Sentence examples for one aspect or another from inspiring English sources

Exact(17)

"Some are better than others on one aspect or another, but basically they can all do at least 80% of the functions that most not-for-profit organisations require," he says.

Unlike their peers, who have concentrated on one aspect or another of the Internet, say e-business, Clarity's partners expect to invest in five areas: network infrastructure, wireless communications, service providers (like Global Crossing), e-commerce and broadband media.

Ms. Gould shows us a graphic that says there are well over 800 tech companies out there concentrating on one aspect or another of the food system, from restaurant management software to agriculture to social networking to diet and exercise.

But here they serve as a reminder that the Neuberger has been building up an African collection and that one aspect or another of it is always on exhibit.

When homeowners objected to one aspect or another of the Corps's plan, Oldham would invoke his experience with the Ash Wednesday Storm.

Until the focus shifted to Mr. Corzine's record-setting spending, Mr. Florio had dominated news coverage of the campaign by offering a steady diet of news conferences calling into question one aspect or another of Mr. Corzine's business background at Goldman , Sachs & Company

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Similar(42)

Others are scientists and researchers in obscure agencies who have transformed their research into examining one terrorism aspect or another.

If you concentrate on one aspect, it's easy to forget another".

Within the terms of the story, it's the intended exchange of one aspect of reality for another, or one home for another — a more radical and metaphorical image of the passage that so many immigrants make, and such as my ancestors made, about a century ago, casting off yarmulkes and caftans and religious orthodoxy in order to make a life in the New World.

The vast majority took issue with one aspect of the column or another.

The ability to switch attention from one aspect of an object to another, or to adapt and shift one's response based on situational demands, such as changes in the rules, schedule, or type of reinforcement in a task, is defined as cognitive flexibility or set shifting (Monsell 2003; Stemme et al. 2007).

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