Sentence examples for recognised implications from inspiring English sources

Exact(1)

However, the emphasis on females ignores the fact that only 80% of males anticipated working full-time, a finding which has wider support in the literature [ 18, 25], with recognised implications for future workforce planning [ 8].

Similar(59)

Those fighting colonial regimes immediately recognised the implications.

The court has rightly recognised the implications for people's privacy and insisted that this disproportionate policy be tightened".

Eighty-seven per cent knew the normal range for potassium; 31% recognised the implications of hypokalaemia and 54% knew what caused hyperkalaemia.

Only recently, though, have development professionals have begun to recognise the implications of this line of research for modern development policy.

There are small-scale protests happening throughout the country, as local people are beginning to recognise the implications of the closure of their particular delivery office, but no recognition of the sheer scale of the closure programme, nor what this will cost in terms of extra journeys to and from distant offices for the nation as a whole.

Failure to recognise the implications of future status on the changing need for information represents a failure of situational awareness (in terms of future status), and weak shared mental models (understanding other demands on the recipient; Section 3).

This categorisation is, to an extent, a heuristic device: the separation between domains is less evident in some social contexts than others (employment in a family run business illustrates the blurring of boundaries) but helpful in ensuring we recognise some implications, below.

When I began to recognise the implications of never writing my reviews, it sucked even more, because it meant I was a thief.

The European Union and the UN have recognised the security implications of climate-led disasters striking poorer countries, pointing to the increased likelihood of wars and mass migration.

Gestational Diabetes Mellitus (GDM) has well recognised adverse health implications for the mother and her newborn that are both short and long term.

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