doesn't come down to one mechanism.
|
|
Florida, in turn, might come down to the Latino vote.
|
|
This is all going to come down to local advocacy.
|
|
Of course this season would come down to Philip versus Elizabeth.
|
|
That request will have to come down to meet Trump's goal.
|
|
Is anyone else thinking this must simply come down to cost?
|
|
And state legislative races sometimes come down to hundreds of votes.
|
|
I mean, it's not going to come down to one vote.
|
|
And SoftBank may come down to the series A one day.
|
|
A lot of it can come down to when you book.
|
|
So the whole case will come down to her single credibility.
|
|
Naturally, it will come down to execution like any other startup.
|
|
It does come down to personal responsibility, I firmly believe that.
|
|
Goliath is written, how much will come down to a jacket?
|
|
This could all come down to expert art direction, of course.
|
|
That may come down to a political decision by his staff.
|
|
They come down to us in the order assigned by some
|
|
But often, such decisions come down to a matter of nuance.
|
|
It will come down to what's most important to you: Pricing?
|
|
A great interview can come down to the tiniest of details.
|
|
It can also come down to where you choose to live.
|
|
It will again come down to voter turnout, political observers say.
|
|
When you come down to it, negotiation is about human interaction.
|
|
What all my fashion phobias really come down to is exposure.
|
|
"It doesn't always come down to the fourth quarter," Casey said.
|
|
"It's going to come down to, John, the debate," Malloy said.
|
|
It may come down to your location, age and, yes, sex.
|
|
JOSÉ DÍAZ-BALART: Are you planning to come down to Orlando?
|
|
The fantastic ideas you have will finally come down to earth.
|
|
Both candidates said the race could come down to independent voters.
|
|
Labor: Building costs really come down to who's behind the labor.
|
|
Once again, it could all come down to Senator John McCain.
|
|
The developing problems here, I think, come down to Trevor Siemian.
|
|
Of course, teller job trends don't all come down to ATMs.
|
|
I don't think that people come down to scores, flat out.
|
|
Ultimately, it may not come down to how talented they are.
|
|
"It will come down to luck," he said of Justify's chances.
|
|
"Dreams are wonderful, but dreams have to come down to reality."
|
|
So, it's really going to come down to the earnings growth.
|
|
For some candidates, it may come down to their performance tonight.
|
|
They literally risk their life to come down to the ground.
|
|
Keeping deepfakes fun, not fearsome will come down to human psychology.
|
|
Many of these failures come down to a lack of leadership.
|
|
In the end, though, it does come down to the barbecue.
|
|
The study's results largely come down to what the cows eat.
|
|
Much of it will come down to the president, he said.
|
|
It'll come down to two main things: sacrifices from everybody, and unity.
|
|
I come down to Florida, I say, 'What the hell is that?
|
|
It will all come down to what the Senate parliamentarian will permit.
|
|
Mastering your money can come down to establishing a few smart habits.
|
|
It could come down to an interpretation of what qualifies as control.
|
|
The decision to come to the U.S. would come down to economics.
|
|
"I didn't think it could have come down to this," he said.
|
|
Extending a show doesn't always come down to a creative decision, either.
|
|
His political survival may come down to who he faces next year.
|
|
Ultimately, it will come down to who needs the joint venture more.
|
|
I mean, the whole thing could come down to 0.7 seconds again.
|
|
Jose has slowed somewhat, its winds having come down to 145 mph.
|
|
Since then, that figure has come down to 28 percent last month.
|
|
Later, we had ten people come down to Virginia from Sandy Hook.
|
|
And you knew it would come down to the keepers, didn't you?
|
|
Ultimately, it could come down to Netflix not campaigning for the show.
|
|
If you're an Amazon Prime member, it might come down to price.
|
|
It may come down to how much consumers are willing to pay.
|
|
In many cases, he suggests, the issue will come down to leverage.
|
|
How come you ain't never come down to Miami or South Florida?
|
|
It'll all come down to how he performs in his next fight.
|
|
The difference between silver and gold can come down to decimal points.
|
|
But some weeks, it's clear everyone needs to come down to earth.
|
|
Presidential debates, like life, all come down to a series of moments.
|
|
Syracuse people come down to the federal building to finish them off.
|
|
On that point, he's right — this race will come down to turnout.
|
|
On infrastructure, "it's all going to come down to financing," she noted.
|
|
They had me come down to Ottawa for the Electric Pow Wow.
|
|
Most of G.M.'s advantages come down to size and operational efficiency.
|
|
To me, it seems like it'll all come down to the data.
|
|
Ahead, seven reasons it doesn't always come down to a paycheck: 1.
|
|
It may come down to the City Council to decide the issue.
|
|
The birds will come down to you when they visit the feeders.
|
|
Which, really, is what Beauty and the Beast's problems come down to.
|
|
And that can simply come down to where you choose to live.
|
|
Madeya's problems come down to the fact that she had no sons.
|
|
But it's still going to come down to actually improving the product.
|
|
I didn't want the conversation to come down to the economic aspect.
|
|
Washington (CNN)In the end, it may come down to the tweets.
|
|
The bull market's future may come down to just one economic chart.
|
|
This game may come down to one side making a tired mistake.
|
|
We knew this game was going to come down to the end.
|
|
In the end, it might come down to how cynical everyone is.
|
|
Their divergence in opinion could come down to differences in personal taste.
|
|
"A lot of it does come down to personality," Mr. Lynch said.
|
|
The decision is likely to come down to which team drafts him.
|
|
The game could come down to a single mistake on either side.
|
|
But these decisions often do not come down to bank statements alone.
|
|
"It's going to come down to what regulators will tolerate," he says.
|
|
Ultimately, he said, the choice of method would come down to funding.
|
|
"It's going to come down to that issue of winnability," she said.
|
|
Of course, it will come down to the games (and the price).
|
|
The problems in this case seem to come down to sheer scope.
|
|
All product and service sales come down to usage and aggregated value.
|
|
It could all come down to how often you buy new smartphones.
|
|
But in reality, next week's votes will come down to raw politics.
|
|
The Grammy Awards may come down to a battle of the superdivas.
|
|
Then again, fish oil's mixed track record may come down to type.
|
|
He&aposd come down to the runway, and I would talk to him.
|
|
In the end, that may come down to the trust of individual users.
|
|
Of course, for audiophiles, it'll all come down to sound and format support.
|
|
Ultimately, the Bank of England's inflation worries come down to one thing: sterling.
|
|
Meanwhile, Friedman said the race in AI could potentially come down to politics.
|
|
Though Zingano started strong, this one would ultimately come down to Peña's grappling.
|
|
So, is it going to come down to those two Republican women, Ned?
|
|
Many said their vote would come down to who gave the best barnburner.
|
|
Here's the description of the final episode: It's all come down to this!
|
|
Privacy is a global issue Policy decisions ultimately come down to trade-offs.
|
|
And a large part of pizza's popularity may come down to its price.
|
|
The decision to grant an injunction, then, might come down to adverse inference.
|
|
The reasons for Heroes' success likely come down to a handful of factors.
|
|
Bianca is annoyed that she, too, has to come down to the station.
|
|
Not to sound mushy, but it really does come down to emotional communication.
|
|
Bertolini said some of those benefits should come down to ages like 55.
|
|
KEMP: I&aposd love to have the president to come down to Georgia.
|
|
The Capital One Cup final has come down to a suffix, hasn't it?
|
|
But eventually, they all must come down to burn up in the atmosphere.
|
|
"Failures often come down to the human part of a company," said Ehrhardt.
|
|
After the rate cut, those deposit rates will come down to some extent.
|
|
The struggle for the Iron Throne has come down to Cersei and Daenerys.
|
|
It had to come down to one of the Splash Brothers, didn't it?
|
|
Now it's become clear Trump's decision could come down to a single sentence.
|
|
Ultimately, success in a job interview may come down to knowing your audience.
|
|
It basically come down to one central question: Do you know your customer?
|
|
The various application vehicles often come down to a texture preference, says Robinson.
|
|
It will all come down to whether we can turn our people out.
|
|
But many analyses of women and their appearance inevitably come down to hair.
|
|
The choice has come down to essential realities or a life of fantasy.
|
|
The problem with Earnhardt's sandwich of choice must come down to the mayo.
|
|
Ask, then Ask Again Ultimately, increasing volunteerism may come down to simply asking.
|
|
The basic moves to master come down to simple concepts: pushing, pulling, hinging.
|
|
With a tough decision that will come down to a judgment of character.
|
|
The study authors suspect these differences from straight peers come down to bias.
|
|
"Certain things come down to respect," Mike tells John later in the episode.
|
|
"We had the police come down to the beach one time," Mazhari says.
|
|
Later on, Bill called and asked me to come down to the station.
|
|
The difference may come down to how people think about sleep, Lichstein suggests.
|
|
But the race, Sorenson knew, was always going to come down to turnout.
|
|
I wear a lot of sweaters that come down to my mid thighs.
|
|
The problems they're trying to solve mostly come down to inefficiency and fraud.
|
|
Control of a $30 billion company doesn't often come down to an auction.
|
|
"Encephalitis deaths have come down to less than five per day," he said.
|
|
As is often true, then, upcoming primary races could come down to turnout.
|
|
The future of Mastercard&aposs growth may come down to its noncard businesses.
|
|
The Neumans, of Washington Heights, had come down to ride back and forth.
|
|
And I think it will come down to who deals with it better.
|
|
Whether or not Tesla actually goes private could come down to its shareholders.
|
|
Ultimately, it will come down to a vote and three swing Republicans: Sens.
|
|
Money issues: The reasons vary, but the most common come down to money.
|
|
The race for Scripps Networks Interactive may have come down to one finalist.
|
|
Flight prices may need to come down to entice travelers to tropical locations.
|
|
Ultimately, though, this category is going to come down to Dern vs. Lopez.
|
|
Paulsen expects choppiness to continue until valuations come down to more normal levels.
|
|
"It could come down to a match between me and Novak," Murray said.
|
|
Their seed will come down to conference record and what happens around them.
|
|
A job interview shouldn't come down to the words you use — you think.
|
|
It always seems to come down to the last games no matter what.
|
|
Kavanaugh's SCOTUS confirmation is supposed to come down to a vote this Thursday.
|
|
After the rate cut, those rates likely will come down to some extent.
|
|
"This race is going to come down to razor-thin margins," Scholten said.
|
|
The law in America will come down to what Roberts says it is.
|
|
But this game could come down to a pair of guys named Melvin.
|
|
As you get older, the questions come down to about two or three.
|
|
But so much will come down to the four days of the tournament.
|
|
I was at university in Leeds, but I had come down to London.
|
|
It's hard to deny how much this seems to come down to gender.
|
|
And really, so much of all of this does come down to money.
|
|
The tipping point, as is often the case, will come down to economics.
|
|
I have a feeling that&aposs what it was going to come down to.
|
|
At first glance, it may seem to come down to the experience of speed.
|
|
"It could really come down to that killer app not being there," said Abbruzzese.
|
|
That&aposs going to come down to the pace at which we negotiate this.
|
|
Let's home in on the general differences, which admittedly come down to personal preference.
|
|
"Where we really come down to is, you need to start over," Wisconsin Rep.
|
|
If history is any guide, this election could come down to one state: Ohio.
|
|
I have argued that part of the problem might come down to Ford's communications.
|
|
The difference may simply come down to people's decision to cultivate joy from within.
|
|
This might all come down to a new Senate parliamentarian, but so be it.
|
|
A more pessimistic view is that wages were bound to come down to earth.
|
|
And sometimes, what makes a "good" photo can come down to a flattering pose.
|
|
And indeed Saturday, at least precinct reportedly come down to a game of War.
|
|
That meant Kavanaugh's nomination would come down to two Republican moderates, Collins and Sen.
|
|
The essence of this past year has come down to team effort for Leicester.
|
|
Instead, his chances may come down to the whims of 254 unpledged Pennsylvania delegates.
|
|
That outcome may come down to us to spot the warning signs and act.
|
|
The main issue with the word doesn't come down to the fates of celebrities.
|
|
Feehery emphasized that the election is going to come down to those battleground states.
|
|
" But, he said, "a presidential race cannot come down to one or two comments.
|
|
The problem seems to come down to three main issues: conflicts, drought, and flooding.
|
|
For Cruz, Rubio's closest rival, Super Tuesday has come down to one state: Texas.
|
|
So many of my feelings about Dragon Quest XI come down to wondering why.
|
|
Voting must come down to the results that each voter wants for the country.
|
|
The biggest question, however, may come down to this: Does cashierless technology really matter?
|
|
If that happens, it will come down to deal-making to form a coalition.
|
|
You know, and again, the safety arguments here really all come down to statistics.
|
|
And where it goes from here will come down to the next prime minister.
|
|
PITTSBURGH — The case for Joseph R. Biden Jr. has always come down to Pennsylvania.
|
|
It sounds like the way to balance things out will come down to cash.
|
|
"This definitely has to come down to the new policy," Blessinger told BuzzFeed News.
|
|
Any contest of wills would likely come down to a contest of bank accounts.
|
|
In the case of a tie, contests can come down to a coin toss.
|
|
Whether Netanyahu qualifies may come down to him holding onto the leadership of Likud.
|
|
So ultimately, success in a job interview may come down to knowing your audience.
|
|
Sledgehammers will be employed, as walls must come down to make a house dreamy.
|
|
Sussman said all these conflicts come down to communication skills — or a lack thereof.
|
|
The future of US-Cuban relations could come down to the upcoming US election.
|
|
At a certain point, it does come down to how big the battery is.
|
|
Getting unstuck: The fate of the tax credit approach may come down to money.
|
|
The survival of his culture had suddenly come down to a sole, complicated man.
|
|
Ultimate struggles come down to the same fundamental question: Whose humanity will we recognize?
|
|
If that's what this game has to come down to, so be it. Millimeters.
|
|
But adoption could come down to consumers' confidence in those companies, Meeker's slides reveal.
|
|
Life onboard the ships come down to a few things: work, eat, sleep, recreation.
|
|
"It will all come down to turnout," Ossoff told his supporters at his rally.
|
|
The problem with universal background checks may come down to poor implementation and enforcement.
|
|
I was just looking at him, like, Damn, it's all come down to this.
|
|
The potential similarities between then and now don't just come down to the weather outside.
|
|
Share of capital procurement had come down to 18% from 21% during the same period.
|
|
Whether you decide to sign up will come down to the channels and content offered.
|
|
It's crucial that you come down to earth as you examine these emotionally charged topics.
|
|
She wants me to come down to their office today for a confirmatory blood draw.
|
|
EW thinks this category will come down to BlacKkKlansman and If Beale Street Could Talk.
|
|
Trump's choice for chief of staff was believed to come down to Priebus and Bannon.
|
|
At the end of the day, this dance is going to come down to confidence.
|
|
Why don't you just come down to Panama and check it out, as a friend?
|
|
You know, and it&aposs all of our business when you come down to it.
|
|
It seems to all come down to how much time and spare cash you have.
|
|
The Democratic nomination does not just come down to which candidate gets the most votes.
|
|
But when those come down to community choices, those are made at the council level.
|
|
"It's getting very difficult to get Chinese workers to come down to Florida," Brad said.
|
|
Farooq Tirmizi, an analyst, predicts a fight that will come down to "guns versus textbooks".
|
|
Strategists from both parties think it'll come down to how suburban voters react to Trump.
|
|
"It's going to come down to the public seeing something, seeing her or seeing him."
|
|
I feel like I'm always taking even money on things that come down to fate.
|
|
"I think it's more likely to come down to the Medicare Advantage issue," Newshel said.
|
|
Share of capital procurement had come down to 18% from 21% during the same period.
|
|
The answers come down to watches, men's shirts, and, hilariously, arm hair, as previously theorized.
|
|
So much of notions of disruption come down to the intersection of cool and necessity.
|
|
As Frank's position shows, the issue won't come down to a predictable Sanders-Clinton divide.
|
|
At the highest levels of combat sports, the majority of knockouts come down to fatigue.
|
|
It could come down to the US Senate to preserve funding for global family planning.
|
|
Christmas can kind of come down to a fight between a ham and more turkey.
|
|
A wall can come down, to create private spaces in an otherwise open studio apartment.
|
|
But it has to come down to how good you are at what you do.
|
|
" NVIDIA Corp: "NVIDIA has come down to a level where I think you pull it.
|
|
The divergence in pre-earnings and post-earnings volatility may well come down to coincidence.
|
|
The major differences between these two pairs come down to their resolution, imaging, and soundstage.
|
|
It's all going to come down to turnout: which candidate can better mobilize their base?
|
|
Well, there's no easy answer to that that doesn't just come down to human panic.
|
|
Trump has loomed large in all three races as they come down to the wire.
|
|
Where any line would be drawn on gay civil rights has come down to Kennedy.
|
|
Abrams is in a tight race that could come down to a few thousand voters.
|
|
This is likely to come down to an interpretative difference in what Trump was demanding.
|
|
AND SO, I THINK IN THE END, IT WILL COME DOWN TO THE SAME MATTER.
|
|
The GOP race is seen as likely to come down to either former state Sen.
|
|
The trial could come down to how well they made their argument for the merger.
|
|
It will come down to who can and will expend resources to reverse this decision.
|
|
"In the end, it has to come down to the people wanting it," she said.
|
|
A lot of it will come down to what some riders choose in the end.
|
|
Whether it supports or opposes upload filters will come down to every single member's vote.
|
|
The all-important business tax rate will come down to 20 percent from 35 percent.
|
|
The primary arguments to kill the act come down to two things: competition and innovation.
|
|
Quality, style, fit, and comfort will deliver — so it really does come down to budget.
|
|
The matchup could come down to which team gets more from its superstar wide receiver.
|
|
"I knew on Monday that it was going to come down to this," Tracy said.
|
|
This matchup might come down to which members of the supporting cast provide the most.
|
|
"Hey, come down to Tony's," he says, while air dancers wriggle and piss behind him.
|
|
The government's decision to pursue this case, Toren says, may come down to two factors.
|
|
"Please come down to the front desk and bring your luggage," a woman's voice commanded.
|
|
It could come down to identifying a sewn seam versus a bonded or taped one.
|
|
Ultimately, such a decision would come down to the 424 lawmakers in the state legislature.
|
|
The corporate tax rate would come down to 15 percent, from 2003 percent, he promised.
|
|
Sometimes, at night, the stars come down to the horizon almost all the way around.
|
|
When that happens, it will all come down to who's sitting in those nine seats.
|
|
If one company has its way, the cloud is about to come down to earth.
|
|
It may come down to our brain&aposs reward center, and specifically, the neurotransmitter dopamine.
|
|
Tell whomever it belongs to that they need to come down to get yelled at.
|
|
The contest may come down to the student vote, which helped Mr Western last time.
|
|
"It will come down to cost and what providers will pay for," Dr. Novelli said.
|
|
We knew it might come down to the final minutes and then maybe to overtime.
|
|
They had just done a twirl, and she hadn't yet quite come down to earth.
|
|
That means President Trump's promise to repeal Obamacare could come down to one issue: abortion.
|
|
Israel said the results come down to one central factor: "It's all turnout," he said.
|
|
The answer will most likely come down to the price tags for Strasburg and Cole.
|
|
When it does come down to cost, the impact of the storm could be devastating.
|
|
" The culprit may come down to declining housing affordability, he said, which is the "No.
|
|
Whether the plant proceeds will probably come down to how it will be paid for.
|
|
Analysts say the final decision is likely to come down to London and New York.
|
|
The answer will come down to how much Washington is willing to pay, he said.
|
|
Ford told Reuters that ultimately, self-driving cars will come down to trust by customers.
|
|
The two main caveats for me come down to the weight of the scooter and safety.
|
|
Some have argued the decision could come down to Tatel, who Bill Clinton appointed in 1994.
|
|
Lawmaker Louise Ellman, who represents Liverpool Riverside, said she had come down to join the celebrations.
|
|
The reason Trump likes Shanahan, though, may come down to one very simple thing: He's deferential.
|
|
Madden echoed that issues with combatting the coronavirus would come down to resources in the country.
|
|
By 2020, it hopes, the price of making them will have come down to about $11.
|
|
But it is going to come down to is what's really going on in the economy.
|
|
Their CEO wants an 'open rate,' currently at 20 percent, to come down to 10 percent.
|
|
In fact, it could come down to tracking winners and losers, company by company, he explained.
|
|
When sibling rivalry explodes And ultimately, how much does it come down to nature vs. nurture?
|
|
Even so, it doesn't just come down to what employee is abroad or on a visa.
|
|
Skorney says the choice between Aimmune's and DBV's treatments may come down to efficacy versus tolerability.
|
|
These investigations come down to documents and evidence, much more so than they do witness testimony.
|
|
It may come down to software as both companies duke it out for each other's customers.
|
|
The unemployment rate has come down to 5 percent and the inflation rate is near zero.
|
|
Well, a lot of it might come down to scarcity, or more accurately, the lack thereof.
|
|
"It does come down to timing," said Paul Britt, senior ETF analyst at FactSet Research Systems.
|
|
"I had a sense this game was going to come down to the ball," Quinn said.
|
|
On the Republican side, Buffett said everything could come down to the convention, scheduled for July.
|
|
Her gorgeous hair, no matter what movie she's in, will always come down to her shoulders.
|
|
Molly's a smart and ruthless cookie, and it might all come down to cold hard cash.
|
|
What it's going to come down to now is their willingness to do the harder thing.
|
|
Ralph Nader notwithstanding, presidential elections in the United States pretty much come down to two people.
|
|
Do those 22 senators really want their careers to come down to a referendum on Trump?
|
|
"The sellers have become much more willing to come down to meet the buyers," he said.
|
|
Those prices will have to come down to make any plan viable without breaking the bank.
|
|
"None of those sports come down to just the physical attributes of the competitor," Wolff said.
|
|
"It was going to come down to getting a big hit," Mariners manager Scott Servais said.
|
|
"MGM has come down to about $31 because of a short-term air pocket, " Gabelli said.
|
|
Such cases have at times come down to a single vote and mirrored justices' abortion views.
|
|
As late as Friday, the Texas senator was saying the race would come down to Indiana.
|
|
Like the NBA playoffs, it will all come down to what happens at Quicken Loans Arena.
|
|
The opera revolves around the mythological Stone and Flower, who come down to earth from heaven.
|
|
The decision seemed to come down to Sarah's last few minutes in the car with Nick.
|
|
Behind the scenes, however, Neal's choice had come down to two schools, Arizona and Notre Dame.
|
|
Their season may come down to how well Anderson plays when he returns from family leave.
|
|
If you like the images you're seeing, come down to the library and check out more.
|
|
It seems to come down to the distinction between pleasure and function, stigma and the patriarchy.
|
|
He said that was why dozens of these decisions had come down to the last moment.
|
|
But now is the time to start paying attention, as talks come down to the wire.
|
|
Iranian protests repeatedly come down to one thing: the accountability of the regime to its people.
|
|
But he said that a case of market manipulation would come down to Mr. Musk's intent.
|
|
Many would say it doesn't have to come down to those two choices, and they're right.
|
|
It'll mostly come down to if you want the smaller S10, or the larger Note 10+.
|
|
OK, so you also need to.... It needs to all come down to the same depth.
|
|
"That seems to come down to old fashioned child labor and child abuse laws," Attai said.
|
|
According to Cartas, both answers often come down to the deeper meaning behind the everyday ask.
|
|
It's a get-out-the base election, so that's what it's going to come down to.
|
|
Like most races, Montana's special election will come down to turnout, especially of each party's base.
|
|
It could also come down to that most basic of explanations: different strokes for different folks.
|
|
The "why and how" could come down to a wide range of factors, including pitchers' performances.
|
|
Trump's decision might come down to which trait of his personality the President chooses to indulge.
|
|
That decision could come down to what type of premium a private equity firm will offer.
|
|
The race has come down to the wire, with Northam having a slight edge over Gillespie.
|
|
The come-down to the 'real world' after my time on Necker was all too real.
|
|
But he said that a case of market manipulation would come down to Mr. Musk's intent.
|
|
Kavanaugh's confirmation has come down to the votes of just a handful of senators: Republican Sens.
|
|
Last year, the economy expanded by 1.9 percent while unemployment has come down to 18 percent.
|
|
Some of the disagreements about the plan come down to deep questions of values and goals.
|
|
This is going to come down to one issue — does he live, or does he die?
|
|
"I think it's going to come down to a decision by the military," he told me.
|
|
Of course, the question of his mental health would ultimately come down to a medical opinion.
|
|
After the sale, its stake in the miner will come down to 76.05 percent, the ministry said.
|
|
Wien's concerns come down to nothing more frightening than valuation levels that appear extended over historical averages.
|
|
The true competition has always come down to the same two contenders — the Backstreet Boys and *NSYNC.
|
|
The vote will come down to four key Republican senators, including Paul, as Vox's Andrew Prokop wrote.
|
|
The government wants to see rates come down to lower its borrowing costs and stimulate the economy.
|
|
That is why so many teams from Europe come down to South America to get our players.
|
|
To change this situation may simply come down to how much money Google is willing to spend.
|
|
The case in Northern Ireland may come down to whether the court rules that Facebook did enough.
|
|
What does my survival come down to, what is responsible for my ability to trump natural selection?
|
|
Wednesday's Fed meeting likely will come down to two words, and "rates" won't be one of them.
|
|
Mr Moreno's choices may thus come down to cutting spending with an IMF agreement or without one.
|
|
Ultimately, a lot of these decisions come down to being able to trust the company, Schneider says.
|
|
The difference between a populist tide and a centrist resurgence may come down to the electoral system.
|
|
Whether people felt fear or freedom, shame or pleasure seemed to come down to their own attitude.
|
|
"I personally do not believe that same sex marriage should come down to a vote," he wrote.
|
|
Clearly, House Of Cards was always going to come down to the tragedy of Doug and Claire.
|
|
So it's really going to come down to their homeowner's policy and their underwriter, according to experts.
|
|
Experience will also come down to precisely how much typing you plan to do on the thing.
|
|
So I would say CAT is probably the story and Deere needs to come down to that.
|
|
The reasons behind this unique biology come down to the virus' effect on the human immune system.
|
|
I just felt like a hand come down to me, it felt like that a little bit.
|
|
Right now, though, Brock Akil is sweating—and not because filming has come down to the wire.
|
|
People volunteered to come down to the office and make calls to notify others about the rally.
|
|
In the end, I think it is going to come down to who can execute out there.
|
|
Image Credit: Amy Harris But entry doesn't come down to money raised, companies sold or headlines grabbed.
|
|
Much of this may come down to state and local law, as it initially did with cigarettes.
|
|
Somewhat ironically, this series might come down to which team can shoot better from behind the arc.
|
|
The reason it wasn't in the speech, however, may come down to rather more domestic political considerations.
|
|
We walk past four Russians in shorts and flip-flops who have come down to the beach.
|
|
Some of the difference in appeal, industry observers agree, may simply come down to Khalifa's large breasts.
|
|
It's not realistic, oftentimes, to ask them to come down to Capitol Hill to do Hill visits.
|
|
The finals will likely come down to SK Gaming facing one of these teams, Na'vi or OpTic.
|
|
Predicting what global markets do next may come down to one specific currency, according to one technician.
|
|
"I don't expect the view on the nominee to come down to climate change," said Senator Carper.
|
|
But the election will come down to the same states that have decided most recent presidential contests.
|
|
The discrepancy in his views may come down to other issues that he blames on Snowden's leaks.
|
|
The bottom line is whether you get a job in America can come down to your race.
|
|
For the second time in three seasons, the final has come down to Atlético and Real Madrid.
|
|
That means small companies have more to gain as rates come down to 21 percent for everyone.
|
|
These episodes all have different coloration, but they often come down to the issue of intellectual diversity.
|
|
Creator Hideo Kojima believes some of the criticisms come down to Americans' love of first person shooters.
|
|
Wind speeds have now come down to between 70 and 80 kph (43-50 mph), authorities said.
|
|
I've spent a career negotiating deals, and ultimately all negotiations come down to bargaining strength and leverage.
|
|
That figure has come down to 22017 percent in the second quarter of 229, BIS data showed.
|
|
Both brands were comparable in terms of nutritional facts, so it would all come down to taste.
|
|
So when it comes to presidential elections, it sure seems to come down to red or blue.
|
|
As a result, there is reason to think it will all come down to McCain and Murkowski.
|
|
The announcement sets up a high-stakes vote that is expected to come down to the wire.
|
|
Their faraway glances and forced smiles suggest that the problems they face ultimately come down to fear.
|
|
"Their ratings often come down to 50 percent content and 50 percent social skills," Ms. Flager said.
|
|
Strategists watching the race say a win this weekend will come down to each side's whip operation.
|
|
"This is all going to come down to a mobilizing effort and an organization effort," Jacobson said.
|
|
Republican strategist Ford O'Connell said he thinks the 2900 Democratic primary will come down to four candidates.
|
|
Well my fingertips come down to my knees when I stand with my arms at my side.
|
|
Jupiter clashes with Neptune, asking you to come down to earth when it comes to making plans.
|
|
At the end of the day, it will come down to a handful of closely contested races.
|
|
These lawsuits will likely come down to the decisions made in the U.S. Court of Federal Claims.
|
|
There's a 56% chance that impeachment will come down to a trial and vote in the Senate.
|
|
How quickly an eel makes the journey seems to come down to individual variation, Dr. Righton added.
|
|
But whether they support it will likely come down to whether President Trump does, McConnell said Monday.
|
|
Psychologists say there are a handful of reasons -- and most of them come down to human nature.
|
|
CHICAGO — The race for Illinois governor has come down to this: the multimillionaire versus the billionaire. Gov.
|
|
If that is the case, the rest of the playoffs might just come down to offensive firepower.
|
|
Quantifying that, Mr. Mobley said, does not always come down to which store has the cheapest gem.
|
|
"People come down to the kitchen for recipes," said Ms. Hilly, a 35-year hospital cooking veteran.
|
|
But the blame for a disaster of this magnitude does not come down to a single man.
|
|
Ratification of the deal could come down to how the union communicates the proposal to its members.
|
|
How they affect your business might just come down to understanding the difference between "weapon" and "tool."
|
|
KR: Sometimes it seems the relays come down to luck—who drops the baton and who doesn't.
|
|
Ultimately, he says, the issue will come down to how courts determine federal public policy regarding cannabis.
|
|
Fisher responded that the fan should come down to the field and tell him face to face.
|
|
The reasons for doing so, often cited for similar removals of legacy features, come down to security.
|
|
And as with many things in Silicon Valley, the decision appears to have come down to growth.
|
|
"A lot of it, I think, will come down to how is it paid for," said Sen.
|
|
Matt: Joy Behar tees up a Biden special, suggesting the general election will come down to Pennsylvania.
|
|
"Words can't even express how excited our family is to come down to South Florida," Quenneville said.
|
|
Greg Abbott will come down to Houston businessman Andrew White, the son of former Democratic Texas Gov.
|
|
One is about deliberately rigging the election, while the other can come down to mistakes, however serious.
|
|
There's warring factions in my personality that I try to exploit, but it does come down to me.
|
|
And I'm afraid Facebook has come down to the position of trying to carve out exceptions to that.
|
|
Utilities can start by installing more transformers, so more high voltage electricity can come down to residential levels.
|
|
The entrepreneurs counter, asking if Greiner and Barkley will come down to $150,000 for less than 20 percent.
|
|
"(Day games) come down to readiness," Hornets coach Steve Clifford told reporters of the afternoon start in Atlanta.
|
|
We knew we just had to come down to Miami and get a win and whatever happened, happened.
|
|
It'll all come down to some very flat grasslands, a dragon, and a lot of flammable human bodies.
|
|
And it&aposs also going to come down to how hard can Chuck Schumer hold this caucus together.
|
|
That's why she believes the best hope for mainstreaming queerness in Marvel will come down to the MCU.
|
|
Please accept my humble invitation to come down to KFC Sentosa on 12 June for a complimentary box.
|
|
Rubio told Fox News on Wednesday the campaign was always going to come down to who wins Florida.
|
|
It's possible the Habs' chances come down to Carey Price having to outplay Matt Murray and Corey Crawford.
|
|
"We're getting all teed up for a lot of money to come down to the area," he said.
|
|
The tricky part is actually picking just one device, and it can often come down to small margins.
|
|
Unfair question: If it did come down to Donald Trump and Bernie Sanders, who would you vote for?
|
|
Names like FireEye and Palo Alto Networks look a little better, particularly as they come down to earth.
|
|
But the environmental impact of a product doesn't just come down to the materials that go into it.
|
|
When asked about solving the problem, Palmer suggests that our transportation woes all come down to 30 minutes.
|
|
Bryan: There are two big lessons I hope they learn, and they both come down to creative strategy.
|
|
Its success will ultimately come down to whether parents feel comfortable letting their kids play with a phone.
|
|
A lot of the compliance costs come down to overhauling the third party systems that ran the game.
|
|
"It will come down to the interpretation of the fact finder, whether it's a judge or a jury."
|
|
It will ultimately come down to which app you're most familiar with and most comfortable using every day.
|
|
His vote, like those of a number of other lawmakers, could come down to her testimony on Thursday.
|
|
The most incredible finding from the investigation: The failure may have come down to a simple stolen password.
|
|
I no longer believed that Islam had come down to slowly phase out the loathsome institution of slavery.
|
|
Green went on to predict that the Iowa caucus results will ultimately come down to Warren and Sen.
|
|
"Meeting our aging society's day-to-day needs will largely come down to innovators and entrepreneurs," he said.
|
|
"You come down to the ending and Tyrion says the person with the best story is Bran?!" pic.twitter.
|
|
Whether he does will largely come down to the will of voters in two states: Ohio and Florida.
|
|
Trade deals come down to economic muscle, however, and Britain's economy is roughly 215.2 percent of the EU's.
|
|
"It's going to come down to the details and the preparation you do before the day," she advised.
|
|
The general election is expected to come down to turnout and how Trump factors into Virginians' voting habits.
|
|
It's going to come down to what you've actually done and what you've demonstrated you can get done.
|
|
What I've discovered over the years is that most of our problems do not come down to income.
|
|
That's going to come down to processor improvements, so we'll see what Apple does with next year's chip.
|
|
But figuring out how much you can realistically afford will come down to your debt-to-income ratio.
|
|
For Mr. Ooi, the parallels between Dungeons & Dragons and theater come down to a fondness for shared storytelling.
|
|
The battle for the Republican presidential nomination could come down to Tuesday's primary in Indiana, where Texas Sen.
|
|
Otherwise, the most noticeable discrepancies between the two phones come down to their screen sizes and their cameras.
|
|
Again, that's why these cases need to come down to defining which domains do these accounts belong to.
|
|
TOM BEVAN, CO-FOUNDER, REAL CLEAR POLITICS: Well, this is all going to come down to turn out.
|
|
Whether or not a guest finishes all of his or her drinks may come down to peer pressure.
|
|
Again, that is still going to have to come down to talent and keeping the right people around.
|
|
Grandpa and everyone's come down to watch me play my first game, and I'm standing there in line.
|
|
I always thought a fucking verdict—you never thought it was going to come down to an acquittal.
|
|
The difference between the consumption of the two plastics could come down to the concentrations of additive chemicals.
|
|
Political coalitions in Juneau do not always come down to party-line votes like in other state houses.
|
|
We have averaged six games a year that have come down to a single possession of the basketball!
|
|
Fran: I've come down to join everyone to make the point that that man does not represent us.
|
|
Political analysts say the race will ultimately come down to two candidates, Annegret Kramp-Karrenbauer and Friedrich Merz.
|
|
It could come down to whether a patchwork offensive line can give Aaron Rodgers some time to work.
|
|
I worked in New York until about 2000 when I started to come down to Washington for jobs.
|
|
Still, some of the final details of the massive funding package have come down to partisan talking points.
|
|
The inspections, he added, would probably come down to monitoring how North Korean experts go about the denuclearization.
|
|
At this point, the race may come down to which man has successfully convinced voters he is Trumpier.
|
|
Sunday will come down to the odd shot that will get momentum going one way or the other.
|
|
In the end, though, it really does come down to what the candidates and delegates choose to do.
|
|
"Eventually this will come down to some industry leaders who make some money," JMP Securities' Joe Osha said.
|
|
Poll Watch The state's caucuses often come down to the wire, but this year's contest is especially uncertain.
|
|
Fitch expects leverage will remain high in 267-296 but come down to below 20154x by end-217.
|
|
Jacoby said the decision might come down to the court focusing on how Congress previously interpreted bankruptcy law.
|
|
He said the decision would come down to a judge's interpretation of the facts presented by each side.
|
|
Neither team has a particularly intimidating offense, so this matchup should come down to a few key mistakes.
|
|
Analysts have predicted that next year's election will come down to four states: Florida, Michigan, Pennsylvania and Wisconsin.
|
|
The best speaker for you will likely come down to which ecosystem of devices you're currently invested in.
|
|
Even rates in high-growth China have come down — to 4.3% from as high as 7.5% in 2007.
|
|
Part of this, too, may come down to the number of zeros that trails every Richter or Warhol.
|
|
John McCain was recovering from surgery, suggesting even the procedural vote count may come down to the wire.
|
|
In the end, it has come down to optics—the most inane argument there is in sports discourse.
|
|
Appealing to independents, strategists say, will come down to Sanders's case for a political revolution versus Clinton's experience.
|
|
The price of a good mask has since come down to around $1,000, and scofflaws have taken notice.
|
|
That referendum seems to come down to Rouhani's most controversial policies: his nuclear deal and his economic opening.
|
|
There's nothing wrong with One Mississippi's approach, and the criticisms I offer largely come down to personal preference.
|
|
And since God would never actually come down to govern human affairs, Islamists would do it in his name.
|
|
It's really gonna come down to the individual team involved, and their process and how much freedom they have.
|
|
Both have very similar specs — it'll pretty much just come down to size at the end of the day.
|
|
When it comes to deciding which board is right for you, it really does come down to personal preference.
|
|
Some of the difference appears to come down to what, precisely, Kleven's models control for that others do not.
|
|
In his professional opinion, the right time to take Social Security doesn't always come down to dollars and cents.
|
|
The causes for radicalization are hard to define, but they usually come down to both societal and individual factors.
|
|
" Midfielder McCall Zerboni said the championship match would likely come down to "very small margins" and "very small details.
|
|
" He goes on to say, "I am a very safe man, especially when it come down to my kids.
|
|
Punters, who were giving Ms Le Pen's chances of winning a stratospheric 35%, have since come down to Earth.
|
|
The twin's husband, Mike, a Canadian guy, has come down to see the place his husband grew up in.
|
|
"When you come down to it, it just depends on what your diet is made up of," Bruning says.
|
|
For Google it'll likely come down to cost advantages and hard-to-replicate tech that they've mastered for years.
|
|
In many ways, the creation and development of these agile teams will come down to a matter of trust.
|
|
In a historically low-turnout primary like New York's, the result will essentially come down to a numbers game.
|
|
National output has expanded in the last six quarters, helping the jobless rate to come down to 19.1 percent.
|
|
Virginia law says that in the event of a tie, the winner should come down to drawing a lot.
|
|
CARL ICAHN: You want to be an investment banker, come down to Wall Street and be an investment banker.
|
|
"I think that in these cases they often come down to the credibility of the individuals involved," he added.
|
|
However, the government wants to see interest rates come down to lower its borrowing cost and stimulate the economy.
|
|
The final spot could come down to the head-to-head meeting between the Aces and Wings on Aug.
|
|
It's worth noting that one of the biggest differences on this issue could come down to the Supreme Court.
|
|
And what they come down to is a work schedule that fits right in with western Russia's time zone.
|
|
After the deal, Warburg Pincus' stake will come down to 36 percent, Capital First said in a separate statement.
|
|
The nurse came to take her temperature, which had come down to a manageable 100 degrees within an hour.
|
|
Much of what happens on this issue will come down to his office, and so far it's not much.
|
|
"It's two good teams, and it should come down to a Game 7," San Jose coach Peter DeBoer said.
|
|
We have travelled to the Clink (CenturyLink Field) for the past two seasons and they come down to ours.
|
|
But what many of them come down to is that people like Hohlt really, really, really hate Ted Cruz.
|
|
But a lot of it does still come down to this idea of culture fit and things like that.
|
|
So the case appears to come down to a fairly simple decision: Who will the jury choose to believe?
|
|
These are steady growers that have come down to much more reasonable valuations and have severely lagged technology stocks.
|
|
"We need the technology cost of the sensors to come down to around 6,000 to 7,000 euros," Sedran said.
|
|
In Iowa, like in many battleground states, the race could come down to the difference between organization -- and enthusiasm.
|
|
Clio Chang: Yeah, the test of Tyrion's loyalty was always going to come down to Jaime (and vice versa).
|
|
That may come down to the content of her music, which marries both a message and radio-friendly structure.
|
|
Though ultimately, the choice of which streaming TV service will come down to a number of factors beyond looks.
|
|
This court case may come down to how much Anthem will have to pay in the break-up fee.
|
|
"I take that streak personally because a ton of people in Spokane come down to this tournament," Few said.
|
|
Amy Klobuchar: The pitch from the senior senator from Minnesota to voters will come down to electability and pragmatism.
|
|
I thought it was quite poetic that some of these games were going to come down to a stop.
|
|
"It's nice to hit a buzzer beater," she said, "but no one wants it to come down to that."
|
|
Money, politics, the law, even love: On "Billions," they all come down to what you can get away with.
|
|
House Democrats' targets going into the 22020 election really come down to what happened in the midterms last year.
|
|
It should just come down to if you're cool, have a good attitude, and wanna have a good time.
|
|
And it might come down to this: Protect May, or risk Labour winning and Jeremy Corbyn becoming prime minister.
|
|
Moore appears to have a slight advantage heading into Tuesday, but it will likely all come down to turnout.
|
|
Changing Florida's gun laws could come down to two things: Whether Ms. Hammer can keep legislators from breaking ranks.
|
|
If you are debating between an XS and XR, your buying decision will probably come down to the camera.
|
|
But ultimately it will come down to whether someone decides any of the software is worth devoting resources to.
|
|
The costs have come down to the point where it's reasonable to start to do this for basically everybody.
|
|
The decision will come down to what condition your brows are currently in, and what you're trying to achieve.
|
|
"I knew it would come down to the last six minutes of the game," Washington Coach Scott Brooks said.
|
|
"If this turns into a pandemic or whatever this is, it shouldn't come down to individual decisions," he added.
|
|
Limit the search to "holiday stress statistics 2019" and the results come down to a measly 28,100,000 or so.
|
|
"To me, the question might finally come down to this," Celeste Wallander, President Obama's senior adviser on Russia, said.
|
|
The ultimate disposition of the open space will come down to continued vigilance by the public and public leadership.
|
|
An election of approximately 6 million registered voters could come down to a few thousand votes shifted between parties.
|
|
Trenkle: I think, to be honest with you, it&aposs gonna come down to when we clean it out.
|
|
And getting the deal done may come down to how much of that he immediately transfers to VMware shareholders.
|
|
U.S. business tax rates are too high and should come down to the levels of our main economic competitors.
|
|
These are really heart-wrenching, tough decisions to make, which inevitably come down to deep questions of personal morality.
|
|
The race for the owner of Food Network and HGTV, Scripps Networks Interactive, has come down to one finalist.
|
|
But some Cam Newton magic in that game's final minute made the division come down to the final week.
|
|
"At the end of the year, you just don't know what it's going to come down to," Alonso said.
|
|
And what it seems to come down to is disagreements over the visual aesthetics and tone of the film.
|
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If you kill someone, whether the criminal justice system throws you in prison may come down to your race.
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This enticed players from the Negro Leagues to come down to play baseball in Cuba during the off-season.
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Ultimately this case will come down to the licensing agreement between Leonard and Nike, multiple sports law attorneys tell CNBC.
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If the qubits get much better, he said, this number could come down to a few thousand or even hundreds.
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He has pretty much decided that the general contest is going to come down to Trump versus Clinton in November.
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It was first used in container loading, but over time, modified atmosphere packaging has come down to the individual package.
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Important disputes over civil rights, criminal procedure and corporate regulation often come down to the vote of a single justice.
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"Eventually, A-shares will come down to meet H-shares, so you wouldn't want to buy A-shares," he said.
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And that&aposs going to come down to the process that follows these meetings, which I think will go well.
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Disputes over abortion rights, like gay marriage, have come down to Kennedy, a 1988 appointee of Republican President Ronald Reagan.
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Control of both chambers, and critical influence over the country's policy path, could come down to only a few contests.
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Another piece turns the rods into a giant piano as disembodied hands come down to tinker the ebony and ivory.
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We all know that the 2020 election will come down to the economy, particularly as Trump's economic plans fall apart.
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The main difference will mostly come down to the fact that the little Google Assistant bubbles will show up sometimes.
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So much of the Go experience will come down to whether users take advantage of the tools Google provides them.
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We'd love to see Kaby Lake MacBook Pros, especially after waiting this long, but it might come down to yields.
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So many of our disagreements, no matter how heated the discussions over them are, come down to fissures in culture.
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In fact, appearance plays a key role in character development — and those little details come down to the makeup department.
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For Miesnieks the problems confronting augmented reality come down to creating believable visual objects that integrate seamlessly into the world.
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But Apple's slump in sales in emerging markets like China and India also come down to its expensive price range.
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Ultimately, the cases will come down to the ways in which that law and the Constitution constrain the president's authority.
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Following the deal, Kingdom Holding's stake in Euro Disney will come down to 1 percent from 10 percent, Disney said.
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Photo: Adam Clark Estes (Gizmodo)Ultimately, picking between the Osmo Action and the Hero7 Black may come down to price.
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It could end up being fairly consequential in races that will come down to a delegate count, every vote matters.
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And for it to come down to a two-point conversion, it's a tough way obviously to end the season.
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Difficulty doesn't just come down to the number of saves you can make, or the efficacy of the security cameras.
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It strikes me that the "needs and aspirations" of all people come down to a desire for security and freedom.
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But our politicians today don't get a pass for their incivility because it doesn't come down to shooting each other.
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Hence, the trade may be to wait for price to come down to a level which makes it more attractive.
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I don't think we can even ask for a recount unless it does come down to one hanging chad vote.
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This has now come down to 24 percent of the firm's total revenue, it said in its latest annual report.
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"This is going to come down to public reaction, and I think that definitely tilts in our favor," said Symons.
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Starting to change the well-worn parenting stereotypes doesn't just come down to having the right policies on the books.
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"It's going to come down to me making sure I'm not giving up any points," Klimitchek said of his strategy.
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Instead, the fight will come down to a handful of moderate senators who have yet to announce how they'll vote.
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At this point, views on the stock might to come down to how one cares to view stocks in general.
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Your decision may come down to how much the lack of a headphone jack and physical home button bothers you.
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Some travelers might not want that privacy, so the seat divider can come down to join the seats' beds together.
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His odds to become the next president, which at their longest were 2628-28503, have come down to 22019-4.
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The discrepancy may come down to the type of pet — not only the species, but the temperament of that pet.
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It'll likely all come down to what happens inside the Beltway over tax reform, according to longtime bull Art Hogan.
|
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But I don't think it can make that change permanent — that is going to come down to the presidential debates.
|
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"The tease for tonight was, 'Come down to FedExForum and see JaMychal Green's Grizzlies against Will Barton's Nuggets,'" Joerger said.
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Particularly when we're getting into anything related to AI and algorithms, it's going to have to come down to regulation.
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Where they finish could come down to the season finale at Barclays Center against the Philadelphia Flyers on April 10.
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It may come down to this troubling reality, new research suggests: Work done by women simply isn't valued as highly.
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Choosing the right one for your situation may come down to how much you're able, or willing, to pay monthly.
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Mr. Faso predicted that the race would come down to some basic choices between liberal and conservative, idealism and experience.
|
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That will all come down to whether Carroll's legal team is able to convince the jury that the assault happened.
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But for many people who opt for a green burial, it can come down to cost, environmental impact and legacy.
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Isaac Boltansky, an analyst at the research firm Compass Point, said the resolution's passage could come down to two members.
|
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But is there no way of discussing these controversies that doesn't come down to whether an offender deserved the punishment?
|
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In Britain, the race for prime minister has come down to the Conservative Party's leaders Boris Johnson and Jeremy Hunt.
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"It's too early to say that this is the parliamentary route you're gonna have Democrats come down to," says Wyden.
|
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The race to occupy 10 Downing Street, above, as the leader of the U.K. has come down to two candidates.
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Obstruction of justice cases often come down to whether prosecutors can prove defendants' mental state when they committed the act.
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The prospects for the nominee's confirmation will most likely come down to how a handful of moderate senators will vote.
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"I feel like these bills always come down to the last minute and we're always scrambling against time," Jayapal said.
|
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Come down to the bar, have you a beer, 10 beers, 15 beers, go home and your shit's still there.
|
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Its VC investment of $80 million would come down to $50 million if the deal is priced at its midpoint.
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The cost of lash extensions has since come down to about $100, making the beauty service more accessible and popular.
|
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An individual account normally costs $2.99 per month, so with the deal, the monthly cost will come down to $1.50.
|
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Much of this response is expected come down to what new White House counsel Pat Cipollone advises, the official said.
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Icotinib, another lung cancer drug made by China's Betta Pharmaceuticals, will come down to 5,500 from 12,000 yuan a month.
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All about Nevada In the immediate future, however, Perez's fate could come down to what happens in Nevada this weekend.
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"A lot of it is going to come down to obviously, you can't let the ball behind you," McCourty said.
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I didn't love these pants on me, but that might have come down to the loose fit around my waist.
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Now that oil isn't rallying, the estimates have come down to 85 cents a share...and they're still going down!
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Although traders say that prices have come down to pre-crisis levels of about $500 a kilogramme, supplies remain limited.
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"But it seemed to come down to, 'She's a good friend of mine, and she's a good person,'" Dixon continued.
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Which means that the way the US and Iran interpret each other's next moves would mainly come down to guesswork.
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To me, from a year out, the race will likely come down to two contenders: The Americans and The Crown.
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And the Latino vote could come down to the state's Puerto Rican population — which has surged in the past decade.
|
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A psychologist found your chances of getting a date could come down to something as simple as whether it's sunny
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The argument might even come down to the fact that their music is good, and that people keep buying it.
|
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Instead, it may have simply come down to disputes over which parent company would have a dominant position in ownership ratios.
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If I pulled it all to the front of my face, it would come down to the middle of my nose.
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He should be accountable for his actions, but the death penalty, should it come down to that, would be undeniably excessive.
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SO IT'S GOING TO COME DOWN TO HOW THE NUMBERS ADD UP AS TO HOW LOW WE CAN GET THAT RATE.
|
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It seems likely that most or all of these differences come down to the fact that Cochrane insists on tougher criteria.
|
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As delivery times come down to one day for Prime members, what's the point of ever driving to your neighborhood pharmacy?
|
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As a recent study suggests, all of these factors may come down to an inherited genetic predisposition to being mosquito bait.
|
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This race has really come down to a fight about increasing diversity and electing a new generation of leaders of Congress.
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"Obviously this game it's not going to come down to one player, no matter how good the player is," Kerr said.
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There are around 75 people working in the UK office today, and that will come down to about 20, he said.
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Public debt has come down to 2700% of GDP, the current account is in surplus and foreign-currency reserves are high.
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Even NBC, which broadcasts the Games, has noticed, with one producer extending an invite for Jones to come down to Brazil.
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Even NBC, which broadcasts the games, has noticed, with one producer extending an invite for Jones to come down to Brazil.
|
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Shares of Levi Strauss have come down to a level that is worth pulling the trigger, CNBC's Jim Cramer said Tuesday.
|
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It cost $1,056,000 per pound of the first burger in 2013 but has come down to $9,000 per pound in 2017.
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Exquisitely strange and profoundly commonplace, his intense, hermetic works come down to us like fragments of heaven in a sordid world.
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"In some cases investigations are unfortunately inconclusive and come down to one person's word against another," they wrote on the blog.
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He told Screen Daily that it would come down to what Stephanie Meyer, the author of the books, was up for.
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You knew it could come down to a bounce and they got the lucky bounce there in overtime for the goal.
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It will probably come down to whoever trained better during the six weeks since the last time they raced each other.
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As the hyperloop has come down to earth, it's lost some of its luster, becoming more like a faster, lighter train.
|
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Josh became immediately enraged and demanded the entire group come down to the beach so that the "source" would reveal itself.
|
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So the "lie" may come down to two interpretations of a statement: Trump says he never intended to obstruct the investigation.
|
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Still, Victor believes it will come down to who wins the budget debate and ongoing funding feuds within the Trump administration.
|
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The question of how Tanooka, 7, survived six nights alone in the wilderness appears to have come down to mostly luck.
|
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Though the headlines will be about which quarterback plays better, the matchup might come down to which defense makes more plays.
|
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It may ultimately come down to what the aging Castros, and the wider ruling class that supports them, want to do.
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The federal match rate would come down to the regular rate the government was paying states for Medicaid before the ACA.
|
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Colorful ads aside, the race will likely come down to turnout, with both parties feeling confident they can mobilize their bases.
|
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Like the Clean Power Plan last year, the fate of McAuliffe's climate rule could come down to who wins the governorship.
|
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But part of the discourse in the post-analytics era has come down to who's worth the money and who's not.
|
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Control maps (Ilios, Lijiang Tower, Nepal) in particular are very Mei-friendly since they always come down to close-quarters scrapping.
|
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Tom: There was an open mic night that used to have all the old sods come down to play the blues.
|
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"Hey, why don't you come down to the police department—you, with all of the leaders from the community," Utz said.
|
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This is much more subjective, and at the end of the day, it's really going to come down to your budget.
|
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I couldn't understand how I could have worked my entire life for something only to see it come down to this.
|
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The decision will come down to the Security Council's five veto-wielding permanent members, Russia and the United States in particular.
|
|
The answer may come down to a resilient compound, in élite culture, of Platonic idealism and run-of-the-mill snobbery.
|
|
The Fed signaled that it would slow its rollout because it expects economic growth to come down to earth a bit.
|
|
It's so hard to get everything in a story to come down to one moment, one shot, and George did it.
|
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My money is on the likelihood that this case will come down to the judge's reading of the All Writs Act.
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JOE KERNEN: The price of it has come down to yearly, to get most of the tests, would be about $5,000?
|
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Earp says it could ultimately come down to whether or not the love-afflicted individual is harmful to themselves or others.
|
|
As ride-hail apps compete for Kenyan clients, much will come down to what each can offer around cost and features.
|
|
Second, the initiative with more votes would take precedence, so it may come down to which initiative can get more support.
|
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"To be honest, it should really come down to 'are you in or are you out?" or, even better, 'let's fight!
|
|
Silverstein: So a lot of things come down to happiness and people looking for happiness, what have you discovered about happiness?
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"As we've said over the course of the campaign, this election will come down to six battleground states," the statement said.
|
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And a lot of the challenges we have with this technology come down to the many small quirks of the internet.
|
|
"You don't want your season to have to come down to a committee choosing your stakes," tight end O.J. Howard said.
|
|
"As we've said over the course of the campaign, this election will come down to six battleground states," the spokesperson said.
|
|
Which one you choose may come down to the number of parking spaces that any particular app inventories in your city.
|
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"I think the race will come down to who the voters believe will support and drive the president's agenda," he said.
|
|
At least 75% of the reasons that people quit their jobs come down to things over which their managers have influence.
|
|
Much would come down to the details, and whether the United States decided to tax completed cars, auto components or both.
|
|
"It's all going to come down to enforcement," Brad Adams, Asia director at Human Rights Watch, told the Thomson Reuters Foundation.
|
|
Your home's appeal might come down to your community's stellar points, from excellent schools to ample green space and nearby entertainment.
|
|
Conventional wisdom about this year's election is that it will come down to about 300,000 voters across five or six states.
|
|
Sometimes these quibbles come down to a determination of who has the permission — literal or social — to borrow, and from whom.
|
|
Ultimately, the success of Edge Chromium could come down to whether it's fully embraced by web developers and competitors like Google.
|
|
It was only fitting that Sunday's game, the Mets' 12th in 12 days, would also come down to the very end.
|
|
They must all pass the same safety standards, though, so it really does come down to your aesthetic preference and budget.
|
|
But whether the Democrats can do it will come down to places like Orange County, which is more populous than Iowa.
|
|
But whenever it has come down to Hong Kong vs China in recent years, the decision has always gone Beijing's way.
|
|
From this, Inspector Horn surmises that Ötzi may have come down to his village and become embroiled in a violent altercation.
|
|
Dan Bishop, are locked in a dead heat, and both candidates concede that Tuesday's election will likely come down to turnout.
|
|
Eventual peace will likely come down to a negotiated deal that must involve both local Syrian actors and their international backers.
|
|
It turns out that might come down to personal preference, as more research seems to be needed for a definitive answer.
|
|
The 2017 Grammy Award nominations were announced this morning and, as expected, it's looking like it'll come down to Beyonce vs.
|
|
L.S.U.'s season may ultimately come down to how its two starting guards — Javonte Smart and Skylar Mays — can handle pressure.
|
|
For an airtight case proving a "quid pro quo," though, it might come down to the word of an administrative assistant.
|
|
A big factor in the race for Sears' customers will come down to where the company decides to shut down stores.
|
|
A lot of the times, yes, which kind of sucks about this industry now, that that's what it's come down to.
|
|
Years of sweat, bruises, elimination competitions, and listening to unthinkable amounts of The Incredible Bongo Band have come down to this.
|
|
The next justice will have an outsize influence over any future abortion cases that come down to a 5-4 split.
|
|
And it may all come down to the Millennial aversion to washing a bowl and spoon too early in the morning.
|
|
The stock's valuation has come down to just over 15 times forward earnings, said Boris Schlossberg, managing director at BK Asset Management.
|
|
Washington (CNN)The battle for America's political soul could come down to a street brawl between two boys from Queens and Brooklyn.
|
|
And senators on both sides are quick to realize they can gain leverage if a vote will come down to party lines.
|
|
In many cases, such businesses will come down to whether they can buy capital for less than they can lend it out.
|
|
They exceeded 30% in the wake of a currency crisis later that year but have since come down to around 10-11%.
|
|
In other words, the Medicare for All debate will in large part come down to who can yell their message the loudest.
|
|
Instead, it will come down to the final vote in the plenary in March or April, where all MEPs have a say.
|
|
They are about $800 now and once they come down to $200 mark, you can have all those cameras in any car.
|
|
Messi has insisted that winning the Ballon d'Or five times in his career has come down to the team he plays for.
|
|
" [...] "The choice between S8 models should come down to how much you value having a larger screen and a longer-lasting battery.
|
|
The choice between S8 models should come down to how much you value having a larger screen and a longer-lasting battery.
|
|
"Both Kendra and Hank fought really hard for their marriage and never thought it would come down to this," the source said.
|
|
As you can see, these are really different exposures, and the one you think is better will come down to personal preference.
|
|
And, as with any of these apps, more than anything it will all come down to the kind of crowd it draws.
|
|
Marty Mosby, director of bank and equity strategies at Vining Sparks, said part of investors' fears also come down to consumer credit.
|
|
The company also said its principal amount of debt had come down to $8.167 billion, compared with $9.981 billion as of Dec.
|
|
" The former Secretary of State adds, "Something as fundamental as affordable health care or financial security – that shouldn't come down to luck.
|
|
"To the extent cover is available, it will ultimately come down to how much it costs as measured against the perceived threats."
|
|
It could also come down to the precise specifics of how 2016 unfolds, particularly in Kasich's home state, a key presidential battleground.
|
|
The difference between guilt and innocence in leaks of future potentially incriminating documents could come down to a similar debate over interpretation.
|
|
And ultimately it&aposs going to come down to his believability by the jury which I don&apost believe is very good.
|
|
There was some uncertainty expressed over how quickly inflation would come down to the ideal level of 3 percent, the statement said.
|
|
Now a lot of this will come down to how well Stadia actually functions, especially for people with less reliable internet connections.
|
|
Besides, who is TJ Dillashaw to come down to the flyweight division and leapfrog every fighter already in line for my title?
|
|
What Sessions decides to do on pot will come down to the department's review of another Holder-era rule: the Cole memo.
|
|
It will come down to which campaign can turn out their voters most effectively on election day and in years to come.
|
|
If he's right, curing or preventing some of society's most common and costly diseases might come down to chemically resetting our clocks.
|
|
The vote is expected to come down to the wire amid controversy over how repealing ObamaCare provisions would affect millions of people.
|
|
Finding solutions to the common hangover and the common cold both come down to having a better understanding of our immune systems.
|
|
You aren't going to win an election by having better security practices Beyond time constraints, security decisions often come down to money.
|
|
The fate of these and other cases – and of the ICO industry itself – could come down to an issue of orange trees.
|
|
You come down to the end and Tyrion (Peter Dinklage) says the person with the best story is Bran (Isaac Hempstead Wright)?
|
|
He wanted us to all come down to Siren Studios, where Buzzfeed shoots, and brainstorm ideas for trans content for the website.
|
|
All the TVs appear to be priced similarly, so at this point, it might come down to brand preference and sale prices.
|
|
Only around 100 of his drawings have come down to us, whereas we have well over 1,000 drawings and prints by Parmigianino.
|
|
"It's always going to come down to — everybody likes to spend money, but where do you get the money from?" he said.
|
|
Whether this brief era of good feelings reaches into the new year could now come down to the party's playbook in Alabama.
|
|
Ultimately these cases are going to have to come down to one question: are these social media accounts for business or pleasure?
|
|
When all is said and done, thus far, moves to "reform" health care come down to a simple, and wildly unfair, trade.
|
|
I feel like I'm not giving a super concrete answer here, but it really does just come down to a gut check.
|
|
I feel like I'm not giving a super concrete answer here, but it really does just come down to a gut check.
|
|
This could be construed as a significant move, but it will come down to whether the market welcomes this or not. Currency.
|
|
The skhothane scene snowballed into an international youth culture phenomenon that saw even the BBC come down to explore this "bizarre" subculture.
|
|
LAS VEGAS — For all the millions of dollars spent on this election, the outcome may come down to people like Megan Blas.
|
|
But the difference between Democratic breakthroughs or defeat could come down to just a few percentage points in many of these contests.
|
|
In a recent news release about "early filing season myths," a number of the purported myths come down to: Don't call us.
|
|
The seven-day repo, China's best indicator of short-term money conditions, has come down to 1.9%, from 2.7% in mid-January.
|
|
If the two sides can't reach an agreement, then matters may come down to a vote on Qualcomm's board on March 22009.
|
|
The battle for control of the House of Representatives will come down to roughly 75 seats that are most competitive this fall.
|
|
A year later, both teams still have superstars in their starting lineups, but I think it will come down to the bench.
|
|
Beyond data analytics, field operations, fundraising and advertising, the election will likely come down to voters' charged feelings about a controversial President.
|
|
The proposals likely won't sit well with voters, said Fiorina, especially as the 2020 race will likely come down to moderate voters.
|
|
The top pick may come down to a choice between Arizona freshman center Deandre Ayton and Luka Doncic, a swingman from Slovenia.
|
|
Whether Torchlight 3 feels like a true Torchlight successor will probably come down to how late in development this change really came.
|
|
He said it could come down to which side decides the remaining outstanding issues don't outweigh the growing cost of the strike.
|
|
"Do not come down to the Green and purchase this K85033," New Haven Police Chief Anthony Campbell warned, according to WABC-TV.
|
|
Putin said that the current budget deficit was acceptable and that inflation should come down to 4 percent in the medium term.
|
|
Current lidar systems can cost tens of thousands of dollars, a cost automakers say must come down to a few hundred dollars.
|
|
Current lidar systems can cost tens of thousands of dollars, a cost automakers say must come down to a few hundred dollars.
|
|
In "Beyoncé Leads With 9 Grammy Nominations," Ben Sisario writes: The Grammy Awards may come down to a battle of the superdivas.
|
|
"I knew it was going to come down to a few thousand votes," José Santiago, a Union County Democratic Party official, said.
|
|
The rules are complicated, but most come down to a key question: Does the change in the law affect the federal budget?
|
|
Making a vaccine does not come down to one big aha moment; rather, it is a sequence of encouraging developments, they said.
|
|
The former is fairly likely, while the latter seems like a stretch, so the division could easily come down to Week 193.
|
|
The race is likely to come down to "Green Book" and "The Favourite," and the latter's malicious wit gives it the edge.
|
|
Scott Olson/Getty Images On Election Day, how easy of a time you had voting might have come down to your race.
|
|
What if the show is going to come down to seven remaining characters, each of whom corresponds to one of the Seven?
|
|
She pushed the panic button and phoned my friend's dad, who decided to come down to Mexico and look for us himself.
|
|
Picking an ultimate winner between those two might come down to the wire before preorders for the former kick off early Friday morning.
|
|
And as the health care negotiations come down to the wire, it's becoming more and more clear that Trump will have to choose.
|
|
If all goes according to plan, these samples will come down to Earth in a special return capsule near the end of 2020.
|
|
He recommended waiting for it to report on Wednesday, and then wait for the stock to come down to get a better price.
|
|
Would-be divorcees beware: The extent to which you benefit from your head of household status could come down to your custody agreements.
|
|
But then you actually play one and reality sets in: Such games invariably come down to mindlessly pressing buttons as rapidly as possible.
|
|
Now the fight over women's rights in Argentina has come down to abortion, as it has in so many countries around the world.
|
|
NBC News and MSNBC national political correspondent Steve Kornacki says the 2020 race for the Democratic presidential nomination could come down to Sen.
|
|
The differences between the various new Galaxy S20 models mostly come down to subtleties like specific camera functions, battery size, and screen size.
|
|
While Elizabeth wins the Fishy for being the prime mover, this episode also shows how decisions never really come down to one person.
|
|
By some calculations, the economy will not be at full employment until the underemployment rate has come down to at least 8.5 percent.
|
|
It just feels like, it's the most 2019 Nats thing ever for this to come down to Game 7 of the World Series.
|
|
"He took off today but he will need to come down to earth quickly," his AG2R-La Mondiale sports director, Stephane Goubert, said.
|
|
But more importantly, Erdogan and his supporters have always known that it may come down to trying to stare down a coup attempt.
|
|
In the floor vote, Kavanaugh's fate will likely come down to the decisions of two female Republican senators: Susan Collins and Lisa Murkowski.
|
|
KS: I probably will not be doing that, but when I get back I will come down to that area you live in.
|
|
This election cycle in particular feels like another moment in which our choices come down to how afraid we are, and of what.
|
|
"Neither of the candidates are particularly well liked so it's going to come down to policy," says Andy Reilly, Delaware County GOP Chairman.
|
|
You also need to make sure your TV is compatible with whichever one you get — and this can come down to individual ports.
|
|
If there was a bracket for the most wide-ranging online beauty shopping experience, it would invariably come down to Sephora and Ulta.
|
|
Some strangers who helped out with the filming even said they had come down to the house to do the exact same thing.
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But under either scheme, the avoidance issue is really going to come down to fussy details that neither senator has yet delved into.
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If the women's competition heading into Pyeongchang is more diverse, the men's look set to once again come down to Belarus and Russia.
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Wisconsin may come down to the level of turnout in these blue-collar Trump strongholds versus the more establishment-friendly areas around Milwaukee.
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"There are a lot of investors on the sidelines waiting for this market to come down to a more reasonable price," Cramer said.
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Oral and written communication Success in business, as tech-focused as it's become, can still come down to people's interactions with each other.
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And it looks like it really will come down to it — if there's going to be any hope of stopping Trump at all.
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When I asked myself why that was, it seemed to come down to programming; as women we'd been mostly pushed to be artists.
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"Looking at who does and doesn't kiss, I think it really does come down to access to hygiene and self care," says Volsche.
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Besides, the reality of the wedding industrial complex is that a lot of it does come down to vanity — primarily aimed at women.
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According to a Politico report, Trump's search for the next Fed chair has come down to Powell and Stanford University economist John Taylor.
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While labor negotiations often come down to the final hours, Macy's had shown signs that it took the threat of a strike seriously.
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"To me, this entire issue is going to come down to, why did the president ask for an investigation," Kennedy told the newspaper.
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ET on Tuesday, Bitcoin was trading on these exchanges at the following price points: The varying prices come down to a few things.
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But strategists from both parties know it'll still come down to both campaigns getting their voters to the ballot box on Election Day.
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Similarly, the core rate of consumer price inflation has come down to 1.7 percent, after a long period of hovering around 2 percent.
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"If you look at the scores, a lot of N.F.L. games are now close and come down to the final minutes," Manning said.
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But this is really going to come down to how transfer-resistant these things are and how long they last on my body.
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Kipnis, Kluber lead Indians past White Sox CLEVELAND — Baseball games frequently come down to pitching, and on Tuesday, Cleveland's was better than Chicago's.
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And there, it'd once again come down to two Republican-appointed justices: John Roberts and, if he's still on the court, Anthony Kennedy.
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We come down to 4 percent or 5 percent of the world population but consume 80 to 90 percent of the world's opioids.
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To Spataro, these announcements come down to the fact that Microsoft is slowly morphing into more of a security company than ever before.
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Yet both come down to a relationship between justice and mercy that has a long history — and a cautionary moral for the president.
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The fight will come down to a shareholder vote on directors that is scheduled for Tuesday — unless there is a last-minute settlement.
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Pohl explained why they had to come down to Gitmo at all, rather than calling it off before everyone got on the plane.
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I recognize that, in much of the political realm, the whole affair has come down to whether or not President Trump was charged.
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Don't use full sentencesThere are lots of ways to take things too far, and most of them come down to being too wordy.
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"I think they're probably feeling a bit lonely, and they have come down to have a look around," she told Reuters by telephone.
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Whether that wow factor is worth the price premium the E9 carries over the C9, though, will ultimately come down to your priorities.
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"When you look at it, it's going to come down to the blown chances early in that game," Girardi said after the loss.
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Saturday's presidential election, when 16 million eligible voters will choose among 35 candidates, could come down to a vote margin in the thousands.
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For the moment, in other words, the progress of the central conflict in the Middle East had come down to this unlikely troop.
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And where their young fates -- like whether they make an Olympic team -- often come down to how they're perceived by a selection committee.
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Obstruction of justice cases often come down to whether prosecutors can prove defendants' mental state when they committed the act, legal specialists said.
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But after that it's going to come down to football, and that's what it always boils down to, who can block and tackle.
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Ultimately, choosing between the Apple TV 4K and the Nvidia Shield TV Pro will likely come down to what other devices you own.
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Nailing a job interview at Netflix can come down to showing you&aposre a fit for the streaming company&aposs clearly defined culture.
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That case was decided on a 5-4 vote and subsequent rulings upholding affirmative action have similarly come down to a single vote.
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"A lot of things this season for us are going to come down to our guard play," Ohio State Coach Chris Holtmann said.
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Hong Kong's compensated daters aren't analogous to America's sugar babies—their differences come down to the clients and what they get from them.
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"It's going to come down to four to eight more years of Barack Obama and Hillary Clinton or a different direction," Priebus said.
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Whether or not O'Rourke and other Democrats could address all of these issues may ultimately come down to factors outside of their control.
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And for good reason: Most of the time, the decisions of the DNC and RNC come down to what the party's chairs want.
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A lot of this will come down to how useful these devices are for customers — and well-designed skills are a part of that.
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As part of the new team's restructuring plans, the number of workers is set to come down to 53,000 by the end of 2018.
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But the secret to Republican effort to save the House may come down to the handful of seats where they are actually playing offense.
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The Giants and Washington are running a pretty tight race here, and it seems to have come down to the margin of fingertips. Twice.
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After the participants pour their heart, soul and skills into creating something amazing out of nothing, it will all come down to the judges.
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"I want him to come down to Florida and he might be here a lot, at the house, hanging out with me," Jazz says.
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So many of our relationships with our allies come down to our defense with them and the relationships that were forged through common defense.
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Aside from the lack of a headphone jack, my issues with the Razer phone come down to two small problems and one big one.
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As part of the new team's restructuring plans, the number of workers is set to come down to 93,000 by the end of 2018.
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As of now, Sanders and Clinton are neck-in-neck in Iowa, and victory will likely come down to who has the better organization.
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This could come down to whether federal civil rights laws really do protect trans people — and therefore ban schools from discriminating against trans kids.
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If the swimmers are related, it could mean that great whites mate farther north and then come down to Long Island to give birth.
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But based on a recent interview with The Hollywood Reporter, it seems like Jackson was fully prepared for it to come down to that.
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"It just feels like it's the most 26 Nats thing for this to come down to Game 2140 of the World Series," Doolittle said.
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As many as 2000 percent of cancer cases, and half of cancer deaths, come down to things people could easily change, researchers said Thursday.
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While the hair change could certainly all could come down to business, as fans are speculating, we have a couple other theories to add.
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"Three major competitors is already uneconomic — we're going to see it come down to two," added Roger Colman, media analyst at CCZ Statton Equities.
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The Trump administration's lawsuit challenging California's so-called sanctuary laws will ultimately come down to how much power the federal government has over states.
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OVERALL Ultimately, the plan's safeguards for people with preexisting conditions come down to one key clause about intending to provide adequate and affordable coverage.
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It's even more important given the fact that control of the Senate could very well come down to what happens in the Florida race.
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" Addressing the issues, Mnuchin said: "This campaign and this election is all going to come down to two things: national security and the economy.
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If one of the safeties has "come down to the box," poised at the line of scrimmage, that means the defense expects a run.
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The economics of the LNG market then come down to shipping costs across various routes, and it's here that Europe comes into its own.
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Now, multiple kits have been developed for different types of Labo players, so it'll come down to preference when choosing which one to snag.
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G_Morgan wistfully suggests that the Zerg Queen Kerrigan is going to come down to the Game of Thrones planet and eradicate the White Walkers.
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The decision about whether to run for president, O'Rourke told Winfrey, would come down to his family: his wife, Amy, and three young children.
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Washington (CNN)Donald Trump's vice presidential selection will "come down to one person's comfort level" -- Trump himself -- former campaign manager Corey Lewandowski said Sunday.
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Therefore, without a full bench on the US Supreme Court, the presidential election could come down to some elected judges in a swing state.
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Jonathan Alter, who has written two books on Obama and has spent hours with him since 2002, said it will come down to numbers.
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I had just graduated from NYU, and after I applied to the workshop, I was invited to come down to Washington, D.C. and participate.
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It's important that we encourage new, original storytellers, and being able to tell your story shouldn't come down to how much money you have.
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That number is now thought to have come down to 3.4, and UN demographers expect it to fall to 2.4 by the early 2040s.
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But a new study, published Wednesday in the journal Menopause, has found that these moments of heat may come down to a woman's genes.
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That's why a key part of 5G's success is going to come down to who controls the rights to use those bands of spectrum.
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"People were saying this series looked like it was going to come down to one goal at the end, and it did," Toews said.
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It will likely come down to how much they want it -- how much they want to run a marathon faster than anyone before them.
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For Trump, the choice for Secretary of State ultimately won't come down to weighing the merits of Romney versus Rudy Giuliani (or Bob Corker).
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The election looks like it will come down to Michigan, Wisconsin, and Nevada—defying pre-election polls that showed a handy victory for Clinton.
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I wonder if it's because so much of the reporting on #MeToo has come down to physical interactions: grabbing people, masturbating, flashing, unwanted kissing.
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Despite successfully engaging in some phone conversations, they couldn't convince any of them to come down to the seashore for an in-person encounter.
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"Plus, there are a lot of investors on the sidelines waiting for this market to come down to a more reasonable price," Cramer added.
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There are many factors to consider when making this choice, and it can often come down to small details and preferences, like the controller.
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Liufau,though, has steadily been ramping up his practice workload, and MacIntyre saidhe expects it to come down to a game-time decision Saturday.
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In the end, the November election could come down to what kind of margin Democrats have in Cuyahoga County (Cleveland) and Franklin County (Columbus).
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While Republicans split their votes among establishment, Tea Party, libertarian, and religious right factions, Democrats pretty much come down to establishment vs. anti-establishment.
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These surpluses have now come down to 2.2 percent of GDP from an average of 4 percent during the period from 2012 to 2015.
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"All covered by volcanic ash that come down to the ground, the grass everything," he said, adding he'd already gone back despite the warnings.
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Wade, saying that the issue is much more likely to come down to decisions dealing with particulars surrounding abortion rather than the case itself.
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Secretary of State Mike Pompeo said the delegations were "rapidly" making progress, but it will come down to the meeting between the two leaders.
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Here's the last picture of my Halloween Garden Club tree since it's about to come down to make way for a new killer tree.
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As long as I'd been flying here, they made you come down to this basement and wait in line before you got your bags.
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The title had once again come down to the final race between them, and even with double points no one else could catch up.
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"And I think with every passing incident, those who have not been appropriately skeptical or appropriately critical have come down to earth a bit."
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Factors suggesting this is happening come down to the amount of money being reported as tourist-related versus the actual macroeconomic conditions surrounding it.
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In a Brexit saga that has seen important votes come down to margins that small or smaller, it was a steep price to pay.
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Some of the earliest examples of written texts that have come down to us are proof of our passion for putting things in order.
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Regardless, the fate of both nations would ultimately come down to the decisions made in post-separation negotiations on debt and the European Union.
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If Mr. Trump can avoid a knockout blow in the Southeast, his chances will then come down to whether he can break through Mrs.
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The race, as Sorenson predicted, was going to come down to turnout on the margins: their tracking poll had them in a dead heat.
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What began as a contest with historic diversity, along racial and gender lines, has now come down to two men, 23.2 plus, both white.
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What began as a contest with historic diversity, along racial and gender lines, has now come down to two men, 70 plus, both white.
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What began as a contest with historic diversity of race, gender and sexual orientation has come down to two heterosexual white men over 70.
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New York politicians and transit leaders have seized on the figures to suggest that most of the subway's problems come down to its popularity.
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Even though it's less expensive to become a member at Sam's Club, ultimately, it may come down to which store is closer to you.
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It's all about the end, and how the eight previous films in the franchise come down to what will happen in the final installment.
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Seniors, accustomed to seeing the Glamour Shots logo on the staff's black polo shirts, also come down to the studio for their senior portraits.
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"Almost all decisions come down to money," Nyquist said during a recent Drake game against North Dakota State at U.S. Bank Stadium in Minneapolis.
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The best are so immersive, your next automobile decision might come down to how well the car stereo rocks your favorite Alabama Shakes song.
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But the outcome could come down to a handful of votes in the British Parliament, so nobody knows for sure how it will go.
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Two people were in the station booth, neither of them the woman who had come down to the platform 10 or 15 minutes earlier.
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A lot of it will come down to what was the actual arrangement but also what does the arrangement look like from the outside?
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The father had to deliver the bad news: If they wanted to see their only grandson, they would have to come down to Minneapolis.
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Nailing the job interviewNailing a job interview at Netflix can come down to showing you're a fit for the streaming company's clearly defined culture.
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I understand all too well that life or death for that one patient I am treating can come down to finding that one donor.
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"When you send the money to the companies and the banks, the money doesn't come down to the workers," said Nelson in an interview.
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Come down to earth and head for the GREAT HIKING TRAILS OF THE WORLD (Rizzoli, $50), featuring 75,000 miles of trekking on six continents.
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It does come down to the locker room, or on the field, or having dinner at the Chipotle after practice, the guys compare notes.
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What began as a contest with historic diversity, along racial and gender lines, has now come down to two men, 215 plus, both white.
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The crucial differences come down to the optional 16GB of RAM upgrade, and the 108MP wide-angle lens used in its four-lens array.
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Mr. Rouda said he saw Mr. Baugh as the bigger threat, but quickly added that it could come down to the slimmest of margins.
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Those upsets have historically come down to the No. 15 seed attempting and, more importantly, making more free throws than the No. 2 seed.
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In other words, it will not come down to Zeus or Poseidon, but rather some player at the far end of the Olympian table.
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How Ohio votes in 2020 could come down to one question: Are people judging things based on the dismal economy of a decade ago?
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The four most critical races In the end, the fight over the majority will all come down to Republicans' ability to defend four seats.
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