Sentence examples for have little consequences from inspiring English sources

Exact(1)

And if I didn't finish what was on my plate, and often times I would cry because I physically couldn't stomach it and if that happened I would have to have little consequences, nothing horrible just not being able to go to the cafeteria to eat".

Similar(59)

Some teenagers also assume that sexual experiences other than intercourse have little consequence emotionally.

Van Horn has kept his scoring average at 18 points, but his baskets seem to have little consequence.

The caricature of Murdoch's novels is that they consist of preposterous plots, about privileged and cerebral characters, whose fates have little consequence.

Some played down Mr. Bush's move as a political necessity to appease his base of social conservatives and said it would have little consequence in the end.

I suppose you could also stop writing about consumer items that have little consequence one way or the other (is it really that important that a digital camera or MP3 player is slightly better than another?) and start to using your blog to build solidarity and solve more serious social problems, but then you'd lose both your job and your large audience.

Earlier conservation treatments were limited to already damaged parts of the sculpture and were shown to be have little consequence for the restoration of the sculpture.

Once an institution and an actuator enter a relationship, the contractual incompleteness may have little consequence if the two can break the relationship with ease when an unspecified contingency is encountered and negotiations fail.

Among those with both migraine and TTH, the former would usually be the more bothersome [34]; this meant that some part of the burden of TTH was instead attributed to migraine, but from a public-health perspective this would have little consequence.

These results contrast sharply to the previous studies that marital affairs have little consequence on marriages.

"Muslim bans" are last-ditch efforts at self-preservation under the guise of protection, and there is a type of protection being offered here … but it's one that is predicated on the fear of something that doesn't exist (i.e., lack of proper vetting) or of losing something that will have little consequence in reality (i.e., the concept of "a Christian nation").

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