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985 Sentences With "to contend with"

How to use to contend with in a sentence? Find typical usage patterns (collocations)/phrases/context for "to contend with" and check conjugation/comparative form for "to contend with". Mastering all the usages of "to contend with" from sentence examples published by news publications.

Just as legal and other systems had to contend with stock, they're being forced to contend with cryptocurrency and assess whether policies and processes put in place in a different era still apply.
Searchers had to contend with difficult terrain and thick forest.
But there's another reality to contend with: The American public,
And then there's market leader Ola to contend with too.
Women have a lot to contend with in the workplace.
That is not something I've had to contend with. Sen.
Now he's got to contend with Jimmy Kimmel as well.
But she now had an eating disorder to contend with.
There could be industry workarounds for Warren to contend with.
The world may soon have to contend with individualized warfare.
There's almost no baggage for an actor to contend with.
But they would have other new taxes to contend with.
Semenya has had to contend with controversy throughout her career.
Our state not only has to contend with increased wildfires.
Pompeo also has to contend with tough opponents at home.
Intimacy issues pop up today for you to contend with.
Now, they have to contend with federal fights as well.
They still had to contend with their America problem, though.
All the things that women have had to contend with.
Of course, there is still Serena Joy to contend with.
The companies may still have to contend with other states.
Mr. Navalny has also had to contend with unidentified assailants.
And we do have some wind chills to contend with.
However, it is also starting to contend with slowing growth.
Humanity doesn't really need another common virus to contend with.
However, difficult emotions come up for you to contend with.
The Canadian also had to contend with a damaged tyre.
There are nasties to contend with, too, the Silent Ones.
Even with a steady supply of cat fur to contend with.
Living in Jamaica, Xenothrix did not have to contend with predators.
Whites, in particular, were asked to contend with an ebbing majority.
How can one street have so much drama to contend with?
On this episode, both men had new antagonists to contend with.
Challenges in China There are other headwinds to contend with, though.
Bisexual men have their own set of stigma to contend with.
Not to mention, the kit has to contend with family tradition.
Banks have had to contend with a rising number of scams.
Venezuelans are forced to contend with completely arbitrary daily withdrawal allowances.
And they don't have harsh winters, like Montreal's, to contend with.
In the meantime, we may still have to contend with pizzagates.
The new prime minister will have to contend with such gripes.
The region already had to contend with Hurricane Harvey in August.
The company also has to contend with its crucial pro market.
And there's still the scariness of the moment to contend with.
And companies ultimately have to contend with their customers as well.
Baby boomers, however, also have to contend with their growing obsolescence.
China's global ambitions will also have to contend with local politics.
They also have to contend with internal divisions over immigration policy.
That's not to downplay the misogyny Clinton had to contend with.
Facebook has more than just new user habits to contend with.
Samsung also has Apple's traditional September iPhone reveal to contend with.
Jurors may also have to contend with gruesome crime scene photos.
That same fear is what the Dreamers have to contend with.
She also has to contend with a power-trippy science teacher.
These aren't the only issues for investors to contend with, either.
Now though, there is no Clinton for Biden to contend with.
But it will soon have another new rival to contend with.
It's another to contend with a human actor play the part.
There are also wild cards like monkey malaria to contend with.
Whether they stay or go, they'll have damage to contend with.
There is, of course, the issue of money to contend with.
Congressional candidates don't have to contend with a sexist media environment.
There's lots of drama for you to contend with this July, Libra.
You'll need to contend with responsibilities concerning your money and love life.
And, Curtice said, Labour has to contend with Jeremy Corbyn's striking unpopularity.
Amazon will also have to contend with a more active regulatory environment.
There are foes to contend with, and a particular goal to accomplish.
Then there's ongoing litigation between Toshiba and Western Digital to contend with.
Plenty have never been worn, no sweat or creases to contend with.
Luckily for them, they now won't have to contend with that future.
At the same time, Salke had to contend with brewing cultural tensions.
The justices have a third case of this sort to contend with.
These two potentially unifying figures will have to contend with factional candidates.
At best Mr Putin will have to contend with an incomplete triumph.
Miners, including Cameco, have been forced to contend with lackluster bottom lines.
In the short term, there are more pressing issues to contend with.
These aren't the only disadvantages the opposition has had to contend with.
For travelers, this means fewer long lines or crowds to contend with.
But European banks will still have to contend with American regulatory requirements.
Currencies will also have Friday's U.S. non-farm payrolls to contend with.
Everyone has real-life issues to contend with away from the field.
But any solution will have to contend with the country's property problems.
Counting our own children, we might have to contend with four generations.
But the broken city is still struggling to contend with its past.
You have to contend with cumbersome stairs, crowded sidewalks and narrow stores.
And then there is also this person's — Maureen's — sign to contend with.
Governments are struggling to contend with what increasingly looks like a pandemic.
Sanders, Warren and Klobuchar also have another wild card to contend with.
A little early to have to contend with a new overstuffed turkey.
And Heller still has to contend with Republican primary challenger Danny Tarkanian.
And under Trump, migrants have also had to contend with Mexican authorities.
How to Start a Revolution also attempts to contend with Duca's virality.
You're still left to contend with issues of fairness, real and perceived.
But Pouille hasn't had to contend with that kind of sexist negativity.
And some parts of the country have to contend with inclement weather.
President Jimmy Carter had to contend with a serious challenge from Edward M. Kennedy for much of 1980, and lost re-election, as did President George Bush in 1992 after he was forced to contend with Patrick J. Buchanan.
She's watched retailers fail to contend with the shift to selling products online.
Poachers in Africa will now have to contend with a new foe: science.
In gaming, Microsoft has to contend with both Sony (SNE) and Nintendo (NTDOF).
Apart from journalists, authorities also have to contend with Kim and Trump impersonators.
The mood is confident—but you'll also need to contend with huge egos.
Some food outlets have to contend with raccoons or foxes raiding the bins.
It'll have to contend with a slew of other well-armed competitors, though.
The large U.S. banks have some serious issues to contend with, Mayo said.
At that point, they have another challenge to contend with: longer life spans.
A fresher approach ... and new enemies for Zuckerberg and Co. to contend with.
And drones in general have a fair bit of regulation to contend with.
Also, Felix will have to contend with a newly formidable opponent: The DEA.
There's the blast itself, and then all the radioactive fallout to contend with.
You may have to contend with some big egos, but generosity flows, too.
Yet voters, and their representatives, also have to contend with the ruling clergy.
How were you able to contend with this dynamic in scenes with King?
In addition to competitors, Uber also needs to contend with regulators and policymakers.
Democrats will also have to contend with the perceived successes of the GOP.
The puzzles never get too tough, staying pleasant and breezy to contend with.
And, of course, millions of Americans have to contend with state taxes, too.
The Vietnamese government has also had to contend with public pressure at home.
Unexpected secrets will pop up for you to contend with during this transit.
They usually have a lot of buried feelings of disatisfaction to contend with.
But Hopkins will probably have to contend with the top cornerback Patrick Peterson.
Europe barricaded itself against this flow, leaving Turkey to contend with a crisis.
Yes, he added, there is a wider variety of tourists to contend with.
During Ramadan, we are asked to contend with these feelings and let go.
More recently, the academy has been struggling to contend with the #MeToo movement.
Sanders, meanwhile, has had to contend with worrying cracks in his campaign's strategy.
But the team also has the Toyota Le Mans curse to contend with.
In short, you've got two problematic employees to contend with, not just one.
There are the serial humiliations of Hitler Youth day camp to contend with.
Unfortunately, those late-blooming geniuses have to contend with powerful biases against them.
Residents and businesses have had to contend with mandatory water rationing since 953.
He had to contend with veteran cornerback Vontae Davis quitting on the team.
And more often before exceeding a high, you have to contend with it.
China also has to contend with outbreaks of swine fever in other countries.
He has to contend with the complications of the primary map and calendar.
There is an inherent challenge of transporting the world to a theme park: The movie's Na'vi inhabitants had to contend with viperwolves in the forest, while visitors to Pandora: The World of Avatar mostly have to contend with crowds and lines.
Production was reportedly difficult, having to contend with Garland's addictions, weight fluctuations, and illnesses.
That's been taken away, and you still have rate hike possibilities to contend with.
But both he and Hamilton also have to contend with a resurgent Red Bull.
But the Resistance has to contend with something the Tea Party doesn't: the map.
So there are a lot of bonded microfibers to contend with teeth and claws.
Unfortunately, the EOS R has to contend with two big misses on Canon's part.
And that growing population has to contend with disturbing episodes of hostility and violence.
On top of all of this, today's farmers have to contend with intellectual property.
But U.S. soybean suppliers will have to contend with an expected bumper Brazilian harvest.
Breitbart will have to contend with strict laws governing hate speech and anti-Semitism.
The biggest obstacle that InSight's engineers had to contend with is the planet's atmosphere.
Standard Chartered has also had to contend with increasing nervousness about the banking sector.
That calculus becomes even more complicated when people have multiple cards to contend with.
On Prince William's wedding day, police had to contend with 18 protests in London.
It'll be just like Y2K but there will be another digit to contend with.
But before you get too excited, there are some hard realities to contend with.
One other thing that Netflix will have to contend with is rising content costs.
Soon, however, the fishermen may have to contend with a different sort of catch.
President Santos will also have to contend with dogged opposition from his foe Uribe.
Egypt has had to contend with Islamist sympathizers in the armed forces for years.
With Black Friday been and gone, there are now Christmas deals to contend with.
In other words, CurrentC had a host of issues to contend with, before today.
Each planet's visual uniqueness translates into different hazards that you need to contend with.
Man is unable to contend with this violence: bodies lie strewn across the frame.
He also has to contend with another data breach bug discovered yesterday in Google+.
Conservatives may soon have more than the odd gay wedding cake to contend with.
Greater antitrust scrutiny is needed to contend with the high level of industry consolidation.
A competitor would still have to contend with the possibility of unresolved future costs.
And a growing family in Michigan has a serious grocery bill to contend with.
But he had to contend with the same prejudices that affected other British Muslims.
The last time investors had to contend with an inversion like this was 2005.
Refiners also have to contend with other damaged infrastructure that are disrupting supply chains.
Regardless of who is in office, is this what we have to contend with?
There are daily resort fees to contend with, not to mention meals and incidentals.
If Democrats win the Senate, they'll have Trump's conservative judicial overhaul to contend with.
But unfortunately, commuters in the great plains had to contend with Quacky last week.
And that's not all he'll have to contend with among the Democratic primary electorate.
" Sharing ventilators, she said, would present "myriad issues you would have to contend with.
He also had to contend with mainstream conservatives and even his colleagues at Breitbart.
"That's just more supply that OPEC and non-OPEC producers have to contend with."
Right now, no one has the bandwidth to contend with a frustrating user interface.
He's a new sort of beast that we have to contend with as artists.
Boosted interoperability would help hospitals struggling to contend with the pandemic better coordinate care.
In addition to suffering intermittent pandemics, Europeans had to contend with numerous endemic diseases.
If he chooses to run, Biden will also have to contend with his age.
Yet, Republicans also have another worry to contend with: primary challenges from the right.
The threat the authorities now have to contend with is the exodus from Syria.
Exxon still has another 15 climate lawsuits to contend with, so far, noted Parenteau.
" Gerard Farrell: "Dumbest I ever had to contend with was twice-a-week neckties.
And some of Microsoft's initial attempts to contend with Google's rise in schools stumbled.
That's not to say cities don't have to contend with pollution captured by rainwater.
Nor did they have to contend with fabricated studies, or fake news, or Twitter.
Ramos, on the other hand, will have to contend with twice as many candidates.
On the streets of Addis, however, I had to contend with the obvious facts.
"Filters do have to contend with each other in some way, too," he said.
But they will have to contend with weaker secondary markets which could hurt deals.
Newt Gingrich has called for a revival of HUAC to contend with ISIS sympathizers.
Pichai will also have to contend with being under more regulatory scrutiny than ever.
However, Buttigieg still has to contend with the fundraising power of his fellow candidates.
Hike will also need to contend with these payment specialists, and that's no easy task.
In addition to Amazon, Cloudera has to contend with emerging companies like Databricks and Snowflake.
But she's already had to contend with far more than her fair share of shit.
And to sit there and take the heat, publicly, is to contend with those criticisms.
Any spending plans would have to contend with rising budget pressures and an economic slowdown.
You won't have to contend with ice cubes watering down your cup of hot coffee.
After all, by some estimates, there are as many as 50,000 cities to contend with.
Europe's biggest low-cost airline has had to contend with the rising price of oil.
The Asian bidders may need to contend with an outbreak of economic nationalism in Tokyo.
And it might not be the last special election that Republicans have to contend with.
To preserve the festive atmosphere, the Russian authorities will have to contend with several difficulties.
And now there's Zika to contend with, a disease that's been linked to birth defects.
The company will have to contend with trendy diets, which unlike WW, are often free.
After the sign-up bonus, you still have to contend with the hefty annual fee.
An outdoor concert has to contend with weather, while an indoor performance has space constraints.
Detroit will have to contend with a top Panthers line that seems to be clicking.
We also need to contend with the exaggerated illusions that keep people supporting these leaders.
No matter how you slice it, stocks have a serious earnings problem to contend with.
Garvie believes these systems have to contend with too many variables to be effective today.
The company has also had to contend with recession in Brazil, once a growth area.
And to further complicate already tough decisions, states sometime have to contend with timing issues.
For the first time in Gary's adult life, he has to contend with self-doubt.
But regardless of what she had to contend with, Hudgens was also flat-out excellent.
Beyond that, there is a league of psychological troubles and social stigma to contend with.
Thursday was the second time this month Lyondell had to contend with an unplanned interruption.
The auto industry has had to contend with a slowdown in business in recent years.
He'll also need to contend with managing his own boss and with winning legislative victories.
We are just catching our breath after Ebola, and have now to contend with Zika.
But taller towers were another matter, requiring additional steel reinforcement to contend with severe winds.
Each of us has his or her own obsessive thoughts and fears to contend with.
There also appears to be a new part of the world to contend with: tornadoes.
There are recently revamped models from Hyundai, Kia, and Chevrolet to contend with as well.
When it comes to labor issues, the world of retail has plenty to contend with.
His films ask viewers to contend with ambiguity, which is part of their sly subversiveness.
But you still have to contend with TV, radio, podcasts, newspapers, friends, and opinionated strangers.
Competing under full kickboxing rules, Hug would have to contend with punches to the head.
That is obviously hard for startups — except for rocket ships like Uber — to contend with.
But you also have to contend with the Scylla and Charybdis of isolation and distraction.
But that's what you're going to have to ... You still have to contend with them.
For years, it struggled to contend with widespread piracy of its Windows and Office software.
When the Eagles have the ball, they will have to contend with Arizona's opportunistic secondary.
The human left Yellowstone unscathed, but he still had the park's staff to contend with.
But grumpy customers will have to contend with the structural imperatives of the insurance business.
It was before the twin towers fell and Muslims had to contend with terrorist stereotypes.
The original Miles is still around, and has to contend with his seemingly superior clone.
That helped fuel a fundraising bonanza that made Buttigieg a formidable candidate to contend with.
Now viewers will have to contend with Jesse's reality that he's still a wanted man.
He sources much of his steel locally, and has had to contend with rising costs.
Some makeup artists have also lowered their rates to contend with the change in demand.
Domestic industry also would have to contend with China's manipulation of the global supply chain.
Unlike older farmers, young farmers often have to contend with student loan debt, Ackoff said.
Robin Li said that Google would need to contend with the strength of Chinese companies.
Studios have to contend with a lot of fan backlash, often for the wrong reasons.
But the smug style sees no true ideology there, no moral threat to contend with.
Buck may also have to contend with the plans of the charitable trust that controls Hershey.
This hasn't existed yet, and anything after Midsommar is going to have to contend with it.
After the Golden Globes ceremony, the movie's stars were forced to contend with the film's reputation.
Of course, the internet isn't going away, and retailers still, really, have to contend with Amazon.
As we count down to the holiday weekend, we'll have a cosmic curveball to contend with.
Little Spoon will also have to contend with Plum Organics and the age-old Gerber brand.
Oklahomans also had to contend with heavy rains and flooding, prompting water rescues by first responders.
And with the introduction to the Cradle, we have another evil technological system to contend with.
To contend with a phenomenon as astounding as the internet, the director starts at the beginning.
Did you have to contend with that, or have you been seeing that kind of reaction?
The two also had to contend with a fan who seemed to photobomb their stylish exit.
The 61st Annual Grammy Awards have to contend with some of music's most impressive new talents.
However, there are still other space weather hazards that satellite operators will have to contend with.
And even if the judges are cowed, Mr Kenyatta will have to contend with continuing protests.
There's also a bunch of TV show canon to contend with, like Legion and The Gifted.
Be aware that even if you're properly insured, you may have to contend with high deductibles.
Yet the longer the generals hang around, the more problems they will have to contend with.
In Houston, survivors of Hurricane Harvey had to contend with raw sewage and fire ant flotillas.
Sans lights, cameras, and action, Grimaldi will have to contend with the ending of Gates' relationship.
Uber is spending a lot of money on marketing to contend with its smaller, pluckier rival.
In that time, the market also has next Thursday's European Central Bank meeting to contend with.
They are not locked into a 1950s sensibility of manhood, which I had to contend with.
He started on pole, with Raikkonen alongside, and had to contend with a skewed steering wheel.
Apple has had to contend with a lot of leaks of details of the next iPhone.
Eventually you'll have to contend with a spiky, underwater creature that means instant death if touched.
I guess we'd have to contend with them, but that could wait until after the election.
And because its Newark farm is indoors, there are no bugs or rodents to contend with.
China also has to contend with tighter supplies from Argentina, the world's third-biggest soybean exporter.
A lunar elevator would not have to contend with the Earth's gravitational force or space debris.
But lawmakers seeking to regulate AI will have to contend with a number of competing pressures.
While the Uffizi has to contend with crowd control, other Italian museums have the opposite problem.
But in making this attempt, Mamie and women like her had to contend with severe laws.
But then she had to contend with a knee injury that required two operations in 2009.
Though each character has a personal struggle to contend with, nothing ever feels truly at risk.
Leaders there are hoping they don't have to contend with anything like that again this year.
Singers in China have long had to contend with official restrictions, despite a thriving music scene.
When the heavyweights are on the field, the Rams will have to contend with Drew Brees.
Ms. Aldaya also has to contend with scenes in which she is chased by menacing men.
Gay-rights activists in South Korea often have to contend with insults and threats of violence.
In terms of the push, the foragers were having to contend with challenging ice age conditions.
MUMBAI, India — So far, India has had to contend with very few known cases of coronavirus.
MUMBAI, India — So far, India has had to contend with very few known cases of coronavirus.
On a recent fall afternoon, however, Rocks has a different sort of problem to contend with.
As their numbers grew, ranchers have had to contend with wolves' appetite for cattle and sheep.
But most will have to contend with a severe shortage of workers and disrupted supply chains.
At the same time, automakers have had to contend with a new political agenda in Washington.
Beyond closing its borders, North Korea has taken other steps to contend with the viral outbreak.
Drivers of these vehicles also have to contend with the loss of income following the ban.
For much of the last decade, households around the world have had to contend with it.
Pax Americana is now faced with a dilemma that European empires had to contend with before.
Future generations will be forced to contend with the crushing deficits that Trump is racking up.
Now, the Americans and Israelis will have to contend with the serious breach of espionage etiquette.
The only way to contend with this misperception is to examine your company stock holdings dispassionately.
But that doesn't mean Biden hasn't had to contend with the issue on the campaign trail.
That made it clear to Ukrainians that Giuliani was a force to "contend" with, Holmes said.
Yet even Walmart is having to contend with a sea change in the way people shop.
Democrats also have to contend with the Trump White House effort to undermine the Congressional investigations.
Banks also have to contend with rising technology costs, which can make scale look more appealing.
The Islanders also have to contend with rumors surrounding their future home — wherever it may be.
He wanted to say he might have to contend with retiring in a couple of years.
But they also have to contend with sponsored posts, where the platforms don't see a dime.
In recent years, the office has had to contend with a historic backlog of pending cases.
Uber also has to contend with competition from Didi, Ola, Grab and Careem in international markets.
Coaches aren't the only ones responsible for the mess that female athletes have to contend with.
Australia now needs to contend with the fact that the gunman was one of their own.
And then there's that Hydra problem to contend with—shut one down and another will appear.
Lil Wayne set out the blueprint that every other rapper since has had to contend with.
Global investors might soon also have to contend with high numbers of defaults in China's corporate sector.
The next Democratic challenger will have to contend with fake news, as will subsequent Republicans and independents.
Meanwhile, enterprise startups have to contend with long sales cycles and stricter requirements from their prospective customers.
Simply by design, Periscope has to contend with the worst problems of both chatrooms and live video.
It's set in a vast wasteland, one filled with all kinds of dangerous groups to contend with.
The Republican candidates may also have to contend with Sessions, who held the seat for two decades.
One question he may have to contend with: Is his team too dominant to help his chances?
And even if they were, they'd have to contend with the message of their own party's nominee.
But it does open up a new front of opposition for the White House to contend with.
It's harder to contend with the ones whose main focus is to not seem like a monster.
All the while, restaurant workers are left to contend with calls they describe as creepy or confusing.
The university has also had to contend with a shrinking number of campuses, layoffs and tumbling enrollment.
Australia take on China next, while the U.S. has Serbia to contend with Friday night Rio time.
Providing proper credits to songs is an issue many online streaming platforms have had to contend with.
At its most peaceful, there were still gang wars, serial killers, and Jingle Jangle to contend with.
Of course, any enterprise messaging startup has to contend with the specter of Slack and Microsoft Teams.
That kind of popularity means she has to contend with some of the internet's less supportive elements.
It has had to contend with a slowing Chinese economy and the ongoing U.S.-China trade war.
"Even when they don't win, they emerge as actors all politicians need to contend with," he said.
After that, Watson will have the lucrative FedExCup playoffs to contend with before the Sept. 30-Oct.
After all, these couples don't have to contend with the libido-wreckers that ordinary ones have to.
Politically volatile regions also generate high demand as companies have to contend with damaged pipelines, Jones said.
There are still plenty of moving parts to contend with here, including, perhaps most consequentially, broadband caps.
Americans also have to contend with skyrocketing costs for the essentials of life: education, healthcare, and housing.
As Bitcoin has grown, it's been forced to contend with a flood of traffic on the network.
In the longer term the EU will have to contend with the imbalances created by Britain's absence.
Even if you're able to contend with that, there's also just not a whole lot to do.
Now it's going to turn into mud, which will be another hazard for them to contend with.
But food waste is something we food media folks need to contend with and talk about more.
Banks was singularly calm about Brexit, but he had to contend with some issues of his own.
Elected populists will have to contend with the practicalities of government, potentially against a weaker economic backdrop.
In 2018, Erdogan will have to contend with a corruption scandal at home and regional uncertainty abroad.
If things could be dull or hard, at least there weren't too many miseries to contend with.
On the flip side, the Tesla also has to contend with super-sedans from Mercedes and BMW.
Without having to contend with an internal combustion engine, there was more room to play around with.
The idea of dealing with refugees—another form of immigration—is much more difficult to contend with.
The central and eastern regions of the country were also expected to contend with a cold snap.
"Now we have the South China Sea to contend with," Mr. Bui Jones said with a chuckle.
We can, at best, help them develop the tools (intellectual, emotional, psychological) to contend with these dangers.
But for a young woman faced with an unplanned pregnancy, those are terrifying misperceptions to contend with.
Of course, the company still has to contend with a shrinking smartphone market, just like everyone else.
The N.O.C. has also had to contend with assaults on its independence as a decision-making body.
Last year, it stopped production in China where it had to contend with competition from domestic rivals.
A lot of people will have to contend with AI taking over some part of their jobs.
Father John Misty has the digital onslaught of the 21st century, and its consequences, to contend with.
Last year, it stopped production in China where it had to contend with competition from domestic rivals.
But, legal weed in Canada has introduced some new problems that these companies need to contend with.
But, Trump has also had to contend with the fact that his party remains divided on it.
New York (CNN Business)Retailers around the world are radically reshaping their strategies to contend with Amazon.
But now, ironically, Mattis has to contend with an even more pugnacious rival in the White House.
On the other hand, Axe Cap has to contend with its own worst enemy: Axe's blustery self-confidence.
In real life, hockey culture has serious issues to contend with, including homophobia, sexual assault, racism, and misogyny.
The problems only came when he was having to contend with being beaten up on the feet too.
Even though she no longer has to contend with unpaid time off, she has anxiety around sick days.
Until now, Nearline users also had to contend with a 3 to 5 second latency when accessing data.
As Tasha pointed out, we've already got several murders to contend with, and no one to solve them.
And now Mars, in sparking a mini culture war, actually has a dramatic pop story to contend with.
Samsung will have to contend with a slew of other well-armed competitors making a similar play, though.
Now, on top of the obvious scientific hurdles, Ishee has a new challenge to contend with: the FDA.
The winter theme also means lots of snowy areas, which include slippery surfaces for players to contend with.
It does not just have to contend with Labor: several more conservative strongholds are under threat from independents.
Of course, they'll have to contend with the real Spice Girls, who may or may not be reuniting.
That's a burden any ruler has to contend with, whether they're in Shakespearean England or zombie-strewn Virginia.
The military assembled an adaptation roadmap in 2014, chalking out how they plan to contend with climate change.
Marshall had to contend with a "very large group…opposed to practically anything outside of the United States".
Incumbents will also have to contend with Apple, despite the delay of its smartspeaker until early next year.
Those who decide to stay have to contend with a drinking water supply contaminated with cancer-causing benzene.
It also has to contend with heavy competition from Chinese players, such as BYD (BYDDF) and NIO (NIO).
There's also this question to contend with: Are you consuming the text the way the author intended it?
Broken glass—and spilled food—will be the last thing you&aposll want to contend with when unpacking.
Unfortunately, San Francisco had to contend with a far more efficient bullpen from Chicago: Just Straight Up Gas.
On the one hand, she's got a potential siege situation — as outlined earlier by Bronn — to contend with.
Every Scorpio has an enemy to contend with — and a surprising one may find you during this time.
Musk is the public face of Tesla, and any chairman would have to contend with his powerful personality.
Those without that calm now also have to contend with the exhausting demands of living a digital life.
Though McBride showcased some serious resilience, he was ultimately unable to contend with his far more experienced foe.
Here, she begins to understand the Commander's true nature, and has to contend with unexpected pettiness from Nick.
If growth stagnates for paid subscribers, Spotify will have a lot of angry royalty holders to contend with.
The action is challenging and intense, with an almost non-stop of barrage of enemies to contend with.
Looking further out, legal action and greater industry regulation are huge headwinds 'the Zuck' has to contend with.
But it may soon have to contend with heavy US and UK naval firepower already in the region.
Blunt does have to contend with the anti-establishment, anti-Washington winds that have roiled the presidential primaries.
But they've still got to contend with tough competition, evolving technology, and fickle consumer preferences like other retailers.
While Chicago was an extremely flat course, we'll have to contend with bridges and hills along the way.
But the party has had to contend with the split that showed itself during the 2016 presidential campaign.
Boeing has had to contend with several reduced orders for the 777X, including from British Airways and Lufthansa.
Imagining a President Trump having to contend with Vice President Clinton makes the current system make more sense.
Trump aide Kellyanne Conway says she may have fewer distractions to contend with than many people in government.
And Sinclair still has to contend with the possibility of $1 billion in damages from the Tribune lawsuit.
With its new VoIP product, Tizeti looks to contend with the likes of Skype, WhatsApp, and major telcos.
Just as publishers have been forced to contend with the ever-changing algorithms on Facebook, Instagram, and YouTube.
Mr Mashaba will also have to contend with a city bureaucracy that is politicised and largely pro-ANC.
Since former Speaker Newt Gingrich's (R-Ga.) time, they've had to contend with irrational obstinacy, obstruction and disingenuousness.
There are many issues to contend with, including player protests, declining TV ratings, and the debate about concussions.
Uber still has several major issues to contend with, including several major government investigations, regulatory messes and lawsuits.
Eviction became a complicated procedure, and real-estate developers have had to contend with these holdouts ever since.
And then you realize how alike we really are, that we all have our issues to contend with.
Still, it's smarter to contend with the source of that anger and desperation, rather than police the outburst.
Some humans have guns, flamethrowers, or armor, and there are motion-activated turrets to contend with as well.
But boy are we tired of having to contend with the stereotype that we are slow and unintelligent.
The agency has also had to contend with embarrassing leaks of its cyber tools by hacker group ShadowBrokers.
He'll have to contend with a cadre of lawmakers who have increasingly embraced the president's low-blow tactics.
But to achieve all these initiatives from drones and data, the charity has one hurdle to contend with.
It's even more troubling to think that nobody inside Google knows how to contend with Google's size, either.
That higher, yearly price is a better way to get your brain to contend with the actual cost.
Neither Cruise nor Waymo has any meaningful consumer friction to contend with as far as its services go.
The Mariners had hoped to contend with a rotation led by Felix Hernandez, Drew Smyly and James Paxton.
But journalists in 1999 did not have to contend with the minute-by-minute demands of digital media.
As the survivors of the tornadoes pick up the pieces, they'll have to contend with the cold, too.
And to write it so that he is both able to grieve and to contend with his guilt.
And if Moore is elected, it would give McConnell a difficult new senator to contend with in Washington.
Day had to contend with driving wind and rain over his last four holes before organizers halted play.
But billionaires in the US have been increasingly forced to contend with the prospect of a wealth tax.
In addition to Azure, there are other cloud providers for AWS to contend with, including Alphabet and Alibaba.
If the shares were sold piecemeal, Ponce would not have to contend with another "weighty shareholder," Lizana said.
Your target is the Fallen High Priest, but there's a rampaging Hive Ogre to contend with as well.
Making the cramped conditions even more unpleasant, Mr. Boudin also had to contend with the brothers' Labrador retriever.
He plays an astronaut aboard an international space station who has to contend with a HAL-like computer.
Lower ad pricing to contend with antitrust concerns, new privacy rules in Europe and increased competition from Amazon.
Big surprises are coming—and you , Aries, might be the big surprise other people have to contend with.
We were able to contend with it a little bit better, but it was a massive, dangerous collapse.
As much as you want to socialize, difficult issues will be coming up for you to contend with.
And that's not to mention the environmental and climate issues that they have to contend with as well.
Because Dr. Spock is nice and all, but it's 2018 and we have the entire internet to contend with.
Cat owners may also have to contend with their pets viewing the Mini as a toy or scratching pad.
Trump is now the third president to contend with a chaotic battlefield that includes at least 20 terrorist groups.
Because Dr. Spock is nice and all, but it's 220 and we have the entire internet to contend with.
It seems that Uber will also have to contend with what looks like a sort of union for drivers.
Kirsten Gillibrand and Kamala Harris, has had to contend with harmonizing his record with a more liberal Democratic Party.
Because Dr. Spock is nice and all, but it's 2741 and we have the entire internet to contend with.
But veterinarians in the UK and elsewhere are now being forced to contend with antivaxxers going to the dogs.
And now mission controllers and astronauts will have to contend with at least four contraband, and potentially hazardous, satellites.
Because Dr. Spock is nice and all, but it's 25 and we have the entire internet to contend with.
With all that to contend with, you might be wondering what else is happening in the Star Wars galaxy.
As well as oil prices the world will have to contend with policies proposed by president-elect Donald Trump.
Bill Clinton has his own well-publicized and often incredibly inappropriate (if not worse) sexual misdeeds to contend with.
The animals that survive the flames have to contend with feral cats, which move toward the fires to hunt.
Of course, Samsung will have to contend with a slew of other well-armed competitors making a similar play.
Now, she's returning home and has to contend with her family and their attitudes toward her much larger ambitions.
If you can get past all that, you need to contend with the voice assistant on the watch: Bixby.
We're not crazy because [Malcolm's] up there saying that thing that we're all living and having to contend with.
Blocks around your living situation and your private, personal life will come up for you to contend with today.
Because Dr. Spock is nice and all, but it's 258.99 and we have the entire internet to contend with.
Over the past year, policymakers have had to contend with a slowdown in global demand as the Sino-U.
Tillerson responded that Sessions would have to contend with the fact it was an ongoing case headed for trial.
In the meantime, California will have to contend with the potential for devastating wildfires and drastic responses like blackouts.
Both now have to contend with forces coming after the captain and her ship, including the people on it.
Ford also has to contend with its crosstown neighbor General Motors that maintains its world headquarters in downtown Detroit.
There are also a dialect and local customs to contend with, in order to offer the best possible experience.
Tesla is already punching above its weight when it comes to forcing other automakers to contend with electric cars.
Once comedy is forced to contend with the reality of living as a marginalized human being, it utterly fails.
Because Dr. Spock is nice and all, but it's 2100 and we have the entire internet to contend with.
Long term, Netflix will may also have to contend with the availability of broadband, and changing regulations, Gould wrote.
The other side: Both scooters and bikes currently have to contend with roads that were designed only for cars.
She's determined to reach her grandmother's home, but is forced to contend with dangerous governmental officials with ill intent.
Mr. Cruz has had to contend with his fair share of attack ads aimed at him here as well.
Gaza&aposs 2 million people have had to contend with blockade-linked electricity shortages, rising unemployment and growing poverty.
Without an auction to contend with, the super long JGB maturities on Monday fared better than the 10-years.
Take-Two Interactive has had to contend with with popular online games like Fortnite that are free to play.
Capheus in Kenya will certainly have to contend with the water crisis somehow — meaning he will run for office.
Because Dr. Spock is nice and all, but it's 212 and we have the entire internet to contend with.
And if you get it packaged at the store, you may have to contend with too much added sugar.
In addition to the capital glut, Decibel has to contend with some of the challenges of corporate venture capital.
In the future, predictions suggest, New York City may have to contend with Sandy-like storms every 2900 years.
Any international agreement is going to have to contend with those politics, and design mechanisms to ameliorate their effects.
Complicated emotions come up for you to contend with, but an easy flow around communication will arrive today, too.
We love to talk about love, but no one wants to contend with the other side of the game.
The last thing any business leader really wants to contend with, if they can avoid it, is actual competition.
He would also have to contend with the reputation of Los Angeles as a haven for bohemian social values.
He says the rules are ill-suited to contend with China's emergence as a major competitor in many markets.
As a spacecraft approaches the moon's surface, it suddenly has to contend with wonky gravity and a rocky terrain.
Farid believes the tech industry is overwhelmed but it's their own doing and they need to contend with it.
As in surgery, you have to contend with many moving pieces, and execute each motion smoothly and without interruption.
When using a whole chicken and a slow poach, there is very little of this stuff to contend with.
But Amazon and Spotify may have more challenges to contend with as other companies enter the music-streaming market.
Fed officials next month will have to contend with yet another political twist over a potentially heated budget fight.
OK. You've still got a glacially paced story to contend with that's overstuffed with characters and under-served plotlines.
Not only did they meet on a reality show, they have that whole long-distance thing to contend with.
Indiana, trying to reach its first regional final since 2002, struggled to contend with North Carolina's size and athleticism.
Banks will have to contend with increased choices and a world where their physical sprawl matters little to consumers.
Then there's rampant spambots and frequent glitches to contend with, which can sometimes make users' lives a living hell.
He finished with 279.7 points in difficult conditions where jumpers had to contend with driving rain and gusty winds.
Until then, he'll have to contend with Sanders unless the Vermont senator ends his campaign on his own volition.
The pope is expected to have to contend with the church's sexual abuse scandal during his visit from Jan.
One problem that marketers had to contend with is that some products, like a juicer, are one-time purchases.
He's always had his little side stories, but this year he's got an entire shopping mall to contend with.
Mr. López Obrador will have to contend with the dire crisis there and an unpredictable neighbor to the north.
Instead, Tesla vehicle owners will have to contend with whatever "Tesla Network" ridesharing option that the automaker rolls out.
"It's the speed that this is hitting us that is making it so difficult to contend with," Fitzgerald said.
But he always has to contend with the possibility that the regime's supporters will be dissatisfied with his actions.
But on top of all that size and talent, it's just one more thing for teams to contend with.
But unlike Bill, Hillary has to contend with a new generation of black voters, specifically black millennials like me.
Witnesses in the trial talked about how officers had to contend with a growing darkness in a remote area.
Within days, Greece was forced to contend with more than 220006,2202 refugees trying to cross by land and sea.
Some Democrats had worried that he was too bland, too normal — not dynamic enough to contend with Mr. Walker.
Almost everyone is now having to contend with what kinds of risks we are or aren't willing to face.
That means Blue Apron also has to contend with the likes of GrubHub (GRUB), Uber Eats (UBER) and DoorDash.
Even with politics taken out of the equation, markets have plenty of moving parts to contend with these days.
If they detected water vapor, they would have to contend with two leading theories for how it got there.
I no longer drink, so I've not had to contend with a New Year's Day hangover in a while.
Finding an apartment in New York City can be enough of a nightmare without noise pollution to contend with.
Beyond having to contend with a dominant LDP and a bolstered Abe, the CDP has significant issues to address.
Florida-based Carnival Cruise Line was re-routing its cruise ships, but there were other hurricanes to contend with.
The Point: Congress is heading back to town, and will have to contend with problems both old and new.
In 2008, prosecutors had to contend with not having an alleged victim to testify and not as much evidence.
Sales have continued to decline over the past decade, and it has a mounting debt load to contend with.
Beltranena and his team have to contend with airline travelers who might be accustomed to reclining seats on buses.
During the 2016 primaries, Republicans were forced to contend with the nicknames Trump gave them on the campaign trail.
They may not fully be able to contend with it, forcing the industry to compress to an unknown extent.
So any comprehensive strategy to deal with climate change in the United States has to contend with public lands.
Workers&apos rights activists weren&apost the only protesters Amazon had to contend with in Europe this Black Friday.
That's something it's had to contend with repeatedly as it's gone up against better-funded challengers, particularly Uber Eats.
So you've got a committed fan base to contend with in addition to all the financial incentives in place.
In the first place, they haven't had to contend with a such a close race in a long time.
But even if we accept, for the sake of argument, Aquinas' explanation, there are other problems to contend with.
But Sanders also had to contend with the state's closed primary system, which only allows Democratic voters to participate.
Even if a trade deal is reached, its exporters will have to contend with weakening demand globally, particularly in Europe.
The industry already has to contend with the used and rental book markets, which drag down sales of new books.
Moderates unhappy as well It's not just the conservative wing of the GOP that leadership has to contend with. Rep.
Of course, there are some privacy concerns to contend with, including some security issues that have arisen in recent months.
In untangling land disputes, the new government will have to contend with powerful business interests, many linked to the military.
They have to contend with their mission and relationships in the past, all before the portal to the future closes.
But since her election in 2018, she's had to contend with a legislature controlled by Republicans who are anything but.
Brick-and-mortar stores have also struggled to contend with the rise of online retailers, led by the juggernaut Amazon.
But they both have to contend with how this new kind of fantasy changes their friendship and their other relationships.
After leaving graduate school in 2014, Kayla and Ryan Anderson had a combined $336,676 in student loans to contend with.
At the same time it was fighting legal action, Papa John's also had to contend with a tarnished public image.
And when it comes to bidding rights, the company will have to contend with ESPN, the big networks and more.
Even if it does, the platform would still have to contend with the prime minister's alleged purchase of fake followers.
Sometimes this means trying to contend with the oeuvre of the Wachowskis; other times it means reading Phantom Menace fanfic.
Amid deep partisan disagreements, the worst that Facebook, Google, and Twitter have had to contend with some sharply worded questions.
But Arab countries are filled with millions of potential new Prime members — and there's little local competition to contend with.
"I didn't want to contend with how that made me feel, or it becoming part of my narrative," he says.
Faced with stalled user growth in recent years, Twitter is being forced to contend with serious questions about its future.
Humans on the Martian surface will already have to contend with radiation, and this effect will only increase the risk.
The state also has to contend with a separate federal lawsuit that several jurisdictions have filed to block the law.
"We believe we're well positioned to contend with what we think is continued disruption in the business, " Iger told CNBC.
Note: Finding Dory screens with the wordless Pixar short "Piper," about a baby sandpiper learning to contend with the ocean.
Brussels will have to contend with more threats to quit, coloring decision-making across the board for years to come.
There's a shortened enrollment period to contend with, as the Trump administration cut this window in half, to 45 days.
But secularism is far from universally accepted in Bangladesh, and has always had to contend with a conservative Islamic culture.
This series, he will have to contend with the impact of one such deal: Joe Thornton, the Sharks' playmaking center.
Some of it is data they believe is skewed because of the budget rule constraints they have to contend with.
Nations have to contend with globally relevant values for AI given the transnational nature of AI development, use, and impacts.
Both Siegel Bernard and Waldmeir cited an additional factor that baby boomers' parents didn't have to contend with: student loans.
Tisdale recommends working with the National Foundation for Credit Counseling to contend with creditors and develop a debt repayment plan.
The stepped-up pace of dealmaking is forcing Amazon to contend with integration issues and could lead to culture clashes.
It also had to contend with a tenth of a second lag between observing the screen and issuing a command.
Oil has also had to contend with OPEC, whose initial failure to agree an output cut accelerated the price slump.
As it opposes your ruling planet Saturn, you have to contend with serious emotions about commitment and responsibility within partnerships.
When von Spakovsky took the stand, he had to contend with questions that suggested he had cherry-picked his data.
The January polar vortex forced 84 million Americans in the US Midwest and East Coast to contend with subzero temperatures.
Pepsi's North American beverage business has been struggling to contend with increased competition from upstart brands and changing consumer tastes.
That counterreaction is something Italy may soon have to contend with — and other countries too, if they don't prepare now.
As they hope to move further from the wreckage of last year, the Mets will have much to contend with.
Simon has to contend with the fallout from what he considered a necessary hypocrisy and the personal betrayals it entailed.
Newspapers in Britain have also had to contend with a phone-hacking scandal that was especially damaging to the tabloids.
Injury and free agency, it turns out, are far from the only external forces for Golden State to contend with.
She created a "rapid response" unit to contend with online media; Glaad now advises Twitter and Facebook on content policies.
Developers also had to contend with fewer international buyers, who in past years were active in the new-construction sector.
The party's candidates will have to contend with President Trump's historically low approval ratings and Democrats gaining in the polls.
But the shareholders will have to contend with California's politicians, the state's utilities regulator and the representatives of wildfire victims.
The European Commission is working with Greece on an emergency plan to contend with a possible outbreak in the camps.
I despair that they have that to contend with that while they're also pursuing their dreams and doing everything else.
Other candidates sharing the stage with an LGBTQ peer are forced to contend with someone they might have normally dismissed.
As you make your way down the bicycle path, you might have to contend with feral cows and water buffaloes.
A system able to hunt for asteroids from space would not have to contend with the streaking satellites above Earth.
The House's rapid push toward impeachment forced candidates and their campaigns to strategize on how to contend with the development.
But he will have to contend with among others the so-called "frugal four" — the Netherlands, Austria, Sweden and Denmark.
But companies in the digital delivery industry have to contend with thin margins and a sometimes rocky path to profitability.
Even then, she notes he'll likely have to contend with a Clinton operation with a long, successful history in Pennsylvania.
This suggests that voters' anger remains strong in France, and the new government will have to contend with this disaffection.
"We're now seeing rates go to levels the market hasn't had to contend with in a long time," he said.
It's something that takes it out of the abstract and propels it into something we are forced to contend with.
And he will have to contend with China pressuring Seoul during the election campaign to back away from deploying Thaad.
And thankfully the U.S. doesn't yet have to contend with "pink-eyed" Terminators sent from the future to destroy humanity.
Communities of color also have to contend with systemic racism when it comes to accessing health care and other services.
Nonetheless, when I leave the lab, I have to contend with work environments that are far less welcoming to women.
Thankfully, that is not an issue I need to contend with now that my children control their own digital privacy.
More difficult to contend with, though, is the legacy of slavery, tenant farming and convict lease labor in rural locales.
There's also this fact to contend with: Negative, scary information is almost always more sticky and memorable than positive information.
But now we can measure those smaller differences, and I think we need to contend with the findings that it's bringing.
They are past and future members of our community, forced to contend with systemic bias that will profoundly affect their lives.
I think the thing that Facebook and Google will both have to contend with is regulatory headwinds, specifically starting in Europe.
But in addition to economic challenges, Apple also has to contend with issues surrounding the development of new products and services.
They will also have to contend with the "kuroshio" (black current)—a very strong current that flows between Taiwan and Japan.
However, it would have to contend with a tough market, which has seen several planned London listings pulled in late 2017.
And those critics have had to contend with the unofficial first children's alumni club — a tight group that knows no politics.
All the commercial skyscrapers, housing, cultural institutions that currently sit near the waterline will be forced to contend with routine inundation.
You start out traversing small pits of spikes, but eventually, you'll have to contend with laser beams and door-opening switches.
While the market always has "unknowns" to contend with, two key events in the next month could explain this neutral miasma.
Those trying to get away from it all will have to contend with industrial action called by British Airways' cabin crews.
However, the industry still has to contend with market volatility and asset class illiquidity, weak bank lending and tightening regulatory standards.
In making those decisions, he and other liberals had to contend with the threats of socialism and nationalism, revolution and reaction.
There was no rush-hour commute to contend with, and officials did not have to wrestle with whether to close schools.
We are forced to contend with the fact that they are human—not a magic wellspring of eternal potentiality and fulfillment.
"Suddenly we had people with thousands of acres while others had to contend with a few hundred or less," she said.
The yen also has to contend with indirect pressures from the dollar gaining against other major currencies such as the euro.
Analysts say that investing heavily on firewalls is no longer enough to contend with the multitude of cyber threats companies face.
"Many businesses - particularly SMEs - are having to contend with heavy pressure on their prices and margins," said Swissmem head Peter Dietrich.
We blindly ignore the reality that the president is not a king and has to contend with Congress on nearly everything.
And yeah, though no new Outkast ever again feels difficult to contend with, it's definitely a decision that's easy to respect.
However, there's a foe that Williams herself as to contend with often as a young actress: sexism within the entertainment industry.
Health care is hard: it's siloed, it's expensive, and it has to contend with messy problems of human biology and behavior.
They have to contend with the fact that rational arguments may fail to persuade those who are guided by their gut.
Screenshot: OoklaAs we continue to wade through the early days of 25G, there are a lot of issues to contend with.
Though short-term emergency needs are being met, county officials are now left to contend with the uncertainty of the future.
Creating the world's next masterpiece is a great deal more difficult when there are such feelings of helplessness to contend with.
Founded in 2009, it became a political force to contend with when it received more than 25% in the 2013 elections.
It's no easy thing to contend with, but it shouldn't make Shannon feel any less good about her big lifestyle change.
Last year, Hampton Creek also had to contend with a government investigation into a buyback scheme, which has since been dropped.
Now the water athletes' have to contend with eye-stinging amounts of chlorine saturating the pool, according to several competitors' accounts.
ABC News reports that the disgraced producer, already facing charges of assaulting two women, has another criminal case to contend with.
Heat is a good thing for hitters The heat is not the only thing the pitchers will have to contend with.
He and Bates, who was 210-for-212 shooting, were too much for the Terriers to contend with in the post.
As the paramount sachem, he also had to contend with challenges to his leadership from a number of other Wampanoag sachems.
When a city doesn't have a detectable rap sound, that presents a challenge, one GoldLink has undoubtedly had to contend with.
"  She added that Biden will "need to contend with the consequences" of what she called the "unforced error of a gaffe.
Mondelez, which was spun out of Kraft Foods in 2012, has had to contend with the wishes of its own shareholders.
The White Sox are trying again to contend, with Sale, Quintana and the slugging first baseman Jose Abreu on reasonable contracts.
Congressional lawmakers have no such forces to contend with and, if anything, have a system and bureaucracy that protects them instead.
ABOUT THE CELTICS (2015-16: 48-34): While hopes are high in Boston there are already some injuries to contend with.
The takeaway: Policymakers will have to contend with the fact that automation is already a fact of life in many sectors.
Continuing in this vein, Chipotle is now having to contend with allegations of racial discrimination and harassment at a California franchise.
The federal tax-filing deadline has been postponed until July 15 as the nation struggles to contend with the coronavirus pandemic.
Oftentimes we have to contend with massive time differences, reporters in, at the border of Myanmar need lots of advance notice.
To add to this, the country also has to contend with river erosion, which annually displaces between 50,000 and 200,25 Bangladeshis.
His successor, Gavin Newsom, will have to contend with the outcome of the case, which is before the California Supreme Court.
It is unfair to force reporters risking their lives for stories to contend with the additional foe of their own conscience.
Interestingly, this wasn't the first such incident that GAIKA says he had to contend with at the PUBLIC Hotel that day.
During Susan Wojcicki's tenure as chief executive of YouTube, she has had to contend with uploads of pedophilia and mass murder.
Through sharp characters and dialogue, he prodded us — in laughter and tears — to contend with the traits that make us human.
But while China had to contend with a nasty, sudden surprise, governments in the West have been on notice for weeks.
Goff adapted well in January, even in the raucous atmosphere of the Superdome, which he won't have to contend with Sunday.
Her presence on stage was electric, according to biographers, although she had to contend with casual misogyny and politically motivated disdain.
Zach Wichter AUTO INDUSTRY Global auto executives will gather in Shanghai this week to contend with a challenging Chinese car market.
After choking smoke from recent bushfires and torrential rains, players at Melbourne Park on Wednesday had to contend with swirling winds.
Now they'll have to contend with a complex mix of grief over their slain classmates and excitement over their burgeoning movement.
Miami had to contend with injuries to starting point guard Justise Winslow (out, right thigh bruise) and Wade (right hip bruise).
There's also the "law of small numbers" to contend with, said Carl Kaufman, a manager of the Osterweis Strategic Income fund.
Even if there were some kind of miracle cure, you would still need to contend with the vagaries of human behaviour.
Regardless of where Walker ends up playing the final two months, Rivera will have to contend with his damaged elbow ligament.
Like HBO Now after Game of Thrones, Disney will have to contend with people canceling their subscriptions as big shows disappear.
Stephen Moore will have to contend with an awkward history among Senate Republicans to be confirmed to the Federal Reserve Board.
But DHS has recently had to contend with an increase in Mexican single adults and families arriving at the US border.
The swan dancer represents the BTS' ego, struggling to contend with the rest of the dancers, "the shadows" holding them back.
The industry has also had to contend with the low literacy rate that has been prevalent in the country for decades.
Meanwhile, the Latino community has to contend with the unfortunate spectacle of infighting and discord within its oldest civil rights organization.
You have to contend with at-times limited charging options and ranges that aren&apost fully comparable with internal-combustion vehicles.
The Safdies have found that a useful tension is generated when professional actors are forced to contend with people playing themselves.
Her radical study explores the ways black women have had to contend with racist and classist assumptions in the women's movement.
Time will be a factor for the markets to contend with in the unwinding of the process of the trade war.
More recently, the agency has been forced to contend with embarrassing leaks of its hacking tools by the "Shadow Brokers" group.
When autonomous vehicles render many of those jobs obsolete, politicians will have a much bigger set of problems to contend with.
In his book "Willful Blindness," McCarthy describes Khuzami as fearless, dogged and willing to contend with the thorniest knots of evidence.
When President George W. Bush visited the UK in November 2003, he had to contend with large-scale anti-war protests.
But despite this, pastors and religious leaders have to contend with the fact that people who have suffered still want answers.
The biggest hurdle these robots will face, however, is probably going to be the desert conditions they'll have to contend with.
She will have to contend with her subjects — both noble and common — attempting to overthrow her, as they did with her father.
The president will also have to contend with a divided Congress, as Democrats are slated to take over the House in January.
There's the whole Gendry-is-a-Baratheon thing to contend with, but the show seems to be pretty done with his storyline.
Qualcomm, while no slouch, competes with chip heavyweight Intel (INTC), while Juniper Networks has to contend with the significantly larger Cisco (CSCO).
Despite all the drama of the 1980 election, President Ronald Reagan still had to contend with a Democratic House throughout his presidency.
Other makeshift sites operated by Border Patrol have continued to spring up to contend with the surge of migrants at the border.
Taylor, in becoming the heir to Axe's throne, has had to contend with their mentor's unwillingness to cede control of his kingdom.
Yet as Slack moves into larger companies, it will have to contend with the reality of how slow-moving, legacy industries work.
That is, until Mr. Hawley and Republicans here were forced to contend with a lurid sex scandal involving the state's Republican governor.
Hitherto he has had to contend with Democratic presidents, Bill Clinton and Barack Obama, who pushed him to make concessions to Palestinians.
Russia's Danila Izotov, Andrei Grechin, Alexander Sukhorukov, and Vladimir Morozov  had to contend with boos at the 4x100-meter freestyle relay final.
Its problem is it has to contend with Trump administration priorities — which naturally don't align with privacy protection for non-US citizens.
Google's Pixel 2 XL, which has been plagued by screen problems, has another stumbling block to contend with: poor audio recording quality.
In Democratic-leaning states, it's likely to be a problem for Republican incumbents who will have to contend with energized Democratic voters.
Canada's passenger-rail service, VIA Rail, has limited routes, leaving many people in remote areas to contend with extensive final-destination connections.
Amid those major announcements, oil traders had to contend with a flurry of pronouncements from OPEC, as well as from Russian officials.
But winning in those markets won't be easy, especially as Uber has to contend with its former foe, Didi, around the globe.
The result is a surreal, hilarious attempt by two dudes to contend with their place in the bizarre sweep of US history.
His account is an addition to a growing list of public gaucheries that Hill has had to contend with over the years.
With "The Red Woman," fans of Martin's novels had to contend with a whole mess of surprises, some more contentious than others.
In addition to the inaccessible terrain, aid groups also have to contend with being targeted by armed groups operating in South Sudan.
They are left to contend with their own perceptions of Jim White, their own abstract notions on what exactly Jim White signifies.
When our phones distract us, it's not some foreign invader but a piece of our shared culture we need to contend with.
Meanwhile, Hollywood has to contend with the fact that one of its most revered actors is believed to be a sexual predator.
Outside of China, Xiaomi seems to have performed well in India, but it has to contend with fierce competition in that market.
But the most challenging thing the Z2240 has to contend with are the other phones on either end of its price bracket.
Indeed, like the city dwellers of today, the inhabitants of Çatalhöyük had to contend with infectious diseases, overcrowding, violence, and environmental degradation.
Competition in the neighborhood is surely stiff, with Output, Good Room, and a typically crammed weekend schedule of parties to contend with.
Importantly, these substances weren't chosen arbitrarily—they're the kinds of things that mole-rats have to contend with on a regular basis.
It's a problem that even those who have taken it upon themselves to chronicle the game's history have had to contend with.
Trump's policies will exact a strategic price as well, leaving U.S. allies on their own to contend with China's massive economic weight.
And to the extent that budgets have recovered anywhere, they've had to contend with ever ballooning pension costs and dwindling state support.
Since the start of the year, the Fed has pursued a more agile approach in setting policy to contend with greater uncertainty.
"Nobody who goes to the Wing is naive to the fact that feminists have to contend with a capitalist society," she said.
One-way carsharing is a complex business to operate, and any new competitor will have a significant learning curve to contend with.
There's HBO and Amazon Prime Video to contend with now, not to mention the looming disrupt of Disney+ later in the year.
In Samsung's defense, if the promises it's making for Bixby are true, there are a lot of moving parts to contend with.
While offices and houses had to contend with the lack of electricity, that was the least of this poor little koala's worries.
Female lawyers say they have to contend with judges who tell them to sit down when they stand up to represent clients.
Young people who grew up in wealthier parts of the city have had to contend with prices that eclipse their junior salaries.
Senators could choose to skip the proceedings, but then would likely have to contend with accusations they were shirking their constitutional responsibility.
But, it'll have to contend with payments players throughout APAC like Alipay, Grab, Paytm, and more, that are seeking the same opportunity.
Belgium, who will have to contend with Brazil on Friday, are at 21/214 while two-time winners Uruguay are 21/13.
Autonomous driving lends itself to highways, where trucks do not have to contend with pedestrians and the myriad distractions of city streets.
PDVSA bondholders would also have to contend with Russian oil producer Rosneft, which has a lien on the remainder of Citgo's stock.
Spotify has also had to contend with questions on copyright law as it faces criticism from artists over its delivery of royalties.
"Banks still have to contend with the burden of their enormous historic investments in complex and inflexible legacy architectures," the report said.
The next U.S. president will almost certainly need to contend with all of these issues through the lens of ongoing climate change.
The authorities are trying to contend with attackers whose names had surfaced in terrorism investigations but who had crossed no legal boundary.
In 2014, Russia was slapped with international sanctions after its military intervention in Ukraine and had to contend with collapsing oil prices.
Mia and Sebastian have to contend with voluminous competition for roles for red-headed white woman and the death of jazz, respectively.
But in order to broadly appeal to the imperfect American youth, they had to have some relatable, gritty circumstances to contend with.
We would still have to contend with roads, traffic jams, air pollution, and run the risk of being hit by a bus.
Maybe that's reasonable for folks like Goldie Hawn ("Glam-ma"), who have to contend with the shortage of roles for older actresses.
Whoever takes the helm will have to contend with a set of challenges that mirror those of other democracies around the world.
Yet even as he flourished on the field, he had to contend with a stutter that was evident at a young age.
Sanders has had to contend with his own imperfections, some of which almost certainly impeded his efforts to reach the White House.
In the end, the left will have to contend with the same deep longing for normalcy that has defined the Trump era.
Italian Prime Minister Giuseppe Conte said Monday his government would use all "human and economic resources" to contend with the coronavirus outbreak.
But it is one that country music needs to contend with, both because of what it says and how it says it.
Buyers also have to contend with builders who snap up modest houses in cash deals, enlarging or replacing them with expensive properties.
Haraway told Lewis that she had no choice but to "contend" with what Lewis had written: a well-argued piece of criticism.
The medical staffs also had to contend with the anger and grief of hundreds of people searching for news about their relatives.
Now he has to contend with a staff of 2,18703, an annual operating budget of $320 million and 17 assertive curatorial departments.
It's also had to contend with a celebrity exodus from the platform that included stars like Rihanna, Kylie Jenner and Chrissy Teigen.
Many of her elderly parishioners, she said, had told her that they couldn't believe what young people today had to contend with.
Driverless cars, such as those being developed by Google and Tesla, would "have to contend with human-operated cars, bicycles and pedestrians".
Which group or groups fill those voids of increasing ungoverned territory in Afghanistan "is something we'll have to contend with," he said.
There's one problem, though: It has Netflix, Amazon, HBO Now, CBS All Access, and a gazillion other streaming services to contend with.
Will doctors have to contend with a gap in medical knowledge and facilities that has been left by this decades-long denial?
As well as the market downturn, Rio Tinto has had to contend with wrangles with the Mongolian government over taxes and power supply.
People will be in an aggressive mood, and you'll have to contend with some control freaks: Power struggles will be in the air!
Not only does it feel like Netflix drops 10 new shows every Friday, but there's also Hulu, Amazon, and Youtube to contend with.
Like the National Football League and other full-contact sports, the NHL has had to contend with persisting damage to players, including concussions.
We'll be able to see the object in exquisite detail, but until then, project scientists are having to contend with an unexpected mystery.
This time, aides will have to contend with a candidate whose time is stretched between his duties as president and a reelection campaign.
In addition to your own winners, you may also "win" the crown among other brackets, which gives you more matches to contend with.
Denial of service, SQL injections, cross-site scripting, and password attacks are just a few of the threats you'll have to contend with.
The wounds of war will scar them for ever, and you will have an even more bitter and hateful diaspora to contend with.
In addition to dodging submerged, cars, debris, street signs, and fire hydrants, Hunter's boat also had to contend with a powerful current Friday.
The Tears of Allah was a mercifully easy start, but I had some trickier dives to contend with in the days to come.
In addition to the Fed, the euro also has to contend with the possibility of the European Central Bank easing policy in September.
As is the case with any piece of beta software, there will almost certainly be bugs to contend with that range in severity.
In addition to media scrutiny, women in politics have also had to contend with rules that affect them and not their male colleagues.
Vaisman and Wink don't think so, but they need to contend with the fact that, in a stock market, growth naturally increases value.
Venus's strut is seductive as hell when Pluto's influence is in the air, but there can also be obsessive vibes to contend with.
There are other schools in other states that don't have [to contend with] a charismatic, swaggering CEO, so the dynamic is very different.
Businesses across the continent have to contend with frequent blackouts, known as dumsor in Ghana, from the Asante words for "off and on".
Once they're released from the clutches of the trial to the max blocks, the women have another set of woes to contend with.
Qatar Airways has also had to contend with fallout from a boycott against Qatar by four Arab nations that cut ties in June.
Per Mayweather, there won't be any kicks involved in the scrap ... but dude's clearly gonna have to contend with some quick hands regardless.
Residents affected by the three fires scorching parts of California have yet another ordeal to contend with: beginning the homeowners' insurance claims process.
Australian Day had to contend with driving wind and rain over his last four holes before organizers halted play at 1:34 p.m.
It's healthy, psychologically, to contend with deep-seated fears, and horror is a portion of how I (and so many others) do that.
They're busy too, and you usually have to contend with a limited range of drinks, excessive corporate sponsorship and an impersonal feel overall.
People also have to contend with water-borne diseases like schistosomiasis, an infection caused by parasitic worms living in fresh water, he said.
Turkey has to contend with conflicts across the border in Syria and Iraq, and Kurdish insurrection and attacks by Islamic State at home.
In parsing histories of the Third Industrial Revolution—that's this one—future academics will have to contend with the phenomenon of venture capital.
Nguyen might say that the only way we can truly acknowledge the past is to contend with how fallible our memories actually are.
She and her colleagues argue that the agency has been denied the resources it needs to contend with the expanding horde of passengers.
In addition to regrouping from a midterm drubbing, they'll have to choose a fresh leadership team to contend with the newly empowered Democrats.
And, regardless of the topic of a book or the race of its author, almost no one wanted to contend with experimental prose.
Slack allows users to consolidate, organize and archive the ever-growing reams of data that modern-day work teams have to contend with.
Not to mention, the last time a monarch died — King George VI back in 1952 — there was no social media to contend with.
Overtaxation and overregulation disproportionately hurt small businesses because they generally do not have the resources to contend with them as big businesses do.
The Dallas police fought that war, too, helping to calm the first American city to contend with a widespread Ebola public-health emergency.
It is a serious issue that the party will have to contend with if there is a snap general election, as widely expected.
In the cloud computing sector, Alibaba has to contend with foreign rivals, and it faces a domestic challenge from the search engine Baidu.
Meanwhile, the UK will reach the crisis point as the country has to contend with whatever Brexit deal is or is not reached.
If Facebook or Snapchat are ever hoping to get into China they are going to have to contend with the ever-growing Kuaishou.
While there haven't been major self-driving bus initiatives of this scale in the West, Japan has different social issues to contend with.
For the GOP's part, they see a field that lacks a candidate strong enough to contend with the Democrats in the general election.
In whatever role she carves out for herself, she will have to contend with the vitriol she has drawn throughout her public life.
For its first 50 minutes or so, following a traumatic experience that its lead characters aren't too eager to contend with, "Dude" meanders.
Rhoda's father is away on a business trip that lasts nearly the entire novel, leaving Christine alone to contend with her deepening fears.
Her ability to contend with the delays, and not be overwhelmed by the emotions swirling in the stadium, was critical to her victory.
He is also an outdoor painter, who said he prefers to contend with the elements than with the dark interior of a studio.
Philip D. Murphy, a Democrat, and is the first Sikh to serve as a state attorney general, has had to contend with intolerance.
Every new adaptation now carries a heavier burden than before, and has to contend with a growing network of narrative and visual associations.
"Judy has always wished to contend with the way that art history has written women out," said Mr. Gartenfeld, the show's main curator.
It is those fringe communities preying on anxieties about social change that we have to contend with now — and for years to come.
Gretchen Whitmer will have to contend with a GOP legislature as Michigan governor, but she still broke full Republican control over the state.
And Mr. Trump's supporters must continue to contend with questions about whether his upset for the ages was the result of foul play.
It also has to contend with Japan's decision last month to restrict exports of chipmaking chemicals to South Korea following a diplomatic dispute.
And in teaming up with Anne Bogart, a director of the theater group SITI Company, she has something else to contend with: words.
The seller, who paid about $7.4 million in 2015, according to public records, apparently had to contend with a loss of 27 percent.
The brand had to contend with some consumers burning its sneakers, while distancing itself from an ensuing wave of support by white supremacists.
Experts previously told Business Insider that the coronavirus could become a permanent disease that we have to contend with, just like the flu.
Saudi Arabia and its Persian Gulf neighbors are deeply satisfied that they no longer have to contend with the mistrust of Mr. Obama.
Trump's transition, initially dogged by reports that it was in disarray, has more recently had to contend with loud criticism of several appointees.
Even with funding, the administration will have to contend with private landowners whose property may be seized to build barriers along the border.
"You will have to contend with a White House that at times seems to be running its own bilateral show," Menendez told Abizaid.
That's just for UPS; it doesn't include what the US Postal Service or shipping competitors like FedEx (FDX) may have to contend with.
Sure, there were bear markets to contend with (2500 to 29.14 is one example), but they were bolstered by a more glacial pace.
And as the company grew, Bezos predicted, it would have to contend with increasing scrutiny and taxation from governments at home and abroad.
The two have to contend with their past records on issues touching on race as they look to win votes from minority communities.
But even if the court repeals the law, Indian society still has to contend with the deep and insidious stigma of being queer.
Is this weight something you have to contend with, or do you simply make your films and leave the rest to the critics?
Mr. Trabucco always uses a lot of fresh entries, and we have 11 debuts and many more rarities and oddities to contend with.
Caitlyn Breen doesn't encounter ghosts when she and her mother move to rural Vermont, but she does need to contend with a legend.
For a former Bible-basher like me, there's a lot of confusing stuff to contend with when I leave London and go home.
For Shaherkani, Saudi Arabia's Olympic committee had to contend with Judo's governing body against the claim that the headscarf would be a safety risk.
This emerging type of fake content will be among the next set of problems social media companies will have to contend with, he said.
Besides, the more bleach you ask for, the more damage you'll have to contend with, prolonging your journey to longer, luscious hair even further.
The EU has grown up in the past decade as economic, migration and security crises have forced it to contend with major world events.
That investigation appears to be continuing, and Trump also will still have to contend with inquiries by the New York Attorney General and Congress.
However, when we have to contend with consistent stress in and outside of work, the break the brain needs to restore itself is eliminated.
Or displeasure, if you're a musician and have to contend with the fact that Sumney is a wizard who wields disparate genres like spells.
ESPN had to contend with the contentious U.S. presidential election, often cited by league officials as a key cause for lower ratings this season.
If you're looking for the next big outlaw act to hang your hat on, well, there's some abs and truck-leaning to contend with.
It was only after their recent reunion that they revealed how the rings became a major talking point they were forced to contend with.
Body positivity is important, but when it's circulated as popular feminism in these media platforms, we also have to contend with that other part.
DETROIT — As his illness lingers and fruitless at-bats mount, Yankees second baseman Tyler Wade may have something else to contend with: the calendar.
"The roster as structured right now, (the Cavs) don't feel like they have the talent and depth to contend with the Warriors," he added.
Besides having to contend with Al Qaeda and a continuing Taliban offensive, Nangarhar is home to the nascent Afghan affiliate of the Islamic State.
Because this time we have a major party candidate who has two rare problems to contend with as she begins the general election campaign.
But on the other hand you have to contend with other people who are not quite willing—Richmond is kind of on the fence.
Not only do they have to contend with studying their prisoner, they have to keep an eye out for Russian spies and double agents.
But their absence has forced me to contend with what I want my legacy to be, decades before I might have ordinarily considered it.
There is also an unknown factor Taiwan may have to contend with in trying to avoid the currency manipulator label – an unpredictable U.S. president.
Fortescue has had to contend with lower demand for its relatively lower iron content ores as key market China undergoes an environmental clean-up.
But he will have to contend with a resurgent ultra-nationalist opposition which rejects integration with the EU and demands closer ties with Russia.
In dense areas, truck owners also have to contend with a crisscross of parking rules, parking tickets, and scrabbling with rivals for prime spots.
Rose sets off for Polynesian night alone to contend with Moishe's racy dad jokes and Shirley's refusal to remove her silverware laden fur coat.
Also, Brazil is currently having to contend with two related viruses, dengue and chikungunya, so it's proving difficult for epidemiologists to isolate causal factors.
These satellites wouldn't need to contend with the distortion caused by gases and other components of Earth's atmosphere, allowing scientists to capture clearer images.
And, if it continues, tech startups and investors in both countries will need to contend with guardrails that were inconceivable just one year ago.
This research is key for keeping people safe, but it's not easy: there's soot, there's smoke, and there are the flames to contend with.
But he also had to contend with Johnson's demands to safeguard that agenda and relieve the continuing budgetary pressures imposed by the Vietnam War.
"They've had a long time to prepare for that fight, so all of that we're going to contend with here very, very soon," Gen.
The day began in bright sunshine before the weather suddenly turned midway through the afternoon, forcing the later starters to contend with driving rain.
Those challenges leave people with much less flexibility to contend with education loans, but Webb cautioned against taking the wrong message from the study.
In addition to monitoring the bike fleet, Mobike will have to contend with quality control issues that have popped up in its home market.
The iPad has to contend with Chromebooks in the classroom These changes to iOS suggest that Apple is starting to take education more seriously.
He will also have to contend with the fact that signing the bill as is could very well cost him his job in 2020.
The impetus for the arrest was, after all, public drinking — not a crime that should require a throng of police officers to contend with.
Residents also have had to contend with poisonous gases given off by the lava, which can include laze -- hydrochloric acid and volcanic glass particles.
Keeping up with changing tastes is hard enough, but you've also got to contend with intense competition and economic dips that dampen consumer spending.
Project CARS 2 could be a credible rival on PlayStation, which isn't something GT has had to contend with too much in the past.
The Navajo community in Arizona has had to contend with a growing feral horse population of about 50,000 to 70,000, according to the statement.
Both companies emphasized that Britons would still be able to watch the show without cost, but they will now have to contend with commercials.
Cummings had to contend with several teams having more than one rider within the break, allowing them to gang up on any solo efforts.
Companies of all sizes — from giants like Visa or Lufthansa to small startups — are starting to have to contend with such regulations, she said.
But they also had to contend with the radioactive groundwater, since cracks in the downed reactors' foundations allowed liquid to seep in from below.
Immediate challenges for Ghadhban and the rest of Iraq's new government will include how to contend with imminent U.S. sanctions on Iraqi neighbor Iran.
Africa has had to contend with three volatile oceanic regions where criminality makes it impossible for countries to realise the potential of their oceans.
Comey pretty clearly believes that Americans signed up, legitimately, for the Trump presidency and should now be made to contend with its full effects.
Full of booze and food, and with another early morning flight to contend with, I decide it's best I don't join them this time.
The ceremony was an example of what Williams and many other highly visible women, in sports and beyond, have to contend with every day.
She didn't have to contend with the deadly traffic jams that were happening around the same time on the Nepalese side of the mountain.
Others offered up support for Popeyes employees who had to contend with frustrated customers and ingredient shortages during the menu item's initial August run.
To get there, there are also the privacy and data hurdles to contend with, which could make or break technologies like the avatar shrink.
We're left to contend with the consequences of our own warfare, such as pesticide-resistant German cockroaches and bedbugs, and antibiotic-resistant MRSA bacteria.
Zoom, for example, was forced to contend with the newly dubbed zoombombing — that is, the act of spamming a Zoom chat with undesired pornography. 
None of the grampers interviewed for this article had to contend with much homesickness, possibly because their grandchildren were all in the double digits.
They have also had to contend with a growing Islamic State affiliate that has carried out a number of massive attacks in recent years.
Game 993 of the A.L.C.S. is Saturday night in Houston, but the Yankees probably will not have to contend with Cole until Game 299.
Federal Emergency Management Agency Administrator Brock Long tweeted that the agency was supporting Texas state authorities in their efforts to contend with the storm.
Even with funding, the administration will also have to contend with private landowners whose property may be seized to build barriers along the border.
Several millennials told CNN that their college debts are crushing their ability to advance -- an issue their parents largely didn't have to contend with.
There's only one Aisling Bea in Living With Yourself, but the Irish actress and comedian is charismatic enough to contend with two Paul Rudds.
Most recently, the immigration judge corps hit a record high, though the Justice Department still has to contend with judges leaving over policy disagreements.
Meanwhile, the threat landscape is more complex, with each enterprise having to contend with its own challenges in ways that won't slow down business.
The use of social media for extremists to congregate, organize, and perpetuate toxic beliefs is another issue tech companies will have to contend with.
Show producers say survival is "virtually impossible" and list bears, snakes, poisonous berries and mushrooms as some of the natural elements to contend with.
They also have to contend with President Trump's huge megaphone — that prolific Twitter feed — as he narrates his own version of the impeachment proceedings.
While phones may be the more recent headline-grabbing example, they're far from the only impossible-to-repair products consumers have to contend with.
Whoever they are, Mosul's new leaders will have to contend with the likelihood of residual militant attacks and the potential for renewed local conflict.
On top of the daily struggle to stay safe and healthy, sexual abuse survivors also have to contend with an endlessly triggering news cycle.
Quora does have to contend with Yahoo Answers Now, which is the veteran of the Q&A space despite the unreliable quality of its content.
This isn't crazy thinking, but it is slightly magical, because magic is the only way to contend with the Republican Party's viselike grip on Congress.
We already have to contend with employers and credit agencies combing through past posts to reach conclusions about hireability, loan-worthiness, even health care eligibility.
What's more, he manages this very 21st-century career without a home Internet connection—a challenge that most Cubans musicians also have to contend with.
And right now, with the obvious caveat that this could change down the line, Tillerson has two competitors -- and the President himself -- to contend with.
With that growth, firefighters have had to contend with new threats to their safety—and that of the buildings and people they're charged with protecting.
Plus, these women had to contend with a few pretty unpleasant side effects (such as dizziness and nausea), and they weren't allowed to drink alcohol.
Local outlet DCist, whose employees are undoubtedly forced to contend with the real-life woes of getting around the city, weren't having any of it.
Alongside Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer, Pelosi will still have to contend with a Republican-controlled Senate and a Republican president to move legislation forward.
The home-sharing site has since expanded to Canada, Australia, and other European countries, though it has had to contend with growing anti-refugee sentiment.
It would extend the distant-signal license for many rural households only until May 31 and then force satellite companies to contend with market negotiations.
Semenya has dominated the event this season, with three of the fastest four times, but has had to contend with renewed controversies about her gender.
And on the fitness front, Fitbit has to contend with companies like Garmin, which has created a profitable niche for itself in the wearables space.
The average blockbuster has to contend with budget fights and studio meddling; a film like "The Promise" is even trickier to bring to the screen.
It's a hard thing to contend with, because with your own children, I want to be honest, but I also know the limitations of honesty.
All this said, of course, any political prognostication has to contend with the fact that Trump has consistently made a mockery of the conventional wisdom.
Index fund investing was pioneered by the late legendary investor Jack Bogle as a way for individual investors to contend with the Wall Street professionals.
When it does, the town will have to contend with a water source contaminated after the earthquake — skin infections have been spreading among the population.
Of course, there will be those who declare that this time is different since America has never had to contend with a Donald Trump before.
Pandora has had to contend with an increasingly commoditized music streaming business and had to find ways to differentiate itself from Apple Music and Spotify.
In season 6, our inmates have to contend with Carol (Henny Russell) and Barbara (Mackenzie Phillips) Denning, the big, bad rulers of maximum security prison.
But since the visa rules changed, even comparatively well-run airlines, such as Cathay Pacific, have had to contend with a sea of red ink.
The B/Ds not only have to contend with this pressure but the high frequency traders are driving commission prices to below $0.005 per share.
Price stepped down and was replaced in 2018 by former NBC Entertainment president Jennifer Salke, who's had to contend with turnover in the executive ranks.
In a now-viral Facebook post, Hall wrote about her father's response, and how it exposed the pressures that modern mothers have to contend with.
To complicate matters, doctors have to contend with their own egos, biases, or an unconscious reluctance to assess a patient's prospects for what they are.
As if tax season wasn't already stressful enough, consumers increasingly have to contend with the possibility of fraud or identity theft involving their tax return.
She takes a cigarette into an empty bar, asks for a seltzer and the sports section, and tries her best to contend with being alone.
But should Gallagher move Machida towards the fence, Machida will be force to drop his hands and square his hips to contend with level changes.
Of course, this being The Walking Dead, you also have to contend with other people who have become twisted by this new zombie-filled reality.
That said, today's health officials have to contend with an already booming online market that makes it very easy for youth to purchase e-cigs.
He'll have to contend with a number of other candidates that are both younger than him and have their sights set on the same voters.
Huawei has already overtaken Apple to become the world's second-largest smartphone distributor, and now it's looking to contend with Samsung for the top spot.
The obvious added bonus is that there'll be fewer crowds to contend with, and you'll get more of a feel for your destination's local personality.
"I think there's a generation of people who were forcibly removed from where they lived and had to contend with surviving in America," he said.
And then, even if they club together, they have to contend with the fact that their readerships have moved on to other forms of infotainment.
"This is where I think you get this intersection of governance and politics and technology that we've never had to contend with before," he said.
In addition to his challenge from Nixon, Cuomo also has to contend with the aftermath of corruption charges against a former top aide, Joseph Percoco.
In its just-over-a-decade-long existence, Twitter has had to contend with its platform being used as a vehicle for abuse and harassment.
Jennifer Kent, whose film, The Nightingale, won the festival's Special Jury Prize, had to contend with verbal abuse from a male journalist during a screening.
Legal argument The idea that a President cannot obstruct justice may be a workable legal argument to contend with any future criminal action against Trump.
Though Ms. Hahn no longer has to contend with brief nudity, no pay, "I feel like I still have a way's to go," she said.
Not only are you responsible for educating the next generation of young minds, you also have plenty of unexpected parent-teacher mediation to contend with.
Why should one more woman have to contend with the conventional daily diet of criticism fed to me as a woman campaigning for political office?
Clinton still has internal Democratic Party politics to contend with, but Mr. Pence is a balm: He puts little if any added pressure on her.
As a result, companies operating in Mexico will continue to contend with demands for bribes, the risk of becoming collateral damage, extortion and other threats.
Yet American officials are only just beginning to contend with the implications of weapons that could someday operate independently, beyond the control of their developers.
Candidates are frantically raising money, and party strategists are in a rolling series of meetings figuring how best to contend with the intensifying Trump effect.
TRUMP VS. CLINTON In the final sprint, both sides realized they had to contend with two factors largely out of their control: Trump and Clinton.
Aside from the highly anticipated meeting, markets have also had to contend with the threat of a trade war between the world's two largest economies.
My mother had been like I turned out to be—an only child with dead parents, so there wasn't any family left to contend with.
The Sun opposes one of your ruling planets (Saturn) this morning, finding you facing obstacles you didn't even realize you needed to contend with, Aquarius.
But that ambivalence is at odds with teaching students to communicate about consent, and presents a paradox that she says universities need to contend with.
If we were ranking all the different varieties of M&Ms, we'd have to contend with peanut M&Ms (good!), peanut butter M&Ms (great
Watching its powerful mass settle on every step, I was able grasp the scale and power of the thing I was hired to contend with.
After all, implementing such technology for Sydney's 43 million annual passengers is pretty large undertaking, even without myriad security and privacy concerns to contend with.
The old ones are mired in bureaucracy, conservative religious ideology, and the past—unable to contend with issues like nanotechnology, artificial intelligence, and virtual reality.
If the AHCA doesn't pass, here's what consumers will have to contend with based on the actions the Trump administration may – or may not – take.
Just to get to his apartment in the financial district, he has to contend with hordes of commuters and selfie-snapping tourists clogging narrow sidewalks.
The constructors offer us a set of three theme entries that seem like a disparate list, but there are those circled squares to contend with.
They looked at individual isolates of bacteria, monocultures pampered with an assured source of glucose and freed of the need to contend with other microbes.
Headlines about millions of Americans losing health insurance are really hard to contend with — as we saw in the Obamacare repeal fight earlier this year.
And even when shares can be sold at a gain, executives have to contend with thorny issues concerning diversification and the reputational risks of selling.
But what the municipality of Page is facing is far less existential than what Antelope Canyon's skyrocketing popularity has forced the Navajo to contend with.
They are likely to contend with motions to reopen cases of those migrants who missed their hearing along with requests for a stay of removal.
The people in my life did not know how to contend with it, other than to deny its persistence or attempt to look past it.
They also have to contend with misleading information in several of President Donald Trump's public statements on COVID-19, including his tweets and Facebook posts.
Republicans hope to deliver a finished plan to President Trump by Christmas, but will first have to contend with objections from Democrats and special interests.
But free speech is only part of the equation; campuses also have to contend with events that threaten students' feelings of inclusiveness and even safety.
Saudi citizens still need to contend with the top-down system of governing in which they all are vulnerable to royal commands, whims and punishments.
With Mr. Cagney's abrupt departure, SoFi joins the ranks of technology start-ups that have had to contend with serious issues related to workplace culture.
More: Scotch producers already had to contend with Brexit — and now they must figure out how to deal with new U.S. tariffs that begin tomorrow.
Here, Pout-Pout has to contend with a crafty octopus who has nabbed the pearl and challenges him to — it's only appropriate — a shell game.
Even more complicated is having to contend with the contradictory norms and codes of ethics of the social work profession that interfere with needing assistance.
The service sector, in contrast to manufacturing, is just beginning to contend with automation and technological displacement — in the form of robots, apps and algorithms.
Residents attempting to return to flooded homes may have to contend with contaminated water and air because the city's sewer systems overflowed during the floods.
On CNN Tuesday, the acting-Homeland Security secretary Elaine Duke said her agency was sufficiently funded to contend with the dire needs on Puerto Rico.
For those that arrive in Sicily, the reality of little to no employment and growing public opposition to migration can be hard to contend with.
But Mr. Dudenhöffer noted that Mr. Diess will still have to contend with the extraordinary power that Volkswagen workers and local politicians exert over strategy.
"Up until now, there's been a value trade-off that marketers have had to contend with," said Linda Yaccarino, NBCUniversal chairman of advertising and partnerships.
Meanwhile, IDP officials also had to contend with innocent calls from members of the public who were simply trying to determine what was going on.
Casper may have capitalized early on with its first-mover advantage, but it now has to contend with several competitors with a similar business model.
I was 61 when I started nearly five years ago, with decades' worth of entrenched notions of who I was — and wasn't — to contend with.
Rubenstein, who no longer has to contend with any real attempts to close the loophole, has little to gain by insisting that it be retained.
"Trading partners will still have to contend with a likely significant drop in their exports to Turkey," said Holger Schmieding, chief economist at Berenberg Bank.
But you've still got to contend with keyboard reliability concerns, and this issue of it turning off for no obvious reason is a bit concerning.
Despite hitting more winners than her rival, Sharapova committed 39 unforced errors and struggled to contend with the second seed's power and aggression in Beijing.
Democrats ducked it with their 2009 stimulus package, even though many economists warned it would not be big enough to contend with the Great Recession.
Confidence: Medium-High Colder air finally works its way in for New Year's Day, with breezy winds from the northwest to contend with as well.
Simply put, those hoping to fill the United States' shoes in leading the world still have their own existential threats to contend with at home.
Meanwhile, audiences in the US no longer have to contend with Olaf's Frozen Adventure if they go to see Coco — and that's a good thing.
European firms, meanwhile, have had to contend with a stronger euro which on a trade-weighted basis, has risen for four quarters in a row =EUR.
Alcohol start-ups, for example, have to contend with the fine print of the post-Prohibition constitutional amendment that granted businesses the right to sell liquor.
In a statement to CNN, Biden campaign spokesman Andrew Bates said that the former senator had done his best to contend with a harsh political reality.
It left me suddenly in a state of shock, not knowing what to do, not knowing how to contend with the new shape of the world.
That image is not one with which American society in general, or the African American community in particular, has been forced to contend with any frequency.
It was another setback for the company, which has had to contend with privacy scandals and criticisms about the infiltration of its network by rogue groups.
But are non-anonymous online commenters actually more aggressive than anonymous ones who don't have to contend with the vulnerability that comes from revealing their names?
Democrats will also have to contend with their top donor, billionaire Tom Steyer, whose group Need to Impeach has been pushing impeachment on Democrats for months.
The government entered the crisis with a finance minister and treasury minister whose remits intertwined, both of whom had to contend with a powerful cabinet chief.
The iMac remains top-of-class, but it now has to contend with an ever-expanding, more aggressively updated group of Windows all-in-one PCs.
As two of the platform's most popular creators, both sisters have been forced to contend with internet negativity and the real-life fallout it can cause.
While Dragon Con claims to have taken steps to contend with ballot-stuffing, not allowing creators to remove themselves from consideration seems like a counterintuitive step.

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