And so in Tasmania we have no significant detriment in the downwind direction. |
|
The simple reason for this is that too much emphasis is placed on physical fitness to the detriment of skills and team play. |
|
Table scraps and human food can lead to excess weight that is a detriment to your dog's overall health. |
|
Still, Scotland kept the faith, to the severe detriment of the mug punters consuming water here. |
|
This is the activity that sucks up my time to the detriment of other things. |
|
Machinery has replaced a lot of the labour, to the detriment of the social aspects of working on the land. |
|
Unfortunately adults tend to take this provision for granted to the detriment of the survival of the Youth Club. |
|
The reports also criticised the fact that too much public focus goes on asylum seekers to the detriment of migrants. |
|
She says they will work to the detriment of people who work in the sugar fields and factories and to the detriment of the environment. |
|
So while hiking the cover price may increase subscription revenue, it may well do so to the overall financial detriment of the paper. |
|
We have employed the claiming system exactly as it is overseas and to our detriment. |
|
This was our phrase for overusing the intellect to the detriment of being open to the spirit. |
|
The line between education and child-minding will be blurred, to the detriment of education. |
|
The charges against them include public indecency, inappropriate behaviour, behaviour to the detriment of military discipline and assault. |
|
This detriment can, I think, best be characterised as the acceptance or continuance of an unlooked for credit risk. |
|
There is a great deal of soul-searching, it seems, but not to the detriment of the listeners' enjoyment, for the music is far from downbeat. |
|
It is a pity that they should wish to finance this by selling land for speculative building development to the detriment of our environment. |
|
Both sides agree that the element of detriment is an essential ingredient of proprietary estoppel. |
|
His transactions touched virtually all propertied families, many to their detriment. |
|
To the detriment of facts and objective analysis, speech that is normally confined to the private world is now rampant in the public one. |
|
|
Once again, agriculture was used to solve social problems to the detriment of the industry. |
|
Our real task is to maintain this position of disparity without detriment to our national security. |
|
In fact, bigger players pitted themselves against smaller players, much to the detriment of the sector. |
|
Mislabelling is an unpleasant example of the way retailers force their way between customers and producers to the detriment of both. |
|
That could, in turn, cause prices of oil to slump to the detriment of the Saudi economy and its ability to provide cheap public services. |
|
Mercury is an inferior planet, in detriment and fall, and even in the sign of Jupiter, an indication of capture. |
|
The controversial case has widened the rift between conservatives and progressives to the detriment of national unity. |
|
If a planet is situated in a sign which opposes its own it is said to be in detriment, a word which literally means to be harmed or damaged. |
|
Too often, remedial actions tend to absorb resources to the detriment of preventive measures. |
|
We were unable to find evidence of any benefit or detriment for the burden of carers as assessed by two quantitative measures. |
|
To both her credit and her detriment, Nora has learned to not be quick to judge people. |
|
It spread rapidly, to the detriment of Spanish, because it was the new language of government, preferment, and education. |
|
There are a lot of recent examples of corporate giants that didn't manage risk, usually to their detriment. |
|
These can take a disproportionate amount of time and funding, to the detriment of local priorities. |
|
Director James Robinson provides only the most rudimentary blocking, often, as in the muddled party scene, to the detriment of the drama. |
|
Neither hotel, it should be said, is shy about installing bright Scandinavian mod-cons to the detriment of its historical ancestry. |
|
Having resolved to follow this course of action I contacted both England and Russia and formed an alliance to the detriment of Germany. |
|
But the fat little guy was a detriment last season, tossing up too many bad shots and not playing a lick of defense. |
|
Every time a player is forced into or places himself in a position of having to rely on raw strength he is at a detriment. |
|
It serves to split the working class, pitting unionized against nonunionized sections, to the mutual detriment of both. |
|
|
Since then medical practice has been straitjacketed by its artificiality, to the detriment of the patient's own narrative. |
|
The concern about Trips is that it is too much of a one-size-fits-all approach that works to the detriment of developing nations. |
|
Much of this work is often done in their free time, outside of normal working hours and to the detriment of family and personal commitments. |
|
This must represent the child's presumed will and may be revoked at any time without detriment to the child. |
|
When are we going to learn in this country that placating the minority to the detriment of the law-abiding community will only end in chaos? |
|
The one person is there in whom God and man are one, without detriment to one or the other. |
|
It is not that this principle is wrong, but that the pursuit of it is most often being done to the detriment of others as we can see quite often. |
|
The majority shareholder cannot direct corporate decisions which enure to its benefit to the detriment of minority shareholders. |
|
A bit too much emphasis was paid on hitting every single scene in the book, to the detriment of a few scenes. |
|
To the detriment of his career, he became a public critic of nuclear weaponry. |
|
Our concern is that this is all a wheeze not to pay rent for the foreseeable future to the detriment of the pension fund. |
|
A planet in detriment or fall is in a precarious condition, more so if it is peregrine or otherwise afflicted. |
|
The poisoning of hounds forced half a dozen masters of packs of foxhounds to abandon hunting altogether, to the detriment of the local economy. |
|
People are unwilling to redistribute large amounts of income to their own detriment, and plans to do so usually have some ulterior end. |
|
It was around this time last year that veterans re-emerged as a potent political force to the detriment of Senator Kerry. |
|
Yet we have a policy that is to the detriment of New Zealand shipowners and seafarers. |
|
The castles themselves helped to fuel the growing schismatic power of the Barons in later years to the great detriment of the local populace. |
|
But, ultimately, we want to restore the reciprocal jump seat because it will be an enhancement to safety and security, not a detriment. |
|
The politics of representation are often a detriment to the appreciation of aesthetics. |
|
But chronic snoring can be a real detriment to getting a good night's shut-eye. |
|
|
Recreation is our meal ticket for the present and the future, and it is my strong belief that clear cutting of lodgepole pine in this area is a detriment to our local economy. |
|
It ensures that no upright resistance breed ab intra to the detriment of their esurient appetite and no professional pride raises its head to topple their schemes of self-promotion. |
|
It brought forward evidence to show that one side of the Iron Triangle was having an ill-effect on the other two sides to the detriment of all other aspects of national security interests. |
|
Honest people do not intentionally deceive others to their detriment. |
|
Stark motifs of injustice, redemption, and the question of whether religion works for the betterment or detriment of mankind captivate theatergoers every step of the way. |
|
Being economical and frugal is one thing, being a tightwad to the detriment of the investment we all have in living here is something else all together. |
|
Personally I regret that it has done so to the detriment of the more manly pedestrian exercises, wrestling, and the clever game of knur and spell. |
|
They are people who have focused on their career to the detriment of their relationships, so they don't see that this is a challenge to do at all. |
|
There seems to be so much pressure to reinvent the wheel these days, to a detriment when it comes to TV programming. |
|
But according to Rob Lowe, a man who possesses all of these qualities, being too pretty as an actor is actually a detriment. |
|
We take our cultural icons very seriously, often to both their detriment and ours. |
|
In geopolitics, this is where regions or states fracture into smaller, mutually-hostile units to the detriment of all. |
|
I really like jackets, and tend to buy them to the detriment of my need of all the other items. |
|
What if, say, I think the book I receive in the mail is a waste of pulp, a detriment to society and is frightening in the way that indoctrination literature always is? |
|
A converse prize for the most catastrophic failure to use force, leading to the greatest net detriment to the human condition, would also be interesting. |
|
By holding on to the bulk of the land to the detriment of the millions of suffering peasants, the white farmers were made to look greedy and callous. |
|
Without the scale insect and its sugary excretions, these birds would be much less common in beech forests, to the detriment of some resident plants. |
|
Doorstep crime includes all aspects of consumer detriment and crime including bogus workmen, high-pressure sales people, bogus officials, and distraction burglary. |
|
I do love what I do, sometimes to the detriment of me as a person. |
|
Dealing with any problem myopically will be to the detriment of another. |
|
|
If cryptocurrencies are like other speculative activities, the early players and the big players benefit to the detriment of the late entrants and the small players. |
|
That actually could be a detriment because he suffers nagging injuries. |
|
Inadequate payments and arbitrary refusals to honor bills by government and private industry are financially starving the health care system to the detriment of us all. |
|
Not only does he smoke heavily, but he has made a substantial fortune out of selling and marketing tobacco, to the detriment of the health of many people. |
|
He heavily favored his own tribe, the Popalzai, to the detriment of other clans who bitterly resented his partiality. |
|
Irish nationalists assert that rule from London has been to the detriment of Irish interests. |
|
But Seppa reports new details about how long-lasting stress physicalizes what we experience psychologically, to our body's detriment. |
|
Where Henry did intervene personally in the running of the country, Elton argued, he mostly did so to its detriment. |
|
When the policeman tried to take Gunn into custody he defended himself with a kalsomine brush to the great detriment of the officer's uniform. |
|
The focus on monoamines has arguably been to the detriment of more novel research and drug development, but this is changing. |
|
This practice not only reinforced the negative, nomadic image of RV travelers, it was a detriment to expanding the trailer market. |
|
By the end of the wars in 1559, Habsburg Spain had been established as the premier power of Europe, to the detriment of France. |
|
Discards generally benefit surface feeders, such as gannets and petrels, to the detriment of pursuit divers like penguins. |
|
Researchers suggest that forecasts of health detriment for such periods should be examined critically. |
|
He is overdeveloping his site, he is working it too hard to maximise his profits to the detriment of the appearance and character of the Conway Road conservation area. |
|
If the profitability of service lines varies, providers will have a financial incentive to invest in profitable service lines to the detriment of unprofitable service lines. |
|
In the context of Africa and other French overseas colonies, francisation has been a tool to propagate French hegemony to the detriment of indigenous culture. |
|
These interactions can be mutualistic or antagonistic in nature, or in the case of commensal fungi are of no apparent benefit or detriment to the host. |
|
Cheap feed and economies of scale drive the feedlot industry, and the American ethanol boom is bound to tip the scale to the detriment of the feedlot industry in Canada. |
|
For years our industry has strived to increase the energy efficiency of concrete roof tile through reflectivity, some would say, to the detriment of aesthetics. |
|
|
There is also a danger that manpower resources will be sucked into the urban areas of South Wales and Gwent to the detriment of the ruralities elsewhere. |
|
However, the above rule cannot apply in criminal cases if the effect of applying the newer law would be to create an ex post facto law to the detriment of the defendant. |
|
Since 2001, judge advocates have stood up, sometimes to their own professional detriment, against legal opinions that threatened to undermine the rule of law. |
|
At the time, up to forty per cent of goods sold in Britain were subject to such price fixing, to the detriment of competition and to the disadvantage of the consumer. |
|
A major theme of his tenure at Defence was the ministry's growing reliance on the nuclear deterrent, in the view of some critics, to the detriment of conventional forces. |
|
John to the detriment of the latter, and beg that the subject might never be mentioned again in his presence, could never have been an easy companion. |
|
The field of historiography in the English-speaking world has naturally focused on languages most accessible to anglophones, but to the detriment of other traditions. |
|
The establishment of the new party, Likud Beiteinu, is likely to solidify right-wing leadership in parliament to the detriment of centrist and liberal parties. |
|
A number of countries have recently limited the use by civilian populations of the semi and full automatic firearms, to the detriment of competition at an international level. |
|