Too much capital is invested in too few places with too few people.
|
|
I see far too few jokes, too few embarrassing moments, and absolutely zero mention of Goldschläger.
|
|
"You've got too few female founders, too few women within tech companies that have meaningful equity, too few female angel investors... and there aren't enough women in decision-making roles," Ashman says.
|
|
I believe that top football is played by too few clubs in too few competitions in limited areas.
|
|
No, this time, it's the opposite that's unusual: Too few Americans are taking on debt and buying too few homes.
|
|
Democrats have attacked this as a boon to Wall Street that would spark too few projects and create too few jobs.
|
|
Years of budget cutbacks have left many states with too few caseworkers and too few foster families to deal with the crisis.
|
|
For now, there are too few elections with robust early voting opportunities, and too few studies correlating early voting figures with eventual turnout.
|
|
We are an overstretched, underfunded health service in which too few doctors and nurses labor with too few resources, struggling to deliver good care.
|
|
The DFS report notes that hedge funds once employed effective strategies but have since fallen behind as too few managers are chasing too few strategies.
|
|
High turnover and staff shortages mean that the state has too few counsellors to teach those programmes, and often too few guards to transport prisoners.
|
|
The squadron, known as Marine Heavy Helicopter Squadron 463 (HMH-463), suffered from too few operational helicopters, too few flying hours, low morale and fatigue.
|
|
It's not that I don't want to get married, it's just that society's guarantees for women are too few and there are too few good men.
|
|
To save money in the 1960s, the towers had been built with too few exit stairs, just as the Titanic was sent out with too few lifeboats.
|
|
The divide between Britain inside the circle and Britain outside it concentrates too much power within too few city districts, centred on too few restaurants, bars and social circles.
|
|
A country that's always prided itself on open spaces, abundant housing, and ample opportunity now has too few homes and is building too few to keep up with its needs.
|
|
"Most people are negotiating on too few variables," Jensen says.
|
|
But too few are asked what matters most to them.
|
|
"Most people are negotiating on too few variables," Jensen said.
|
|
Potatoes have too much starch and too few nutritional benefits.
|
|
In part that is because there are too few police.
|
|
Too few Americans understand our country's other instruments of influence.
|
|
The troops involved are too few and too lightly armed.
|
|
Too few cybersecurity professionals is a gigantic problem for 2019
|
|
But examples like these are too few and far between.
|
|
But there were too few votes to overcome Trump's veto.
|
|
Finally, the WHO sees too few oral antibiotics being developed.
|
|
"There's too much power in too few hands," Coffman said.
|
|
Crashes aren't the result of too few signs and signals.
|
|
Far too few people who could benefit are taking PrEP.
|
|
Go deeper: The global fear of too few young people
|
|
There will be 20, but this is actually too few.
|
|
INFLATION ROUGHLY DEFINED: TOO MUCH MONEY CHASING TOO FEW GOODS.
|
|
Almost nobody thought there were too few people in prison.
|
|
Senior Republicans still criticize Obamacare for covering too few people.
|
|
The problem: Too few refugees and too many border patrols.
|
|
They already have too many starters for too few spots.
|
|
They were judged negatively for using too few exclamation points.
|
|
She has "too few occupations and too few real conversations" — in a way she's like today's superbusy, superachieving kids, who barely have time to imagine what it might be like to kiss a frog.
|
|
IT SEEMS THAT THERE'S TOO MANY DOLLARS CHASING TOO FEW DEALS.
|
|
But he worried that too few U.S. companies have such ties.
|
|
Werner Herzog: No, there're too many of them, and too few
|
|
"You have too much capital chasing too few deals," he said.
|
|
Far too few people grasp the positive effects of hormonal contraception.
|
|
That's hardly controversial, yet it's something far too few filmmakers engage.
|
|
Too few of these projects think about the fundamentals of television.
|
|
Border officials are rude, and there are too few of them.
|
|
And too much data can be as bad as too few.
|
|
Currently, there are too few women trained for many such jobs.
|
|
Instead, the young complain about crumbling services and too few jobs.
|
|
First, the data confirm that too few women hold senior positions.
|
|
I am overwhelmed by too many memories, colliding with too few.
|
|
But there are too few inspectors reviewing the paperwork, he said.
|
|
Police would be too few or too corrupt to enforce compliance.
|
|
Maybe too few of them did, and that was the problem.
|
|
Too many golf courses are chasing too few golfers as well.
|
|
Significantly, too few Americans have contact with those who do serve.
|
|
The problem was that we found far too few of these.
|
|
The excuses are the same: There are too few GP openings.
|
|
Were there too many bad matchups and too few star turns?
|
|
Ballet is a thrillingly multidimensional art: Too few dancers remember this.
|
|
But their actions, critics say, are too few and far between.
|
|
Our culture provides too few emotional payoffs for not spending money.
|
|
In this case, too much information has yielded too few results.
|
|
"There are unfortunately too few people like her," Dr. Fitzgerald said.
|
|
After suspects are arrested, family court judges have too few options.
|
|
The authors first noted that there were too few prospective studies.
|
|
Too few students and a college comes up short on revenue.
|
|
Our challenge is that too few people vote, not too many.
|
|
But how many is too many credit cards — or too few?
|
|
There was no water or food concessions and too few toilets.
|
|
Too few nails, and your balloon is more likely to break.
|
|
Avoid choosing too few people with whom you make eye contact.
|
|
There are too many investment dollars chasing too few investment opportunities.
|
|
Are there too many or too few staffers on the floor?
|
|
Take in too few, and you'll start to feel fatigued and hangry.
|
|
There are too few transformational and brilliant women in the public eye.
|
|
Sanders said he received at least 2.3942 too few state delegate equivalents.
|
|
Liao admits that too few girls are enrolling in her maker courses.
|
|
The problem, she implied, was that too few seem to share it.
|
|
Today the problem is that officers are too few and too inexperienced.
|
|
"There were too many seats for too few behinds," Marks told us.
|
|
Too few people have embraced the first view, too many the second.
|
|
In 2018 there were too few female CEOs for large-scale study.
|
|
For such a big screen 248 pixels-per-inch is too few.
|
|
Prohibition failed because too few Americans agreed that all drinking was debauched.
|
|
But she says too few police know the areas where they operate.
|
|
And that is something far too few Americans seem to have realized.
|
|
Ras Baraka, Newark's mayor, believes that too few people are being detained.
|
|
Because too few people experienced the magic that the Steam Link affords.
|
|
But too little has been implemented, in too few places, farmers complain.
|
|
If Manila has too few trains, it probably has too many buses.
|
|
If too few take the offer, airlines are permitted to deny boarding.
|
|
Our culture has too few shared dreams, and too many overblown squabbles.
|
|
"Since it's too early, too few people have developed dementia," he said.
|
|
That means too few people to clean up and help maintain order.
|
|
But too few customers also matter for the functioning of the market.
|
|
And the problem of auditors being "too few to fail" will persist.
|
|
You know, there's too much power in the hands of too few.
|
|
We may end up with too few robots rather than too many.
|
|
Go deeper: Too much money (and too few places to invest it)
|
|
In my experience, far too few of these patients actually get it.
|
|
Take the sprawling subway system, which has too few bathrooms for comfort.
|
|
Too few tears are shed for the people killed by police violence.
|
|
We have way too few units in California and across the country.
|
|
The current budget process lets too few lawmakers participate in the legislating.
|
|
The Democrats either missed them or considered them too few to matter.
|
|
Critic's Notebook Are there too many movies out there or too few?
|
|
There are still far too few places where one can get naked.
|
|
Essentially every review of Hilda — and there are too few of them!
|
|
The problem: There were just too few people with publicly available genetic data.
|
|
A rapidly changed economy that benefits too few while leaving too many behind.
|
|
Too few disengagements indicate a lack of instructive situations from which to learn.
|
|
And the overall number of private-sector jobs is still far too few.
|
|
A similar majority (60%) said their portfolios hold too few of these companies.
|
|
There are already too few women in decision-making roles in the industry.
|
|
There are just too few ways to eat an egg, am I right?
|
|
For some of our forgotten leaders, it's a case of too few books.
|
|
For all the talk about infrastructure investment, too few shovels have hit dirt.
|
|
Real life has too many moving parts, too much unpredictability, too few certainties.
|
|
Sadly, too few give too little thought to this crucial right and duty.
|
|
Too few Argentines see the connection between blackouts and their low energy bills.
|
|
He returned 10 hours later with about 150 scallops — too few to sell.
|
|
To some it appeared we had too many workers and too few jobs.
|
|
If too few of them need to transition gender, that's a problem too.
|
|
Too few people are interested in listening to him these days, he said.
|
|
We see consequences of too few school nurses in our current measles outbreak.
|
|
We sometimes hear that we have too many specialists and too few generalists.
|
|
Sometimes the original studies had too few participants to produce a replicable answer.
|
|
This is the history of America too few know or want to acknowledge.
|
|
Both sides complain that too few top national security posts have been filled.
|
|
Some have too few basic skills or work experience to be job ready.
|
|
Too few people in the world ever acquire any real power, he argued.
|
|
Often they found too few aides to cover the floor, Gerry Baker said.
|
|
Often they found too few aides to cover the floor, Gerry Baker said.
|
|
Routinely given too few resources, community colleges often fall short of their promise.
|
|
The air smelled too good; there were too few items on the shelves.
|
|
The fuss about too few female artists in the Guggenheim show was unjustified.
|
|
But again, too few of these wines would bear up under close examination.
|
|
Too few people are skeptical enough to question what they hear and read.
|
|
The doctors expressed a worry that too few people were currently being tested.
|
|
They complain, as ever, of too few jobs, poor services and rampant corruption.
|
|
But its sense that it has too few places to turn has abated.
|
|
Yet incidents of viciousness in wolves are too few and rare to mention.
|
|
Too few manufacturing firms in the United States acknowledge the need for action.
|
|
Progressives say 85033 drugs is way too few to bring about meaningful savings.
|
|
I fear that all too few would even know what we have lost.
|
|
Ten is too few, and our critics had to make some difficult calls.
|
|
A rapidly changing economy that benefits too few while leaving too many behind.
|
|
The big problem is teachers: often too few, too ignorant—or simply not there.
|
|
Lawmakers have criticized the finance ministry for appointing too few women to the committees.
|
|
But, far too few Latinos get to showcase their talents at Hollywood's biggest night.
|
|
A show that sends too few episodes might be hiding something down the road.
|
|
Even at lower costs, too few new niches appeared to absorb the workless ungulates.
|
|
Some worry that there is too much money chasing too few deals in Asia.
|
|
But too few scientists, he said, recognize the inherent uncertainty of their splashy results.
|
|
Too few kindergartens in the city to find a place to leave my kid.
|
|
Alas, the industry generated far too few sceptics and far too many corporate cheerleaders.
|
|
But too few Liberians have benefited, and some rural dwellers have lost their land.
|
|
It's all about buffering changes in both directions: not too many, not too few.
|
|
Lawmakers have criticised the finance ministry for appointing too few women to the committees.
|
|
TC: Do you ever worry about there being too few women in venture capital?
|
|
Recessions strike when too many people wish to save and too few to spend.
|
|
Too many characters are introduced in too few pages, and there's too much repetition.
|
|
There was simply too much open land and too few willing workers, Cook writes.
|
|
They were too plain to use as ornaments, too few to make a dress.
|
|
With Donald Trump ending the "individual mandate," too few healthy people were signing up.
|
|
This is something far too few entrepreneurs and venture capitalists want to think about.
|
|
America's retirement system is coming up short: too few savers, too little being saved.
|
|
The only concern is Embiid playing too few games because of injury or rest.
|
|
There are complicated rules and regulations, and too many cars for too few spots.
|
|
Too few of his insights were caught on record, too little of his breadth.
|
|
Producers often argue that there are too few experienced female directors to choose from.
|
|
Some precincts had too few voting machines and hours when the machines were down.
|
|
A faculty shortage and too few nursing school slots has contributed to the problem.
|
|
Australia's export portfolio shows a nation with its economic eggs in too few baskets.
|
|
Left alone, markets will generate too much pollution (Nordhaus) and too few ideas (Romer).
|
|
Too few long entries, and it's less likely to be considered a weekend grid.
|
|
And too few such people, it figured, appreciate the finer points of hip-hop.
|
|
"It's too much concentration of power in the hands of too few," said Trump.
|
|
Also, some contracts allow publishers to reduce the discounts if too few students participate.
|
|
Too few know the history of the Nazi methodical mass murder of disabled people.
|
|
This means too many vehicles, too few roads, and too little maintenance or repair.
|
|
Some have complained, for instance, that the reforms were too slow and too few.
|
|
I've met thousands of kids with far too few opportunities to enjoy the outdoors.
|
|
His collection had too few surprises; finally in its moment, not ahead of it.
|
|
While having too few can compromise safety, having too many burdens the American taxpayer.
|
|
"There are just too few women competing," said W Series Chief Executive Catherine Bond Muir.
|
|
There were too few females to make an estimate of female whale shark longevity, however.
|
|
Employees complained about too few meeting rooms and the challenge of concentrating due to noise.
|
|
But far too few communities in these fast-growing areas are really taking aggressive steps.
|
|
And too few families will have access to the second chance that mine has found.
|
|
The shows and movies that get it right are still too few and far between.
|
|
These steps have merit, but they are too few and for the most part uncoordinated.
|
|
Educated urbanites who stage protests over constitutional issues are too few to sustain a party.
|
|
Their school résumé is too important, and they have too few years to amass it.
|
|
And it recognizes the sad reality that far too few predators change on their own.
|
|
Despite such dramatic gestures, too few Hindus accept that the Ganges's holy waters are sullied.
|
|
Maybe too few Americans have been exposed to men and women of the Muslim faith.
|
|
Retaining earnings and profits in the hands of too few chokes capitalism to economic death.
|
|
He told the truth about that, a truth too few people are willing to recognize.
|
|
"You just have to be willing to wield it, and far too few people do."
|
|
She tried giving talks on the subject but felt she was reaching too few people.
|
|
One reason for the setbacks in Helmand province is that there are too few trainers.
|
|
HSBC's management is now multi-national, although its board has too few Asians on it.
|
|
"We are asking too few ships to do too many things," said Wicker, a Republican.
|
|
If anything, the United States is granting too few women asylum rather than too many.
|
|
But that is a recipe for inflation, creating too much money chasing too few goods.
|
|
There are too few women exploring the spaces, just outside mainstream pop, that fascinate Rihanna.
|
|
Of course, checklists will not fix every potential problem, such as too few polling places.
|
|
"Now there really are too few local Pekingese," said Zhang Lei, a breeder in Beijing.
|
|
It installed too few stations, which were located away from bike paths and tourist attractions.
|
|
Only four percent of victims believe the driver is having too few people in prison.
|
|
Too many people were managers, he said, and too many managers had too few reports.
|
|
Sadly, too few of the films of the LA Rebellion movement are available to stream.
|
|
The INCB argues that poor countries have too few opioids because they cannot afford them.
|
|
At this point, do you think there are now too many emojis or too few?
|
|
That's the root of the problem: there are too few good schools in lower grades.
|
|
In other words, an abundance of ventilators today could turn into far too few tomorrow.
|
|
Even today, too few of us who have built companies worth $1 billion or more.
|
|
After graduating, I moved to New York, in 1979, too few years before AIDS did.
|
|
For example, too few people hold the certificates necessary to be truck drivers, Kensing said.
|
|
Facebook got rid of those contractors, who were already too few for meaningful quality control.
|
|
But while experience is precious, it also results in too few people for too many posts.
|
|
Instead, there are too many haphazardly placed buttons and ports, and too few eye-catching detail.
|
|
Instead, there are too many haphazardly placed buttons and ports, and too few eye-catching detail.
|
|
But experts worry that too few companies are asking the hard questions necessary for real change.
|
|
The machine had only 52 working qubits, far too few to take in a whole image.
|
|
It cited an "unbalanced risk pool," meaning too few healthy people on its rolls, hurting business.
|
|
"There's too much capital chasing too few deals," said Randy Gerardes, Wells Fargo Securities Senior Analyst.
|
|
Nevertheless, 70 years on, there are still far too few black people on the red carpet.
|
|
Too few regulations could lead to a dangerous genetic engineering free-for-all and arms race.
|
|
Gene-banks contain too few specimens of two-thirds of the pertinent wild relatives of crops.
|
|
The liquidity issue here will be too much of it and too few things to buy.
|
|
Some downsides of insufficient sleep are apparent to anyone who's clocked too few hours of slumber.
|
|
"In the Brexit negotiations, there are still too many questions and too few answers," Barnier said.
|
|
Unfortunately, moments like these were too few in the website's nearly 14 years of publishing online.
|
|
Too few agricultural buyers reach villages, and the ones that make it can often dictate prices.
|
|
Third, too few Swedish schoolchildren are learning to code: needlework and carpentry are compulsory, not programming.
|
|
Plenty of places to eat in New York, far too few quiet oases for intellectual pursuits.
|
|
Include too few, and you might be unconsciously (or deliberately) gerrymandering evidence in your own favor.
|
|
And oftentimes, that can result in a dynamic of too many demands with too few justifications.
|
|
Politicians queued up to criticise big tech companies for abusing data and paying too few taxes.
|
|
Too few stories focus on those who are really at risk for sleep deprivation, namely teenagers.
|
|
Dallas coach Rick Carlisle would almost certainly take having too many guys over having too few.
|
|
In this digital age, too few American boys take the time to read great literary texts.
|
|
Too few reflected on the implications of the politics that allowed them to enact their ideas.
|
|
Too few Americans are trained in CPR or know where to find an automated external defibrillator.
|
|
English is required, but many students graduate with too few English credits to enter a university.
|
|
But there are too few of them to re-elect him in a two-person race.
|
|
On Etsy there are too many gorgeous and beautifully photographed handmade goods chasing too few buyers.
|
|
That was far too few, considering roughly one million people join the labor force every month.
|
|
Congress has dedicated and talented technology staff, but they are too few to meet the demand.
|
|
Right now, there are too few opportunities for mid-career lateral entry in the Foreign Service.
|
|
Many of the experts we rely on are nearing retirement with too few replacements being trained.
|
|
Smaller states have too few districts for gerrymandering to impact more than one or two seats.
|
|
There are too many cars for too few roads, and too little interest in public transportation.
|
|
Also, on House side, the staff $$$ cuts left lawmakers with too few experienced staff to help.
|
|
Women's groups have too few dollars and too little (wo)man power to fight every injustice.
|
|
" There are simply "too many companies," he said, "selling too much coal to too few customers.
|
|
But to some Democrats, that statement came too late, and offered too few details about Russia's intentions.
|
|
Simply put, the company has far too much cash and too few options to effectively deploy it.
|
|
That's my little worry, that maybe there are too few objects to come to a firm conclusion.
|
|
Those include recent measurements of distant hydrogen, strange excesses of antimatter, and too few high-energy electrons.
|
|
The system favors the GOP because too many liberal voters live in too few (primarily coastal) states.
|
|
In local markets across the nation, there are too few listings to meet the strong buyer demand.
|
|
Espacio Público says one reason for the high subsidies is that too few companies operate the buses.
|
|
Predictions: I've got four new playoff teams; history tells us that's two or three teams too few.
|
|
These irresponsible people help to create the resultant tragedy of too many pets, and too few homes.
|
|
Mexico has always had too few checks on the president, never mind a president with messianic tendencies.
|
|
Alas, too few came and inflation had already eroded the value of each note to 20 cents.
|
|
But if you provision too few, one major moment could break your site (we all remember healthcare.gov).
|
|
The United States also has too few workers with the specific technical expertise to make vaping products.
|
|
Trump also argued that the economy has produced too few jobs to keep up with population growth.
|
|
On the campaign trail, he blasted it as too much power in the hands of too few.
|
|
The film's Batman goes in the opposite direction: He has too few facets instead of too many.
|
|
There were too few cases of lung cancer among nonsmokers to include them in the full analysis.
|
|
In 33 of the 35 OECD nations, too few babies are born to maintain a stable population.
|
|
Normally, low quality content simply receives too few Likes or comments to be seen by many people.
|
|
"It's too much concentration of power in the hands of too few," he said during the campaign.
|
|
Some people today imagine that Hitler sneaked up on Germany, that too few people understood the threat.
|
|
But they remain too few and their investments too small to vault Platinum into the big league.
|
|
The global economic outlook continues to improve, but too few citizens have benefited from that economic growth.
|
|
The French cannot be that partner, at least not all the time, because they are too few.
|
|
For one thing, too few Americans have the education or training needed to reach the middle class.
|
|
Some have argued that countries in the Middle East accept too few refugees, and should take more.
|
|
But in trying to be too many things to too many people, he won over too few.
|
|
More survey results: 62% believe too much money is chasing too few deals in North American buyouts.
|
|
"There are just too few women competing in single-seaters series at the moment," Bond Muir said.
|
|
There are too few female teachers, and many families will only let girls be taught by women.
|
|
The camps are overflowing, the doctors are too few, and many hospitals have collapsed under government bombing.
|
|
As for right now, "There just are too few people writing about dance these days," she says.
|
|
Did Trump prevail in 2016 because too few young people, progressives and voters of color cast ballots?
|
|
Are too few parents seeking out stories for their sons that go beyond ninjas and winning things?
|
|
An economy that works too well for too few and not at all for too many more.
|
|
"We have really good candidates; our problem is not too few, but too many," Mr. Schumer said.
|
|
If the models had predicted too few emissions, and the price had gone to $1,000 per ton.
|
|
Despite television coverage of the ceremonies, some felt that too few Parisians took part in the observances.
|
|
The public plan's low costs wouldn't be worth much if too few providers agreed to accept it.
|
|
Consumer drones and robotics are in their infancy, a niche, with too few practical uses as yet.
|
|
Too many "I"s and you're self-absorbed; too few and: Where are you in this piece?
|
|
However, this might be because too few students took advantage of the option to start school later.
|
|
"We have a nice problem - too many passengers and too few planes," Chief Executive Carsten Spohr said.
|
|
And the big problem facing the economy isn't too many robots, in other words, but too few.
|
|
The limited array of non-opioid painkillers that medical providers can prescribe help far too few people.
|
|
If the chapters on illustrators suffer, it's only because Looser gives us too few examples to view.
|
|
Murder in the 2140-217 Trust ebbs in a precinct with many murders but too few detectives.
|
|
With Democratic majorities in both chambers, state Republicans have too few votes to stand in the way.
|
|
Credit bureaus with too few consumers or who have data breaches would ultimately go out of business.
|
|
There were too few security forces in the city, he said, and they were using outdated equipment.
|
|
This country's bright queer future is already here, hiding where too few of us care to travel.
|
|
"Iraq has too few export outlets," Abdul Mahdi told reporters at his weekly press conference on Tuesday.
|
|
Too few and people get ticked off when they can't get one; too many and you're wasting money.
|
|
Auditor General Michael Ferguson, who reports to parliament, said Ottawa had too few tools to measure its success.
|
|
They're not selling any more of them, and too few people are using the ones that still exist.
|
|
They joined forces after realizing the children's book market had too few bilingual options for first concept books.
|
|
The executive order fits with Trump's view that the US imports too many products and exports too few.
|
|
As Howard said, the concept behind "Two is Too Few" will come to life in honor of Pride.
|
|
There were too few Spanish-speaking organizers, the former staffers said, despite asking the campaign to hire more.
|
|
In addition, we are frequently overwhelmed by too much stimulation, and too many choices instead of too few.
|
|
Many African governments already have fine-sounding policies to promote contraceptive use, yet too few act on them.
|
|
But herders complain that there are too few of these, or that their camels refuse to use them.
|
|
When he abolished state school fees, too few teachers had been trained to meet the surge in demand.
|
|
The real issue is that in 2016, there are still far too few roles for non-Caucasian actors.
|
|
While the slow loris had similar feeding patterns, the trials were too few to yield statistically significant results.
|
|
And Dean Stattman, the commissioning editor, had an interesting discovery – he was actually eating far too few calories.
|
|
The world of international tourism is topsy-turvey—some places have way too many visitors, others too few.
|
|
They have far too many children that need homes and far too few families willing to provide one.
|
|
What I had achieved seemed negligible, inadequate; it spoke to too few people, it existed in outmoded forms.
|
|
Insurers are leaving the insurance market because too many sick people and too few healthy people are enrolling.
|
|
Ask anyone house hunting this spring, and they'll tell you there are far too few homes for sale.
|
|
For one, financial regulatory agencies with too few members can run into quorum issues that affect their functioning.
|
|
As healthy people refused to enroll, too few were left to shoulder the burden of the seriously ill.
|
|
But there were only 22 children in the study, too few to really say whether mesalazine was effective.
|
|
On May 2nd the stock exchange said too few had signed up for its stockmarket listing to proceed.
|
|
With many Baby Boomers retiring and increasingly restrictive immigration policies, America's economy cannot grow with too few workers.
|
|
Talk to any VC and you're likely to hear that there's too much money chasing too few deals.
|
|
There were simply too many mouths to feed, too much land unplowed, and too few hands to spare.
|
|
Syrian government forces, U.S. officials said, are too few, too poor and too weak to secure the country.
|
|
When you have too few primary care physicians, it won't be as easy for patients to see them.
|
|
Writing, too, in some (too few) moments can be like that; you lose consciousness and suddenly you're flying.
|
|
"The main reason is we had too few orders externally and too high a cost internally," said Liu.
|
|
Should too few voters turn out, that might hand Putin margin of victory high enough to look illegitimate.
|
|
What's more, eating too few calories and not enough protein causes your body to burn muscle for energy.
|
|
"Far too few communities are really taking aggressive steps," Foxx said on the latest episode of Recode Decode.
|
|
The other crisis is older and affects many more people around the world each year: too few opioids.
|
|
They live in communities rocked by opioids, that have too few jobs, that are in intense distress themselves.
|
|
He chastised the Trump administration for sending too few ventilators and drew an instant rebuke from the president.
|
|
The local magistrates court, which handles less-serious offenses, is under threat because it hears too few cases.
|
|
Republican men stood out: Only about a quarter of them said there were too few women in leadership.
|
|
For Tesla, getting the right balance between too few and too many warnings has been a difficult challenge.
|
|
These students are at the mercy of debt schemes, too few scholarships, and poor-performing for-profit schools.
|
|
"It's not enough, you barely see them on the radar, they're too few and far between" he said.
|
|
Too few nurses, particularly registered nurses, provide care at some of the most troubled homes, the analysis shows.
|
|
Even if tribal law enforcement were able to respond, the need is too great with too few resources.
|
|
Unfortunately, however, too few working people are represented by forward thinking elected leaders like those out in California.
|
|
So with too few platelets, you&aposre at a higher risk of excessive bleeding both externally and internally.
|
|
Mr. Massey's name was left off the survey because the pollsters believed that too few people knew him.
|
|
And, of course, the great friends, alas too few of whom I've kept up with over the years.
|
|
Critics routinely complain about screen versions of literary works that take either too many liberties or too few.
|
|
Too few Americans keep track of writers like these and of the issues they broach in their writing.
|
|
But teams from outside of Europe and South America get too few opportunities to test themselves against the best.
|
|
And even more issues: Inexperienced and untrained managers throughout the organization, with either too few employees or too many.
|
|
It could also help CEO Mark Zuckerberg dodge criticism that he's made too few changes to his inner circle.
|
|
"Too few of our old crew left on Astor," she sings on "New York," a song about lost heroes.
|
|
" Later, he added: "I think it's appropriate always to resist concentration of power in the hands of too few.
|
|
But infighting for too long has been the city's reality, resulting in too few solutions and too many killings.
|
|
During the campaign Mr Trump lambasted Ford and Mondelez, a food firm, for employing too few people in America.
|
|
But in some cases, there are too few of these voters to make any difference in a presidential election.
|
|
But the Swiss retaliation has nonetheless caused uncertainty: there is no formal definition of how few is too few.
|
|
Specifically, we need a programme where the government creates jobs in places where there are too few employment opportunities.
|
|
True enough, but the current system has produced too many crises and too few ruined bankers to be satisfactory.
|
|
On top of this, far too few companies hold managers accountable for making progress on gender diversity (just 16%).
|
|
It is widely respected, though many complain that it is chronically underfunded and understaffed and brings too few cases.
|
|
"Too few companies are adapting their risk assessments and control frameworks fast enough," he said in a press release.
|
|
There are just too few things that robots and artificial intelligences can do better than humans at this point.
|
|
It's not that Americans don't want to buy homes, it's that there are just too few homes for sale.
|
|
Interest rates have plunged since the financial crisis, indicating that the world's savings are chasing too few investment opportunities.
|
|
Too few consumers are convinced that the internet has a role to play in every corner of their lives.
|
|
In it, the couple suggest that our modern diets are formulated around too much sugar and too few veggies.
|
|
But the program struggled because too many insurers requested risk corridor money and too few paid into the fund.
|
|
Commodity prices are falling because we have too few dollars chasing the increasing production of a strong American economy.
|
|
It's one of the too few opportunities to convey to loved ones just how much we really love them.
|
|
The politicians behind the government-ordered review of the law this week said there had been too few convictions.
|
|
If too few taxes are withheld from your pay in 2018, you could owe the IRS in 2019. Sen.
|
|
Part of the problem, he said, is that the area has too few jobs and too little government investment.
|
|
But the program struggled because too many insurers requested risk corridor money and too few paid into the fund.
|
|
Some educators argued that the more pressing issue was that too few minority students could access special education services.
|
|
Europe has too many banks for too few customers, and marginally profitable lenders are a source of economic weakness.
|
|
Those are traits too few of England's teams possess to thrive, so deep-rooted is the emphasis on entertainment.
|
|
But the overcrowded driveways on their block hinted at many households like theirs, all living in too few apartments.
|
|
At home, too, few believe Mr. Putin's Russia is the open or transparent nation he boasted about in 2010.
|
|
Sanders's campaign has released too few details to understand the medical impact of the heart attack on his health.
|
|
Unfortunately, far too few with this condition get this surgery because of a lack of referral from their doctors.
|
|
Many who resorted to calling in the results found that there were too few operators to handle the calls.
|
|
The biggest driver was the sheer flood of venture dollars targeting too few deals in the Valley these days.
|
|
Yet another was to maintain market integrity, which is easily compromised when too few firms control too much finance.
|
|
Going back to Mozart, he responded to critics by saying there were neither too many notes or too few.
|
|
It recently fired its (already too few) editors responsible for weeding out fake news from its trending topics section.
|
|
"Too few options, especially at the lower portion of the market, are slowing some would-be buyers," Kan said.
|
|
General Atlantic CEO Bill Ford has seen the SoftBank effect – too much money with too few guardrails – up close.
|
|
If there are too few resources being devoted to firearms research, it lies in areas outside of Public Health.
|
|
But skipping meals or eating too few calories earlier in the day appears to stack the odds against us.
|
|
"But in the end, regrets, I&aposve got a few, but then again, too few to mention," he said.
|
|
Only a third of Republicans think there are too few women in politics while 237% of Democrats say so.
|
|
"The seven worst words in the world are: Too much money chasing too few deals," says Oaktree's Mr. Marks.
|
|
He believes too few care about the truth, especially when it concerns the poor, dark-skinned and badly represented.
|
|
That's not to say Tennessee can't create more big plays at Houston, but two proved too few last time.
|
|
Countries such as the United Kingdom have accepted far too few Middle East Christian refugees, another cause for alarm.
|
|
The investigators say they have too few people to look into the things that they are allowed to investigate.
|
|
Battalion 414 showcases the necessity of European cooperation: Germany has too few soldiers, the Dutch lack a tank program.
|
|
This summer, singer/actress Selena Gomez did something that too few Americans get to: She received a kidney transplant.
|
|
Miami International Airport closed one of its concourses on Saturday because too few TSA agents were showing up for work.
|
|
"Even dozens of street protests are too few to criticize the agreement," Mr. Tavakkoli was quoted as saying by Fars.
|
|
That year he also offloaded the cable distribution business, which hooked up too few homes to be able to compete.
|
|
High-growth companies provide a disproportionate number of new jobs, but too few of those startups transform into "scale-ups".
|
|
Bias can be introduced into polls if too few voters belonging to certain demographic groups answer their phones, for example.
|
|
Whereas in 2016 it was forced to lease out surplus planes, now it has too few to cope with demand.
|
|
If megadeals do become more common, it may be for a prosaic reason: too much money chasing too few opportunities.
|
|
Today another dystopian scenario looms instead: that of a world in which there are too few robots, not too many.
|
|
There has been little room for error, none for rehearsal, and too few quiet spaces for this kind of reflection.
|
|
The results were not statistically significant, although Woolhandler said she believes that was because the study had too few subjects.
|
|
Too few people use two-factor authentication, offered by Apple and many others, which adds an extra layer of security.
|
|
VC fund partners routinely complain about too much capital chasing too few deals and pushing up valuations to unsustainable levels.
|
|
Even at 6.43% growth, too few jobs are created to absorb roughly 1m new entrants into the workforce every month.
|
|
I can even point you to ways that products fail because too few women have been involved in their development.
|
|
Sweet/Vicious received rave reviews (it currently holds a 100% on Rotten Tomatoes), though, admittedly, far too few of them.
|
|
Susanne Wenger died in 2009, and the team who maintain the grove are aging, and their successors are too few.
|
|
"It's important for women scientists to be here because there are still too few of us," said neuroscientist Sharri Zamore.
|
|
Defenders of the fund's strategy dismiss this criticism, arguing that poorer countries often offer too few suitable, big investment opportunities.
|
|
In addition, too few students were infected for researchers to identify trends over time in infection rates among college students.
|
|
Not because politicians actually want those changes, but simply because there will be too many beneficiaries and too few taxpayers.
|
|
Some in the east have long complained that they receive too few oil revenues, though officials in Tripoli dispute that.
|
|
The previous year, in a quarter of schools too few children had been vaccinated against measles to confer herd immunity.
|
|
"There are too many hands and too few with the proper qualifications to properly understand the users' needs," she says.
|
|
Fans want to see games that can go either way: European clubs play too few games that meet this criterion.
|
|
Basically they had to readjust the levels to make sure certain levels didn't have too many (or too few) users.
|
|
In his speech, Roosevelt warned that corporate mergers were concentrating too much wealth in the hands of too few people.
|
|
For a major studio film starring a predominantly Asian cast, of which there are too few, the championing is historic.
|
|
If anything, they're a sign of an economy with too few opportunities for productive investment and too much monopoly power.
|
|
Only 54 of the chamber's 118 members were present on Tuesday afternoon - too few to conduct business under House rules.
|
|
Gift-giving is one of the too few opportunities to remind our loved ones just how much we love them.
|
|
Whether you're in a minuscule studio or a Classic 6 with too few closets, there is rarely enough of it.
|
|
Plenty of top-dollar drugs armored in patents, but too few solutions for patients that are genuinely affordable and helpful.
|
|
People have been doing prescribed burns for decades, but too few and too rarely to make much of a difference.
|
|
One thing too few people do, according to Mr. Boykoff, the University of Colorado researcher, is laugh about climate change.
|
|
Too many teams, they felt, had perfected the art of catching opponents offside, meaning too few goals were being scored.
|
|
Never were there too few doctors, nurses or respiratory therapists available to attend to her many needs, day or night.
|
|
Workers also complain about the companies' tendency to run kitchens with too few workers, too little equipment and haphazard upkeep.
|
|
Nurses unions have pressed for rules setting minimum staffing levels, arguing that having too few nurses leaves patients at risk.
|
|
In all the world, there are only about 100,000 Dungans, and in Brooklyn, too few for the census to register.
|
|
So there are ultimately too many variables at play and too few tools to analyze them in a meaningful way.
|
|
With Glory and Lion Fight and others, there are opportunities, but still too few to accommodate the strikers coming up.
|
|
Despite ongoing efforts to improve gender equality in the workplace, still too few men recognize the extent of the problem.
|
|
But the phone received poor reviews and was criticized for being a bad Android clone and having too few apps.
|
|
Of the (too few) recitals of Duncan dances I've seen over the years, this seemed the longest and most diverse.
|
|
There are approximately 860,000 practicing physicians in the United States today, and too few — about a third — deliver primary care.
|
|
Having too few beds could lead to overcrowding if a future administration returned to policies that rely on more incarceration.
|
|
Mr. Barr agreed that too few companies were making 5G equipment; Nokia and Ericsson are the only other global competitors.
|
|
Without government intervention, such as research subsidies or an effective patent system, too few resources will be devoted to research.
|
|
So there are ultimately too many variables at play and too few tools to analyze them in a meaningful way.
|
|
Our community colleges have too few resources, especially given the concentration of disadvantaged students there and the supports they need.
|
|
The government has too few people to inspect all the damaged buildings, he said, and is asking for international help.
|
|
With too few education dollars actually being spent on instruction, why do we continue to enlarge the federal education bureaucracy?
|
|
Too few citizens have digital IDs or mobile wallets — locking them out of access to critical services and e-commerce.
|
|
The tragedy in Washington is that there are too few men and women in power who share Jim Comey's character.
|
|
In other words: What if the problem we face is not too many bad hackers, but too few good ones?
|
|
Even if more manufacturing jobs are created, however, there may be too few Americans with manufacturing skills to fill them.
|
|
Many critics have contended — in sometimes detailed reports — that the Hall has admitted too few women and people of color.
|
|
Two hours later, after too few good turns and very many worse ones, Edgar Falk's entire stake was gone. ♦
|
|
The soaring economic cost of this epidemic suggests that we are investing too few public resources into prevention and services.
|
|
"Our fleet is too small, and our capabilities are stacked on too few ships that are too big," he said.
|
|
Ultimately, of course, inflation, defined as too much money chasing too few goods, is determined by what monetary authorities do.
|
|
Their challenges, they say, are homegrown: California has too few licensed cannabis businesses, too much taxation and overly onerous regulation.
|
|
Industry experts have branded the UK accelerator scene "overcrowded", with too few early-stage investors capable of producing successful businesses.
|
|
Avoid crowding too many cats into too few square feet (solitary by nature, cats don't always relish one another's companionship).
|
|
So is the problem that we have too many robots coming for our jobs or that we have too few?
|
|
The tech companies were too easily used as vessels for disinformation and they had too few safeguards to prevent it.
|
|
After his mother's job left her with too few hours to qualify for coverage, Stallman found himself curiously browsing Healthcare.
|
|
But too few people know the risks, experts say — even though sudden deafness should be viewed as a health emergency.
|
|
Globalisation was meant to create enough gains to help the losers, but too few of them have seen the pay-off.
|
|
Having too many rules leads to a culture of non-compliance that is every bit as lethal as having too few.
|
|
In today's housing market, choice is a privilege, and too few have the privilege to choose to stay or to go.
|
|
"Too few people are doing too much, and it's keeping the Cabinet weak," said one outside adviser to the West Wing.
|
|
"There are too few [good] gastronomic bistros in the big towns and not enough young people doing good things," he said.
|
|
It was a breath of fresh air—and an experience too few queer people of color find themselves able to share.
|
|
But all that new supply has created bottlenecks in a region with too few pipelines to bring the crude to market.
|
|
The result: a Bay Area investment climate where there are far too many venture capitalists chasing far too few investment opportunities.
|
|
"Three seemed like too few, and five seemed overwhelming," Amelia Miazad, one of the site's founders, told Mashable in an email.
|
|
And having too few doctors and nurses meant that inmates with mental illnesses were also more likely to act out violently.
|
|
They argue that the caucuses are not "inclusive," ignore independents, sacrifice substance for organizing, and turn out far too few voters.
|
|
Schools where too few students scored as "proficient" on the tests were subject to an escalating series of interventions and sanctions.
|
|
In most Indian cities, public sanitation remains woefully inadequate, with rampant public urination and toilets being either dirty or too few.
|
|
However, if they work too few hours to meet a minimum, they are paid nothing for their time, the suit alleges.
|
|
Where psychiatrists are too few, patchy supervision of new trainees can fail to weed out problems that lead to poor quality.
|
|
He may have thought they were too few to matter, or that their endangered traditions should be nurtured after the Holocaust.
|
|
Each Eero is equipped with two ethernet ports—too few if you have other wired devices—and a single USB port.
|
|
Not to mention that, even in 2017, while many senior federal officials can tweet, way too few really understand the internet.
|
|
" Trump, meanwhile, warned that the proposed merger would result in "too much concentration of power in the hands of too few.
|
|
Parties putting forth too few female (or male) candidates will not be allowed to appear on the ballot at election time.
|
|
"No or too few permits would be catastrophic," the 53-year-old said at his Birmingham base, overlooking the M6 motorway.
|
|
Universities deploying obstetricians to the region are focusing on an Odate hospital partly because there were too few pregnancies in Kazuno.
|
|
And too few people use two-factor authentication, offered by Apple and many others, which adds an extra layer of security.
|
|
Sea accidents are frequent in Indonesia, a sprawling archipelago, with vessels often overloaded and having too few life jackets on boat.
|
|
The current education and training system, in particular, provides too few aspiring workers with the skills necessary to fill today's jobs.
|
|
I think too few people are dissecting it, because they're ... You can appreciate, there's two side to each of that, right?
|
|
Too few homes for sale drove prices sky high and led to fierce competition among buyers, especially at the entry level.
|
|
In the past quarter-century or so, there have been too many Jane Austen movies and too few Whit Stillman movies.
|
|
Even while 2202 percent of agricultural laborers in less developed countries are women, far too few own or manage the capital.
|
|
Too many and you're wasting manpower and machine-power (which equals money), too few and you're wasting your crop yield, a.k.
|
|
Thousands of idealists joined the party last summer and too few recognise the mess Mr Corbyn has made of the job.
|
|
In the last 20 years, the U.S. stock market has undergone an alarming change that too few people are aware of.
|
|
As a candidate, Trump said his administration would reject the deal because it put too much power in too few hands.
|
|
Some Arizona voters, for example, waited up to five hours because of too few polling places and mistakes with voter registration.
|
|
And when too few kids are vaccinated, outbreaks can occur, and people die from diseases that should have been long defeated.
|
|
In this convoluted scenario, endorsing Kasich now serves no purpose: He has too few delegates to compete with, and foil, Trump.
|
|
There are too few external candidates — or we're waiting for the superstar, like Marissa Mayer or Diane Green, to become available.
|
|
By any objective standard, the United States trains far too few physicians to care for all the patients who need them.
|
|
"There are too few jobs here," he said, "and no mobile connection," he added, while fiddling in vain with his phone.
|
|
Many primary care doctors lack the necessary training, he said, and already operate with too few resources and too many patients.
|
|
Still, since 2014, health inspectors have cited one of every eight nursing homes for having too few nurses, federal records show.
|
|
The bad news is that too few of the younger painters who helped foment this turn in New York are present.
|
|
Yet news stories are full of claims that these jobs provide unequal benefits —too few women and minorities reap the gains.
|
|
If too many of those customers need expensive medical care, there are too few healthy customers to spread those costs around.
|
|
Bed Bath & Beyond had too few products on the shelves and was out-of-stock on key items during the holidays.
|
|
If that number proves too few to meet the unquenchable thirst, I devoted an entire column to 20 rosés last summer.
|
|
The billionaire also took time to complain about the poor state of many corporate boards: Too few women serve on them.
|
|
But those grievances have one thing in common: fear that too much power is in the hands of too few companies.
|
|
This has created a so-called "death spiral," where insurance companies cover too many sick policyholders and too few healthy ones.
|
|
It turns out that too few parents had the heart to deny their children Disney products to make a boycott effective.
|
|
The department already releases information on school capacity, with yearly updates on whether schools have too many students or too few.
|
|
Pros: New AMD CPU inside, long battery life, excellent keyboardCons: Too few ports, no top-firing speakers, on the pricey side
|
|
Railton analyzed Sandberg's December 2010 TED Talk, "Why we have too few women leaders," which has more than 8 million views.
|
|
They looked like a mix of narwhal and beluga, but with too many for a narwhal, too few for a beluga.
|
|
After a summer of debating whether women are wearing too few clothes (ew, tramp!) or too many (ew, national security threat
|
|
If deported, they&aposll return to countries ill-equipped to absorb them and generating too few jobs to provide opportunities to work.
|
|
It includes too few doctors, commands too little attention and energy from elected officials and advocates, and it's shot through with partisanship.
|
|
What too few Americans appreciate is how directly the inability to say "no" at the Fed has determined their station in life.
|
|
The same code that makes resizing possible should make them work better on the Surface Duo, but too few support that feature.
|
|
The Oscars in particular have drawn ire in recent years for having too few nominees who were female or people of color.
|
|
Food and supplies were limited at the encampment, the too few porta-potties weren't cleaned out fast enough, and people got sick.
|
|
When psychiatrists are too few, he says, it is best that they work with those most in need, such as the suicidal.
|
|
And if too few shareholders sell, the first days may see thin and volatile trading, resulting in strange pricing for the shares.
|
|
For instance, the long-held adage that too much money chasing too few goods and services will cause inflation must be questioned.
|
|
"Neither the euro zone nor France suffers from too few debts," sniffed Jens Spahn, the health minister and Mrs Merkel's possible successor.
|
|
Britain's Financial Conduct Authority (FCA) has cautioned banks not to leave their UK operations with too few senior officials to monitor risks.
|
|
A spokesman added they may need to balance what they fund if consumers bought too many or too few of certain items.
|
|
"We got too old and too few," said Sister Veronica, who was the camp director until 1988, when Marydell Camp officially closed.
|
|
That's what alliance members believe — that the ship is going to sink on its own, precisely because CarbonWA has too few allies.
|
|
But, but, but: The ongoing crisis in Venezuela has shown that too much money chasing too few goods can still create problems.
|
|
Or else the brain-drain will become a demographic death-spiral, leaving the island with too few taxpayers to cover its costs.
|
|
So while there may be too-few soldiers with too-old gear, they're still the most competent in the world at killing.
|
|
People view it as a metric of success — teasing those who get too few, or buying likes to try to gain admiration.
|
|
Trump won the Republican primaries and then the 2016 general election at least in part because too few people took him seriously.
|
|
Right now, too few people are focused on China's banking system, Bass said, but the narrative will swing that way this year.
|
|
And according to the federal government, too few college students have the financial literacy required to understand the loans they're taking out.
|
|
America's farm population is aging at an alarming rate, and there are simply too few young farmers ready to take their place.
|
|
Too few people are considering the issue that if the world is unprepared, longevity will be both a gift and a curse.
|
|
One of the biggest problems with the SSDI program is that too few people ever exit the rolls and return to work.
|
|
Unfortunately, far too few have sounded the alarm against Bolton since the Trump team began floating his name for high-level roles.
|
|
Too few returned home after the war, and with each passing year, even fewer remain to tell their harrowing and heroic stories.
|
|
Recent attempts to achieve bipartisanship on legislation have not worked for the Democrats — there are too few like-minded Republicans in Congress.
|
|
Although there are treatments for opioid use disorder, the most effective therapy — medication-assisted treatment (MAT) — is available to too few Americans.
|
|
With no high-level, active Thai fighters, and too few foreign students to be highly profitable, Sitjemam doesn't fit into either category.
|
|
Many of the biggest obstacles to growth—too few new houses, poor infrastructure and a skills gap—stem from British-made regulations.
|
|
In Silicon Valley, he says, there are too many VCs chasing too few deals with too much money at too high prices.
|
|
The commission also issued too few harvesting permits, leaving unlicensed fishing crews with little incentive to follow the rules and limit catches.
|
|
Bringing on too few workers could produce disheveled shelves and long lines — and sour shoppers even further on brick-and-mortar stores.
|
|
Wayne State University, in Detroit, suffered from a far bigger headache than Texas did — too few of its students were graduating, period.
|
|
"The country is in trouble because you have all of these young people looking for work with too few jobs," she said.
|
|
Too much art fills too few galleries, and the density forces Mr. Rugoff into juxtapositions that come across as cluttered and frivolous.
|
|
The steps are not A.D.A. accessible; the work spaces resemble boxcars; the women's bathroom is far away and has too few stalls.
|
|
While commissions by BIDs require city permits, critics point out that these new art presenters offer too few avenues for community feedback.
|
|
His 145.8 passer rating was about double that of his counterpart, Rodgers, who had too little time and too few open receivers.
|
|
A result is that too few women are choosing to run, and party officials are less likely to encourage them to try.
|
|
Black women also often prefer a black mental health care provider, and there are too few black social workers, psychologists and psychiatrists.
|
|
We beg you to practice proper precautions and hygiene — and, still, tens of thousands of people die, and too few worry enough.
|
|
She also brought too few diapers and in Barcelona had to make an emergency run — for a decidedly not-leak-proof brand.
|
|
After comparing the two sectors, the researchers found that there were too few large companies willing to acquire clean tech start-ups.
|
|
The city is building 7500 new social-housing units a year, but Mr Morel says too few are for the very poor.
|
|
"It turns out that there are too few people doing this stuff, because there hasn't been a market for it," Baradaran said.
|
|
Once it had become clear that there were too few remaining to change the outcome, Ms. Abrams finally acknowledged defeat on Nov.
|
|
And the jobs being created in their stead, in online warehouses for companies like Amazon, are too few to soak up those displaced.
|
|
Researchers say the problematic facial-recognition systems likely were given too few black faces and can only identify them under ideal lighting conditions.
|
|
The union said there are far too few inspectors to police Brazil's powerful protein industry, which exports about $14.5 billion in meat annually.
|
|
There is simply too little to see here: too few artifacts to make up a spectacle, not enough historical context, not enough fire.
|
|
There were also too few testing kits for patients, making it hard to distinguish a coronavirus case from any other flu or cold.
|
|
Too few people pick up their phones and talk to pollsters these days to get a statistically valid sample by calling random people.
|
|
On top of this, Mr. Diallo claimed that Uber's aggressive hiring has flooded the city with too many drivers chasing too few fares.
|
|
On the present course, by the end of 2019 too few judges will be left to rule on new cases (three are required).
|
|
Laval's 12-storey hospital, built in 1974, has more than 1,000 beds and admits 40,000 patients a year but has too few doctors.
|
|
IF THERE were a list of common complaints about America's economy, the fact that too few people work would be near the top.
|
|
Too much processed meat was tied to 57,766 deaths, too little fatty fish to 73,626 deaths, and too few vegetables to 53,410 deaths.
|
|
The stock market has been rising because too much money is chasing too few opportunities, economist Mohamed El-Erian told CNBC on Wednesday.
|
|
It's much rarer for a show to air too few episodes during the eligibility period, thus dragging it into a future Emmy window.
|
|
Now we have just such a vaccine for some of the most terrifying cancers we know, and yet too few are getting vaccinated.
|
|
Judging by the collective desires of parents and would-be parents, more suffering is caused by having too few babies than too many.
|
|
Many people have missed their planes, and some flights have been delayed because too few passengers made it to the gate on time.
|
|
Too few young, healthy people have enrolled, leaving insurers with higher-than-expected expenses for those older people who remain on the exchanges.
|
|
"That is way too few in our experience with the number of officers we've encountered committing misconduct on our cases," Ms. Kaishian said.
|
|
An attorney for some of the plaintiffs in the federal lawsuit said it was the county's fault if too few machines were employed.
|
|
It's what happens when worker bees leave the hive, and the queen is left with too few bees to keep the hive thriving.
|
|
Venezuela's military is key to tipping the political balance between Maduro and Guaidó, who admits that too few troops defected that fateful Tuesday.
|
|
I don't mean that our headlines are disturbing, which they often may be; I mean that too few people ever read beyond them.
|
|
Mr. Parker cautioned that the period he studied provides too few midterm elections, and thus too little data, to draw any firm conclusions.
|
|
It seems too few coaches on tour have that kind of leverage or ability to take that kind of risk to walk away.
|
|
Republicans hold 23 of the Senate's 40 seats (two are vacant), leaving Democrats with too few votes to block bills on their own.
|
|
Several of the otherwise well-designed trials involved too few participants or did not last long enough to reach a scientifically valid conclusion.
|
|
Lawmakers seem to agree that there are too few tech companies with too much power, and that Big Tech needs to be regulated.
|
|
He seemed to think that too few of his white contemporaries had the same open-mindedness, even as they fêted him for it.
|
|
" Alan Dershowitz watched the same proceedings with disdain, writing in Newsweek that too few journalists "reflected the complexity and nuance of the situation.
|
|
Now they are held in English and Mandarin because too few people, even in his organization, speak Hokkien fluently enough to conduct meetings.
|
|
Here are the arguments made by those who fear that too few companies have consolidated too much power, along with the companies' responses.
|
|
But some cities, including Detroit, suffer because too few people want to live there, even as a small creative class revitalizes their downtowns.
|
|
But they typically have gone through labor in open wards with no husband or family present, too few nurses and no pain relief.
|
|
Leading experts in the UK tech scene told Business Insider that London was "overcrowded" with too many accelerators producing too few successful companies.
|
|
That means too few organizations are helping to register new voters, inform residents about important campaign issues or mobilize communities on Election Day.
|
|
Too many homes and businesses are too close to the water, and coastal defenses are too few, for catastrophic damage to be avoided.
|
|
But far too few least-developed countries (LDCs) have adequate plans in place to absorb the private money that is available, Khan said.
|
|
I have not seen evidence that the annual crop of candidates for public office are too few or too conventional in their ideas.
|
|
It's got irregular floors, too few plugs, and no thermostat (if you're hot, open the window; if you're cold, put on a sweater).
|
|
But should that come to pass, it will be the result of a righteous mob that has too few choices; too little political education; too few structural and institutional supports for responsible citizenship; too much individualism, greed, self-aggrandizement built into the legal fabric; too many filters for political actors; and too much reliance on wealth to support the practice of politics.
|
|
It's possible there were too few people with these medical issues to determine whether the conditions might be associated with occupational noise, Masterson said.
|
|
After a study about connection speeds in the US last year, the FCC decided that too few people had access to high speed internet.
|
|
After all, Comcast bought NBCUniversal under the Obama administration even as concerns were raised about too much media power falling in too few hands.
|
|
They also had too few extremely preterm babies to draw firm conclusions about the heart risks associated with delivery earlier than 34 weeks gestation.
|
|
Although on the script page George Lucas is a man of too many words, in real life he is a man of too few.
|
|
Mr Macron, for example, is now in trouble in France partly because he has made too few efforts to bind in the centre-left.
|
|
We have this tin pot, would-be dictator as a possible president because for a generation, too few Americans have in fact taken civics.
|
|
" He later wrote that "Marilyn Hagerty's years of reviews" represented "a history of dining" that "too few of us from the coasts have seen.
|
|
They found that many individual studies were poorly designed, showed evidence of bias or had too few participants, according to the systematic Cochrane Review.
|
|
Clinton almost always wins self-identified moderates, and there are usually too few self-identified conservatives in the poll to break them out separately.
|
|
I lay around in bed for a while and pet our cats — we have three, which is both too few and way too many.
|
|
Over a lunch of puffer fish, gold-industry bosses recall days when the sweet potatoes, a staple crop, were too few to go around.
|
|
Too few study participants Dr. Roderic Eckenhoff, a professor of anesthesia at the University of Pennsylvania, said the study is interesting but lacked rigor.
|
|
HomeBase has proved a successful alternative to automatically assessing families for shelter, but too few families know about the program or understand its effectiveness.
|
|
IMF Managing Director Christine Lagarde said "growth has been too low for too long, benefiting too few," and that's what officials need to address.
|
|
In too many states the program purposely covers too few people and pays too little for those who are lucky enough to get coverage.
|
|
The failure to turn out female graduates has a woeful impact on women's health, since it means too few female medical and nursing staff.
|
|
Eating too few carbs could leave you feeling zapped, and the plan doesn't take into consideration other important nutrients, such as protein or fiber.
|
|
But one recurring concern for several justices was whether the environmental groups' position might impose too few limits on the power of federal regulators.
|
|
But in many parts of the country, too few healthy people are signing up to balance the cost of those needing expensive medical care.
|
|
West Africa has become a melting pot of terrorist movements, jihadist groups, and ISIS — a sort of terrorist hub with all too few observers.
|
|
A new listing is typically picked up by a buyer within a month (that is, very fast) but there are just too few listings.
|
|
Automakers agree that electric cars offer impressive fuel-economy numbers, but counter that consumers buy too few of them to move the average number.
|
|
Eight students in a class are too few for Eisans' satisfaction — they prefer to see a few dozen people working out at a time.
|
|
" The interviewer settled for that because, apparently, the image was more vivid and evocative than the usual "too much money chasing too few goods.
|
|
This summer, my concerns have focused on a question that too few are asking: What will happen to kids deeply impacted by this epidemic?
|
|
A result of this mutual apathy is too many Islamists, and too few police and intelligence officers — particularly in Belgium, but not just there.
|
|
Similar programs are underway in several police departments across the country and around the world, but they are still too few and far between.
|
|
As a white grandmother, I have been searching for such books, and I have been saddened to see that there are far too few.
|
|
United is not suffering because too few people are employed to think about how to improve the team, but because there are too many.
|
|
That would almost certainly be too few to force a runoff, even if they were all validated and were cast overwhelmingly for Ms. Abrams.
|
|
In addition, a city watchdog agency found in March that the unit had far too few detectives to handle the city's sexual assault cases.
|
|
He has done what too few do nowadays: remembered whence he came and reached back to help those coming from similar and worse circumstances.
|
|
But real security is still distant, given the slow pace at which we can clear the hazards with minimal funding and too few experts.
|
|
The rest have disappointing records, with too few students graduating and even those who earn diplomas not possessing the skills they need for college.
|
|
It reinforced the reality that too few people realize there are humane and legal ways to reduce needless suffering, even for somebody with dementia.
|
|
America and policies of trickle-down economics have left a generation of voters with too much debt, too many jails and too few options.
|
|
"It was a perfect example of too many trawlers chasing too few fish," says Pettinger, who is now director of the Oregon Trawl Commission.
|
|
The first step is realizing that the biggest economic problem facing the country is the concentration of opportunity to too few people and places.
|
|
And, instead of worrying about too many robots in the workforce in the future, should we be worrying that there will be too few?
|
|
Yet although the world desperately needs new drugs to meet this challenge, there are far too few new antibiotics in development to do so.
|
|
There are too few workers to fill the open roles, and those jobseekers whose skills are in high demand have their choice of opportunities.
|
|
But, the oil industry is plagued by corruption, and its wealth when prices were high has been shared among too few, for too long.
|
|
Officials in states like West Virginia have said they're in crisis, with too many kids and too few families and caseworkers to go around.
|
|
Republicans have spent years complaining that the Affordable Care Act covers too few people with insurance that costs too much and covers too little.
|
|
Even in Endgame, when they marry and have a child, Pepper's scenes are too few to feel invested in what felt like an inevitable pairing.
|
|
Bottom line: This is obviously a company that doesn't give a shit about your security and is likely taking too few steps to protect you.
|
|
"It is simple common sense that having all this money in too few hands is harmful to our society and to our future," it reads.
|
|
Meanwhile, all too few people are asking what the people who spoke up want, and what a movement would look like that really served them.
|
|
We're too focused on mythical threats to border security, and we admit too few newcomers who can contribute to our society economically, culturally and socially.
|
|
But another — and to me, better — option is to understand that the problem is not one of too many unsettling images but of too few.
|
|
To the Editor:Your article suggests that Berea, S.C., students are not prepared for college or career because too few of them have high ACT scores.
|
|
The women I interviewed complained of too many stereotypical costumes like cops, pirates, and nurses, and too few in the way of au courant characters.
|
|
Part of the problem is too few openings in the region, says Aldo Cammara of Education InProgress, an NGO that helps youngsters learn computer skills.
|
|
In one instance on September 14th, an IRA employee managing the "Secured Borders" Facebook group was criticized for having too few posts criticizing Hillary Clinton.
|
|
Another element of the poll critique Trump and his supporters are pushing is that national surveys are including too many Democrats and too few Republicans.
|
|
The administration attributes that to several factors, including that too few young, healthy people are signing up to offset the expenses of the needier patients.
|
|
Routinely eating too few calories and skimping on protein or fiber can leave you feeling hungry and dissatisfied and more likely to reach for treats.
|
|
More specifically, he seemed to be the straight middle-aged white man who got it in a way that too few of his cohorts did.
|
|
Too many academics keep their data and calculations secret, he reckoned, and too few journals make space for papers that seek to replicate earlier results.
|
|
According to Milan, too few Americans are being tested early and often, and too many HIV diagnoses come late in the disease's progression to AIDS.
|
|
"Skipping meals or eating too few calories earlier in the day appears to stack the odds against us," says nutritionist Lisa Drayer, a CNN contributor.
|
|
Too few Germans drive them to make the air cleaner, though this may change in the wake of the Volkswagen diesel emissions scandal last year.
|
|
She said she was against an Australian-style "points" system for EU migrants (though mainly because it might let in too many, not too few).
|
|
United said that when too few people volunteered to give up their seats for airline employees, passengers were chosen for removal through an automated process.
|
|
While Mr. Cruz steadied himself, rebounding in his home state of Texas and winning several smaller contests and delegate conventions, his successes were too few.
|
|
The largely volunteer effort to help them navigate immigration court is a fragile patchwork, with too many cases, too few lawyers and too little justice.
|
|
Chopra and dialogue writer Sharat Katariya manage to infuse some freshness in Singh and Kapoor's exchanges, but those moments are far too few to count.
|
|
Hatten said he logged complaints more than a year before the crash about having too few employees to properly maintain the fleet, court documents showed.
|
|
Interestingly, the study also suggested that participants weren't consciously aware that they liked people less when they had too many or too few Facebook friends.
|
|
Without immigrants to ensure America's population growth, aging Americans could find themselves in need of a welfare state with too few taxpayers to support it.
|
|
Burton argues that the agency has too few political appointees for administrations to effect change and that Congress should have more discretion to provide oversight.
|
|
Garcia has plenty of land to expand his farm further but cannot yet find the labor because too few people have returned to surrounding communities.
|
|
The current incentives in our national political system do not encourage civil behavior, and there are too few role models and validators who encourage it.
|
|
With its slumped demographics, Germany wants highly educated people to keep its world-class economy chugging when Germans are too few to do so themselves.
|
|
That's one problem with ACA exchanges right now—too few young healthy people ("young invincibles") are signed up to cover the costs of sicker people.
|
|
"A lot of them have experienced real trauma and we have too few counselors on our staff," said Ebley, an English teacher Maclay Middle School.
|
|
In fairness to Mr. Obama, Republicans in Congress bitterly opposed his public works spending plans, and he lamented there were too few "shovel ready" projects.
|
|
If too few Bid2Ride drivers are available to snatch a bid, the service will refer riders to established ride-hailing services like Lyft and Uber.
|
|
She is deeply concerned about environmental issues and says that Chennai suffers from diminishing green cover, dirty air, too few parks and too much garbage.
|
|
"Foster" underscores a devastating social issue: There are too many children in need of help, and too few reliable adults and resources to provide it.
|
|
Heigl didn't get to show the luminance, flintiness or idiosyncrasy of her romantic-comedy forebears; she was given too few moments of wit or insight.
|
|
"We will not approve in my administration because it's too much concentration of power in the hands of too few," he said at the time.
|
|
Too few to even acknowledge, and those that were foolish enough to try and prey on the victims of Harvey were chased off or arrested.
|
|
It's just a matter of doing the work, but we can't do it because we are too few, and there is not sufficient financial support.
|
|
Because people may ignore the positive spillovers when weighing the costs and benefits, too few people will get vaccinated, unless the government somehow promotes vaccination.
|
|
Too few amongst us had sympathy, or paused to consider that women and men often had no knowledge of the risk that their partners brought.
|
|
"I know there are far too few spaces for trans people to feel safe and free to express themselves," Mr. Bohlka said in a statement.
|
|
In 2014, Tony Awards administrators eliminated sound design as a contest category, arguing that too few voters understood the craft well enough to judge it.
|
|
Caught by surprise themselves, Sinn Fein ran too few candidates to emerge with the most seats - a mistake it will not make next time around.
|
|
Another international observer said Odinga's team had identified 11 polling stations where the opposition had proof of problems - far too few to overturn the results.
|
|
" Trump vowed on the campaign trail last year to block the merger because "it's too much concentration of power in the hands of too few.
|
|
We know that as long as there are too few jobs and employers do not have to compete for workers wages will continue to stagnate.
|
|
The effort was stymied by too few areas offered for auction, the low quality of some projects and the dominant role of state-run Petrobras.
|
|
Unfortunately, too few Americans understand that cross-border trade creates jobs, not just in our region and state but in the rest of the country.
|
|
"Too few investors focus on the impact of cyclical businesses for [earnings per share] growth, in our opinion, and thus significant misconceptions abound," he said.
|
|
We need you, Lilly Singh With too few exceptions, late-night comedy shows have been a white boys club for too long, said Melissa Blake.
|
|
"As I told the Senate on Tuesday, we are asking too few ships to do too many things," he said, referring to a floor speech.
|
|
But the states and federal government can expand medical parole programs under which far too few terminally ill and physically disabled people are now released.
|
|
The hardships of life in Honduras are too many, the government's solutions are too few — and the allure of the United States is too great.
|
|
For many professional women, doing gender-balance math is a tic, a reflexive response to being in too many rooms with too few other women.
|
|
During the early days of internet polling, many feared that online samples were bound to be unrepresentative, mainly because they would include too few older people.
|
|
" President Donald Trump said at an October rally that he opposed the deal, saying "it's too much concentration of power in the hands of too few.
|
|
In some cases, the science was simply shaky, based on studies that were too small, too few or too narrow to extrapolate for the general population.
|
|
But it's the only way out of the current "too few IPOs" doldrums: We need to shift from being trend followers back to being trend setters.
|
|
With that toothlessness comes too few questions about technology instead of the usual deluge; without those questions it seems that Black Mirror has lost its edge.
|
|
A slideshow on the group's website suggests most polls tend to include too few Latinos or Latinos that are not representative of the wider Hispanic electorate.
|
|
The 220-seat theatre's small size means that too few people will see this production, but it also means the actors can afford to be subtle.
|
|
U.S. medical schools are expanding, but part of the problem is that there are too many expensive specialists and too few primary care physicians, says Blumenthal.
|
|
The party is likely running too few candidates to lead the next administration and its rivals say they will not form a coalition government with it.
|
|
Asia has been slower to change, with too few female directors and screenwriters, and with persistent stereotypical depictions of women that are "quite problematic", said Asmarani.
|
|
Whereas many people assume he worries about a world with too many robots, Mr Frey is in reality more concerned about a future with too few.
|
|
First, the number of magistrates has halved in the past decade, driven by short-sighted recruitment freezes leaving too few magistrates to do the work required.
|
|
"Even if we retained all the school leavers and university graduates we have here, that would still be too few," said Nitzsche, a liberal Free Democrat.
|
|
But unlike what most Keynesians will tell you, inflation doesn't come from a low unemployment rate but rather from too much money chasing too few goods.
|
|
Novartis Chief Executive Joe Jimenez has given Ball the task of reviving Alcon, where struggling surgical equipment sales have been exacerbated by too few innovative products.
|
|
One town in New Zealand is suffering from a problem other places around the world would love to have: Too many jobs with too few workers.
|
|
With too few listings to satisfy buyer demand, sellers had the upper hand in 2015, but there were signs that a shift was beginning to emerge.
|
|
As a result many lenders, including Deutsche, have too few blue-chip long-term institutional shareholders who are prepared to hold serially incompetent managers to account.
|
|
"We still have too few options in the swimwear market and when we do, they usually look like they're made for plus-size women," she says.
|
|
Instead of the expansive visualization of Ellison's novel that Parks imagined, his editors gave the feature only three pages, too few to do the book justice.
|
|
One could answer "too few" and still support using a more accurate price index, if it's paired with an increase in the overall level of benefits.
|
|
" Moreover, too few Americans are aware of the exploitation of Uighurs and other Muslim laborers for garment production in what has been called the "cotton gulag.
|
|
"Advisers and families are so focused on preparing the money for the family, but way too few are preparing the family for the money," he said.
|
|
The Fed's more than seven-year quest to generate inflation has started to bear some fruits, but likely too few to spur an imminent policy change.
|
|
There were also too few elderly or very young adults to determine whether the apparent protective effect of physical activity is true for all age groups.
|
|
The cheaper generics began to come out there and were too many restrictions to make them easy to prescribe, and too few people knew about them.
|
|
While savage inequities persist when it comes to opportunities for women as directors in Hollywood, there have been exceptions over the decades, if far too few.
|
|
And this dynamic is very likely to continue, for the simple reason that there is still too much law school capacity chasing too few good students.
|
|
The Socialists came second in both ballots, with enough parliamentary seats to veto their rivals but too few to form a viable government of their own.
|
|
Insufficient dietary iron can lead to iron deficiency anemia, a condition in which there are too few red blood cells in the body to carry oxygen.
|
|
In Syria, the U.S. has just 22019,000 troops in a chaotic battlespace: too few for strategic effect, but enough to drag the country into another war.
|
|
The researchers didn't look at people who were living together but weren't married, finding too few people in the two surveys who belonged to this category.
|
|
White flight, fueled by state funding that prioritized suburban development over urban improvement, left public schools with too few whites to achieve the goals of integration.
|
|
Of course, having too many teeth can disrupt smile symmetry as much, if not more, than having too few but it's an interesting data point nevertheless.
|
|
The cholera response teams set up three years ago do extraordinary work, but they are too few and poorly equipped, and their funding is not guaranteed.
|
|
I've seen one too many dystopian, post-apocalyptic thrillers recently based on worst-case, extreme-weather scenarios, but too few about saving mankind from these fates.
|
|
But, in the countries where the INCB exerted the greatest influence, the bigger problem was that too few (rather than too many) opioids were being prescribed.
|
|
Such little passages of empathy are what have made the series worth getting invested in, though they're a bit too few and far between this season.
|
|
But nurses who work there say there are often too few of them to provide all of the care the babies, and their worried families, need.
|
|
Today, with too few exceptions, our politicians seem to be fixated on defining and regulating the amount of well-being individual people are supposed to desire.
|
|
The election commission's chief, Somchai Sawaengkan, said the previous quota turned out to be untenable because it would have resulted in too few party-list seats.
|
|
A good yardstick for whether a country is admitting too many or too few immigrants — beyond the political mood of the moment — is its economic needs.
|
|
Greg Chin, a spokesman for the airport, said the shift was a precaution taken out of concern about too few T.S.A. agents showing up for work.
|
|
The deaths of her students bear the hallmarks of a city awash in guns, with too few residents willing to tell the police what they know.
|
|
Nevertheless, BP's patronage cannot detract from the Assyrian reliefs that are themselves magnificent to behold and provide a window into a world too few know about.
|
|
The police force, he said, is far below its authorized strength, and there are sometimes too few patrol cars in decent repair to cover the city.
|
|
Officials also said it had to use Huawei because — after years of mergers and industry consolidation — there are too few competitors in the network-equipment space.
|
|
But his greatest weakness is manpower: His ground forces, eroded by years of fighting, are simply too few to hold, much less advance, every front line.
|
|
"In a body that has far too few women, for a senator to say: … 'The senator shall take her seat,' should never be uttered," said Sen.
|
|
Pruitt recognizes as far too few do that the EPA bureaucracy is an interest group much too prone to illegal activity as it pursues its objectives.
|
|
It's also a warning sign for the rest of the technology industry about what can happen when a company's power is concentrated among too few people.
|
|
At one in Forssa operated by Attendo, authorities found there had been too few nurses, causing elderly patients to lie in wet diapers all night long.
|
|
Markets farther south, in Sunset Park and Bay Ridge, showed signs of similar rent growth near the ferry, but there were too few transactions to analyze.
|
|
It's a constant balancing act for ride-hail companies, which always have to ensure there aren't too many drivers and too few riders or vice versa.
|
|
Perhaps in a world with so many diverse and diffuse visions of interior space, 25 rooms are too few to capture the glory of interior design.
|
|
The breaking of a black body is readily available for viewing, but there are too few spaces that show the opposite: black culture and its resilience.
|
|
With the one-child policy, there are too few children to bear the burden, and if there is more than one, parents may find themselves causing conflict.
|
|
As long as these two options appear to be on the table, it looks as if too few MPs will be willing to accept Mrs May's compromise.
|
|
Regulators, already complaining they have too few resources, will sift through the data to try to spot bubbles early after failing to see the last crisis coming.
|
|
"There are still too few women in the upper reaches of the private sector — academia, science, technology, not to mention politics and government," she told the audience.
|
|
She knew then I wasn't a shoplifter — only a black woman with a bare face who came in to spend too much money on too few items.
|
|
Insurers struggled with the business: They faced prolonged periods of low interest rates, too few customers surrendering their policies and more customers than expected using their benefits.
|
|
Of course, 10,000 troops would be far too few to invade Iran — the number needed is estimated to be anywhere from 100,000 to just under 2 million.
|
|
"We're working with decade-old machines and too few of them," one of the attorneys overseeing the recount told BuzzFeed News Saturday, asking not to be named.
|
|
And the craving for boys has diminished as parents realise that they will be hard to marry off (since there are too few brides to go around).
|
|
As cohort after cohort of young Asians reach marriageable age, all of them containing too few women, a huge number of men will struggle to find partners.
|
|
The current study only looked at lesbian households, because when households were finally matched and controlled for continuous relationships, there were too few male same-sex households.
|
|
Kuznetsova was always likely to hit the big winners but they were too few, and errors more plentiful, as Wozniacki grabbed two early breaks in the decider.
|
|
The city has hired too few inspectors to catch fare-dodgers and motorists who stray into bus lanes (though cameras are catching some of the errant cars).
|
|
But too few have spelled out concrete steps they'd take to help them, and fewer still have shown the leadership and know-how to make it happen.
|
|
The US currently has about 2,000 troops in Syria, far too few to provide a counterweight to the thousands of Iranians who've been rallied to support Assad.
|
|
It's certainly not the average American's diet, which contains too few vegetables and too little dairy, according to data from the National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey.
|
|
The reason Crosby and other ranchers are losing money, even with lower feed prices, is because the industry has gone from too few cattle to too many.
|
|
A change in the way it allocates employees' holiday left it with too few working pilots to cover all of its scheduled flights, as Gulliver previously reported.
|
|
But with the DUP and plenty of hardline Tories threatening to vote the other way, they are too few in number to deliver victory for Mrs May.
|
|
An attempt was made in the 1980s to make drug lords the new major threat, but they were too few in number to sustain the media campaign.
|
|
India has far too few courts, judges and prosecutors for its 1.3 billion people and there is a backlog of million of cases pending before the courts.
|
|
It may initially show too many or too few News Feed stories about the product until it receives enough feedback to learn the appropriate level of visibility.
|
|
Bernie Sanders said Wednesday that it "is a disgrace" that some Arizona voters waited in line for five hours to vote because of too few polling stations.
|
|
Yet there is little point in helping people change careers if a lack of dynamism in the economy means that too few good jobs are being created.
|
|
Clinton's core supporters may be enough to win her the White House, but they're probably too few to give Trump the electoral drubbing he so richly deserves.
|
|
Four of the top 10 are in Florida, where low wages and too few rental units are major factors in Florida's "rent affordability crisis," according to LendingTree.
|
|
The biggest problem conservatives and anyone who really understands the health care system in America has with the Republican plan isn't that it includes too few subsidies.
|
|
Newmont's acquisition of Goldcorp could spark further consolidation in the industry, where too many gold companies are chasing too few assets, Michael Siperco from Macquarie Research said.
|
|
The government said the incidence of sexual offences was rising in Sweden with young women facing the greatest risk but too few of these offences were reported.
|
|
With ease, the good doctor sizes up Vanessa's inner anguish, recalling those far-too-few scenes in which LuPone and Ives played off each other last season.
|
|
Some officials have previously said that the country was too large and had too few resources to get all of its 1.3 billion people to speak Mandarin.
|
|
Evers, the Wisconsin state superintendent of public instruction, hammered Walker throughout the campaign as a career politician who has been around too long with too few results.
|
|
After some fans complained that there were too few cities on the tour, Hart uploaded a documentary explaining the work that went into the "Hello Harto" tour.
|
|
In the Democratic primary this year, people flocked to Bernie Sanders because they were angry about campaign finance and excessive debt and too few opportunities to flourish.
|
|
That leaves too many dollars chasing too few goods, which leads to price increases, as buyers bid up what they are willing to pay for scarce goods.
|
|
The usual justification for municipal broadband is that having too few broadband providers chokes off opportunities for local businesses and individuals who depend on reliable broadband access.
|
|
Its bearded co-founder Emile van Rinsum said the first year had been a disaster because the soil layer, known as substrate, contained too few plant nutrients.
|
|
But this time Facebook gave developers too few growth options, and weary from its past waffling, they never adopted Facebook's "Project Spartan," and that Platform dried up.
|
|
She said that there are far too few immigration judges tackling far too many cases, which leads to a backlog that can leave immigrants waiting for years.
|
|
And on the eve of the election, the Supreme Court was unable to hear a last-minute challenge over the process, because too few judges showed up.
|
|
Others say there are still too few resources being devoted to the problem — like shelters for battered women — for the domestic violence law to be effectively implemented.
|
|
For years the world has experienced what some analysts call a "safe asset shortage," too few government bonds and other investments viewed as reliable relative to demand.
|
|
There's something odd about the smattering of buildings, which are too off-kilter to pass as charming; there are too few shadows and corners to hide in.
|
|
Only one woman has ever received the top trophy, the Palme d'Or, and critics say too few movies directed by women are included in the main competition.
|
|
But before the problem of too few adult students on elite campuses can be fixed, first we have to admit that we have a problem at all.
|
|
At the same time, sales are falling, again, because there are too few homes on the low end, and the homes that are available are very expensive.
|
|
Hamer argued that a Johnson administration shift from commodity food distribution to a discounted food stamp purchase program, which too few could afford, had made matters worse.
|
|
Survey respondents reported becoming sick 72% less than the control group of citizens living with no nanomachines at all or too few to observe any healing function.
|
|
He also harangues Republicans for passing too few FTC regulations, which enables what he called the "cycle" of data breaches, press revelations, corporate apologies, and congressional hearings.
|
|
The future senator once referenced studies purporting to link cervical cancer with sexual activity — but his concern was actually women having too few orgasms, not too many.
|
|
As the public struggles with too few bills in circulation, business has fallen in many sectors to a small fraction of what it was before the ban.
|
|
If insurers attract too few consumers with little or modest health needs and, instead, attract a larger proportion of sicker ones, health care costs outstrip premium revenue.
|
|
There are too few independent directors and too many directors with long-term relationships to Musk as investors, overlap with other companies like SpaceX, family or otherwise.
|
|
But one big challenge stands in the way, experts say: Too few trained workers able to plan, install and maintain solar, wind and other clean energy systems.
|
|
However, according to Smith, meaningful evaluations were difficult to achieve because random sampling coupled with the small size of some facilities sometimes resulted in too few surveys.
|
|
By failing to anticipate the prospect of war between a rising Germany and a declining United Kingdom, the U.S. and others took too few steps to prevent it.
|
|
Too much capital may be chasing too few creditworthy borrowers, particularly in an environment of abnormally low interest rates and where non-bank loan growth has been aggressive.
|
|
A cap-and-trade approach, generally preferred by national environmental groups, presents high cost uncertainty for politicians: Too few permits could lead to high prices and economic disruptions.
|
|
Machine learning has the potential to solve many of our regular human problems, like for instance having too few nightmarish, oddly cat-filled crude images to gaze upon.
|
|
He said that the company sent too few people and would be unable to meet its deadline to shut off gas and get people back into their homes.
|
|
The problem isn't that there are too many calories in the fat cells, it's that there's too few in the bloodstream, and cutting back on calories can't work.
|
|
He voices a common criticism, that because the country has not demanded that immigrants assimilate, too few consider themselves Swedish and too many rely on social-welfare programmes.
|
|
This is thanks to the low 23p resolution, which for a lot of us is just too few pixels after being spoiled by quad HD and Retina displays.
|
|
Fast-growth "unicorn" companies can quickly outgrow their founding, venture-based startup corporate governance, and find themselves facing Uber-like crises with too few adults in the boardroom.
|
|
Louise Branch of North Somerset council says that men who seek help are usually too few for a peer-support meeting, something women recovering from abuse find helpful.
|
|
Too much demand for too few high-yielding loans has allowed issuers to pile up debt without covenants that would protect recoveries in the event of a downturn.
|
|
The issue of there being too few for-profit tech companies that control tech services has a precedent in the media industry, something that Corbyn also directly attacked.
|
|
Too few of them have private-sector pensions, and the government scheme, Social Security, set up by Franklin Roosevelt (pictured) is less generous than it used to be.
|
|
Still, it might be worth stepping back and giving her a bit of credit for laying bare her spending habits in a way too few privileged people do.
|
|
Politicians from both major parties are now keen to show they take concerns about immigration seriously—while too few attempt to make a convincing case for welcoming migrants.
|
|
What's more, it can help you identify whether you are providing too few resources to accommodate the number of containers you are deploying, as well as too many.
|
|
Too few roads, berths and systems; too many ships, cars and grasping hands, leading to high costs and lost time: that is Indonesia's infrastructure problem in a nutshell.
|
|
It's clear from Cruz's reporting, however, that far too few of these cases are coming to light and that laws against "corporal punishment" are not adequately protecting students.
|
|
"It's too much concentration of power in the hands of too few," said Trump, who has repeatedly accused the media of being biased against him and his campaign.
|
|
The city has too few cabs, and with several college campuses and the endless blocks of bars along Sixth Street, Uber and Lyft seemed to fit right in.
|
|
But the persistence of overly protective labor contracts alongside temporary ones with too few protections has probably also created inefficiencies within Spanish companies that have dampened economic growth.
|
|
Clinton's boast that she won where the economy is vibrant partially explains why she lost: There are too few of these vibrant areas left to win national elections.
|
|
When they learn to sign with me — and there are still too few who really learn — they must overcome these cultural taboos about excessive movement, pointing and gesture.
|
|
With a visa auction, there would be price, and that price could help guide policy as to whether there are too few or too many visas each year.
|
|
Physician shortages in the US are on the rise, and one area where we're likely to have too few doctors is in the field of obstetrics and gynecology.
|
|
The number of PhD graduates in the biomedical sciences is also high, and some suggest too many are being trained because there are too few positions in universities.
|
|
The companies point to a fundamental dynamic in the marketplace in which too few healthy people are buying policies and too many sick people are filing costly claims.
|
|
The Pittman Park site had too few voting machines to start the day Tuesday, an official said, resulting in long lines that drew the attention of the Rev.
|
|
Analysts are fond of describing the system as wasteful, with too many patients getting too many services, driven by too many specialist doctors and too few social supports.
|
|
But far more satisfying — and too few — were the snippets of the originals and clips like the present-day studio recording of Stills and Eric Clapton playing together.
|
|
For all the talk of recession, the losses so far have appeared calm and orderly, suggesting to him that too few investors have been asking the same question.
|
|
Given that the I.R.S. is already suffering from too few enforcement resources, the I.R.S. may well hesitate to take action against possible violations of this de minimis limit.
|
|
"Too few of our old crew left on Astor," St. Vincent sings, a reminder that New York is a grand city whose best anthems are about its crumbling.
|
|
Nicolino's numbers per nine innings are poor across the board — too many hits allowed (22), too many homers (2.3), too many walks (3.9) and too few strikeouts (5.6).
|
|
Ranks have thinned as insurers grapple with major difficulties: Low interest rates, too few people surrendering their policies, and more customers than expected using their benefits, said Witt.
|
|
The study also had too few students who identified as nonbinary but were assigned male at birth to get precise estimates of the assault risk for these teens.
|
|
So far, the supporting evidence has been, in short, that Liverpool has too many points, and that the remaining members of the traditional Big Six have too few.
|
|
Gareth Morgan, a millionaire making his first attempt at Parliament as the leader of the Opportunities Party, received 2.2 percent of votes, too few to win a seat.
|
|
Among the able-bodied, a majority already work or attend school full time—the problem is that they work too few hours or their wages are too low.
|
|
Such tests provided DNA-based diagnoses of genetic disorders caused by big biological screw-ups: too many chromosomes, too few, or chunks of them in the wrong places.
|
|
Women are also significantly more likely to say there are too few women in politics today, with 242% who say so, compared to 241% of men who agree.
|
|
Khan said earlier this month that feminists must "redouble" their efforts to fight for gender equality as too few women hold senior positions in business, journalism and politics.
|
|
Ending poverty by spending money does not, in his framework, address the "root cause" of poverty: Too few people are at work making enough money to support themselves.
|
|
What is surprising is that too few politicians, let alone presidential candidates, seem to grasp the need for them within the first year or so of the next administration.
|
|
These men are too few to form an actual football team and, as such, even the idea of a 'World Class XI' is redundant to the point of oblivion.
|
|
And if too few black and Latino men are on PrEP today, that means encouraging adoption among those imperiled segments of the LGBTQ community is an exponentially difficult problem.
|
|
Most make a counteroffer to avoid hiring costs for a replacement, to keep knowledge within the company and because there are too few people able to do the job.
|
|
The masses say they're being subjected to too much nature photography, and far too few memes, confirming the final victory of internet content over the beauty of the world.
|
|
National politicians in many countries remain shamefully ignorant of the EU and its rules, and too few MEPs see it as part of their role to help educate them.
|
|
Too few times and you could argue it would have had little impact on actually shaping opinions — at least to that first tier of people who were directly targeted.
|
|
We each have our own array of receptors, each receptor amenable to certain scents, and when they are damaged, too few or wholly absent, the scent may be lost.
|
|
But many of its captains of industry fret that its past wide-open policy on takeovers means that it now has too few big firms to hold its own.
|
|
He emphasized that the team charged with getting these machines going was working hard, but there were too few people and too many demands and something had to give.
|
|
It was not possible to estimate increased risk for hypertrophic cardiomyopathy in men with BMI 35 and above because there were too few cases to provide a meaningful analysis.
|
|
Not only are the potential losses huge, but there are too few launches each year to do the same sort of actuarial math as in other types of insurance.
|
|
But despite the success of Jackbox Games, too few developers have been playing around with this idea, one that really allows for more than party games with suggestive jokes.
|
|
"You look at the senior positions in business, in journalism, in politics - there are too few women, not because they're not talented but because there's gender inequality," Khan said.
|
|
Now the company must give cause for deactivation, and certain standards like drivers' accepting too few passengers are no longer consider grounds for being cut off by the company.
|
|
There are still too few of them, but these films, across decades and continents, at least give voice to a conversation that social stigma all too often renders silent.
|
|
From the left, Obama has been criticized for accepting too few refugees; from the right, he's been lambasted for expanding the program this year amid heightened concerns about terrorism.
|
|
On Friday I acknowledged that my side of the argument were too few to prevail, and congratulated you on at least reaching a Cabinet decision on the way forward.
|
|
Some British lawmakers say the country should leave the EU and trade on World Trade Organization terms - the IMF's 'no deal' scenario - if the EU makes too few concessions.
|
|
Too few of the tracks Drake released last year — "Know Yourself" and "Jungle," the aforementioned "Hotline Bling" — generate that connection; he was making music to intimidate and to impress.
|
|
Too few are willing to face up to the reality that the wave of disgraces is one phenomenon, not many: a function, pure and simple, of Mr Corbyn's leadership.
|
|
New devices like laptops and gaming systems are notorious for having too few USB ports, but The TP-Link will give you enough ports for all of your accessories.
|
|
Jobs such as database administrators and electrical engineers have too few women to even be able to accurately compare wages, according to data from the Bureau of Labor Statistics.
|
|
While there are some big employers like the E&J Gallo Winery and Conagra Brands, there have been too few new jobs to make up for the agricultural decline.
|
|
There are too few sidewalks in Dhaka, and those that exist are often impassable, occupied by vendors and masses of poor citizens who make their homes in curbside shanties.
|
|
He reasons that investors are not necessarily embracing risk out of confidence; with returns on government bonds so low, they simply have too few other opportunities for productive investment.
|
|
But she said too few people, mainly wage earners, were bearing the burden of taxation, while the pension system needed to be made sustainable and better support the poor.
|
|
Throughout the season, Collins also had to juggle playing time with a roster that often struggled to score and, at times, had too many players for too few positions.
|
|
"What we've seen in California is that as a result of policy, we have millions too few housing units," Steyer said, promising to build "literally millions" of those units.
|
|
It is a reflection of big-dollar investors chasing too few ideas and getting tripped up when things turn poorly for a company they have set big markers on.
|
|
Unfortunately, too few borrowers today actually are in repayment on their loans (when adding in the number of student and parent borrowers in deferment, forbearance, delinquent, or in default).
|
|
Mr Loeb, whose fund also has a large portfolio of credit investments, has returned to activism after a hiatus in 2016 when he thought there were too few opportunities.
|
|
As wealth disparities and economic inequality grow, too much power is concentrated in the hands of too few people, and the government must take action to correct the imbalance.
|
|
In a place known as a food desert, where there are no jobs and too few opportunities to acquire skills, and where there are failing schools, we are there.
|
|
G.M. and others have produced electric vehicles, but sales for each model have usually amounted to a few thousand cars a month — far too few to turn a profit.
|
|
Officials testified to Congress in March that the Air Force not only has about 1,500 fewer pilots than it should but also has about 3,400 too few maintenance personnel.
|
|
Too few make it abroad to allow a complete view of Japan's distinguished theater tradition: With context missing and a limited frame of reference, the plays can seem mysterious.
|
|
We are too far outside our norms, too far down a path that too few of us even realized we were traveling, for us to see its meaning yet.
|
|
Too few dancers are using their eyes to address the various corners of the opera house; too many are aiming performances straight out as if at the rehearsal mirror.
|
|
But the jobs are unstable and inconsistent — as in the Peytons' case, paying too much to qualify for benefits one month, offering too few hours to qualify the next.
|
|
But Mr. Cooper's supporters argue that any alleged discrepancies are too few in number to affect the outcome of the election — and that the Republicans' language is often misleading.
|
|
Thousands of Iraqis, some of them insurgents, plenty of them innocent civilians caught up in the post-invasion chaos, and far too few qualified interrogators to sort it out.
|
|
"Far too few people know about it or know they have it, and that is why we launched the prevention program and joined forces with other organizations," she said.
|
|
The Italian landowners — the same ones who raped and starved my relatives and maybe yours — were devastated by American emigration, left with too few hands to work their land.
|
|
Trump made his disapproval clear in public before the merger was given the green light: "It's too much concentration of power in the hands of too few," he said.
|
|
The boarding school era and its erasure of language is a blot on the nation's record, and one that too few non-Natives have been forced to reckon with.
|
|
That's too little time, too little money, covering too few people, relying on a program that is already severely under-funded, and adds rather than removes barriers to women.
|
|
The digital media are in the middle of a shakeout, with too many websites chasing too few advertising dollars, as Facebook and Google gobble up much of that revenue.
|
|
After all, the luxury group's chairman, Johann Rupert, said in 2016 that Richemont had "too few women" in senior roles and he wanted fewer "gray men" running his companies.
|
|
Dahlia Scheindlin, a pollster for Labor in 2015, said politicians with greater skills than Mr. Gabbay had tried that before, but found too few center-right voters to chase.
|
|
One limitation of the study is that it had too few people with prediabetes to draw broad conclusions about how the condition might progress for millions of people worldwide.
|
|
On Friday I acknowledged that my side of the argument were too few to prevail, and congratulated you on at least reaching a cabinet decision on the way forward.
|
|
Many people — though still too few — are awakening to the fact that the problems of rich Western democracies, and to a lesser extent of emerging market economies, are fundamental.
|
|
Better yet, he's got too few pro fights for there to be the usual "he's ducking [my favourite fighter]" which follows every top flight boxer in the world today.
|
|
Too few cybersecurity professionals is a gigantic problem for 2019 That's according to Robert Ackerman Jr., founder and a managing director of AllegisCyber, an early-stage cybersecurity venture firm. 4.
|
|
Johnson, who served as New Mexico governor as a Republican from 1995-2003, said too few people knew what a Libertarian is, and that his job is to change that.
|
|
But Trump along with the Republican-led Congress is intent on ending Obamacare because they say costs for patients are out of control and choices for care are too few.
|
|
Italy in particular is grappling with the issue given its vast number of artistically important churches and too few resources to maintain them, especially the ones damaged by frequent earthquakes.
|
|
Insurance could instead become an arbiter of social norms, penalizing individuals for snacking on junk food or taking too few steps, for example, irrespective of their particular circumstances, Gatschke said.
|
|
Sweden has build too few houses for decades and with a growing population, swelled by around 160,000 asylum seekers who arrived last year, there is an acute shortage of homes.
|
|
They bought too few B-2s and F-22s, while scaling back procurement of the F-35 from the buy rate necessary to recapitalize the Air Force's geriatric fighter force.
|
|
There are, simply put, too few construction workers that are too expensive for builders like Lennar to hire in an effort to relieve the supply constraints stressing the housing market.
|
|
In Africa, says Nicolas Friederici of Oxford University, incubators have disappointed because they are a supply-side solution: there are still too few promising startups in need of their services.
|
|
Mr. Vail said that with too few guards to maintain order, inmates felt compelled to protect themselves with crudely made knives and other weapons, prompting a chain of retaliatory violence.
|
|
Its American division was driven to bankruptcy when the tech bubble burst, and the firm was left with lots of rent to pay and too few tenants to cover outgoings.
|
|
Even if new antibiotics were paid for separately, many investors think that patients for drugs like plazomicin are too few to make these drugs commercially viable in the near term.
|
|
"It's not the fault of our colleagues that the company has built too few test rigs over the years and can suddenly not handle the test volume required," Osterloh said.
|
|
The trend has economists worried about everything from soaring pension costs to "secular stagnation"—the chronically weak growth that comes from having too few investment opportunities to absorb available savings.
|
|
In an interview with CBS Good Morning, Musk agreed with Tesla's critics that there was over-reliance on automation and too few human assembly line workers building the Model 22016.
|
|
Because the virus is unable to infect the same person twice...the epidemic reaches a stage where there are too few people left to infect for transmission to be sustained.
|
|
"Show me a country without any large, successful companies, and I will show you an unsuccessful country – with too few jobs and not enough opportunity as an outcome," he wrote.
|
|
The U.S. Constitution created a system of checks and balances because our founding fathers understood that too much power concentrated in too few individuals has too much potential for abuse.
|
|
"We're focusing on the long term, recognizing that too few Canadians have a situation where they're going to be able to retire in dignity," Finance Minister Bill Morneau told reporters.
|
|
Too few of our tax-dollars were designated toward building the physical infrastructure and hiring the manpower that would be able to provide the resources required to treat today's veterans.
|
|
For other cancer types in the trial, though, the drug was less effective, or there were too few patients to draw conclusions, showing how much more remains to be learned.
|
|
The awards are the latest sign of a booming market that hardly existed five years ago, when there were too few fictional podcasts to warrant a meaty Top 10 list.
|
|
"There were too few drug overdose deaths among Asian-Americans to be able to draw meaningful conclusions about mortality rates by drug type, so this group was omitted," Shiels said.
|
|
Q. Are there any worries that betting markets simply have too few traders, particularly American traders, and too little action to make it a good gauge for United States elections?
|
|
While there are some medical personnel available within Customs and Border Protection (CBP), there are far too few to fully staff all detention facilities to screen or treat sick children.
|
|
They could be too far away or too few in number to stick out above the background noises of the universe and register on our devices here at this time.
|
|
For the study, researchers used government records to calculate infant mortality rates in 35 states; some states had too few deaths to analyze meaningful differences between the groups of babies.
|
|
While demand may get a seasonal lift from higher consumption over the northern hemisphere summer, it's likely the story will remain one of too many cargoes chasing too few buyers.
|
|
Too few in a position to influence policy seem to be asking if this may be the equivalent of trying to protect that glass house with a stone-sharpening kit.
|
|
America was going to become less reliant on foreign oil with or without it, the direct beneficiaries were too few and too localized, and the climate science was frustratingly inconclusive.
|
|
While there are reasonable debates to be had about the fairest fair way to go forward, from what I can tell, too few schools have taken this seemingly radical step.
|
|
Opinion Columnist On Wednesday afternoon, I traveled to the charming but unassuming neighborhood of Juniper Hill in White Plains to speak with a living legend too few people know about.
|
|
Women were more likely than men to say there were too few women in office or leading companies, and to say it was harder for women to get these positions.
|
|
But business owners who have been waiting to bring seasonal workers said the requirements to apply for visas were onerous and that the extra visas were too few, too late.
|
|
But after living in Latin America over the course of five decades, I have seen too few sustained efforts to create paths of social mobility that are secure and stable.
|
|
But with too few patient organizations and advocacy leaders on the conference's agenda, Health Datapalooza exemplifies the challenges we face as the demand for big data in health care grows.
|
|
Russia not only gets the cold shoulder, it is suspended from bodies such as the G8, which leaves too few opportunities for Europe and the US to confer with Moscow.
|
|