In a nutshell, the phone and the router are in competition for the same airwaves. |
|
In a nutshell, I hadn't suffered the same hard knocks and had little chance of knowing what was really important in life. |
|
In other words the National Trust is willing to, in a nutshell, relinquish our claims of ownership under those conditions. |
|
In a nutshell, it encourages the development of antiterrorism technology by providing liability limits for terrorism claims. |
|
So, to put it in a nutshell, you must grab the bull by the horns and beard the lion in his den. |
|
In a nutshell, biennial plants are just like annual and perennial plants except that it takes them two years to complete their life cycles. |
|
In a nutshell, it involves looking at a mutant line and mapping the mutation to a specific gene. |
|
In a nutshell, the ne'er-do-well Phantom wants to incite world war to make a fortune selling modern arms developed by his master scientists. |
|
In a nutshell, you have to look at the fabric, the cut and finally, examine some of the finishing details. |
|
In a nutshell, if someone comes up to you and winds you up, you don't have to become annoyed, and reply in kind. |
|
And this, in a nutshell, is the story of Portuguese wine over the past 20 years. |
|
Yet, in a nutshell, it lacks the originality that it would take to launch a musical revolution. |
|
That's pretty much the last ten years of American political history in a nutshell. |
|
Its brief, in a nutshell, is to showcase works of art to as broad a spectrum of people as possible. |
|
These famous lines of Shakespeare aptly describe the human life in a nutshell as perhaps no other verse manages to do. |
|
This, in a nutshell, summarizes the uphill battle of perception facing hedge funds. |
|
Here, then, is their perspective in a nutshell, and it's a despicable sight. |
|
In a nutshell, students can post their resumes on the system and employers can post job openings. |
|
In a nutshell, the issue was whether God's righteousness is imputed or imparted. |
|
In a nutshell, when the masses justly resist, it is an honor and an obligation to stand in support of such resistance. |
|
|
In a nutshell, geolocation analyzes the user's IP address to guesstimate where the user is accessing the Internet. |
|
In a nutshell, the series went in favour of the team that was more professional and proficient in skills as well as in strategies. |
|
In a nutshell, the plastic used in these bottles contains a potentially carcinogenic element. |
|
In a nutshell, if you need to run a home network, Ethernet is significantly faster than wireless. |
|
In a nutshell, every computer connected to the Internet has a unique IP address. |
|
In a nutshell, CO2s are extracted by pressurizing carbon dioxide until it becomes a liquid. |
|
In a nutshell, you plant the tubers sandwiched between layers of multipurpose potting compost. |
|
In a nutshell, coal ports are exposed to the vulnerability that stems from overdependence on the fortunes of a single commodity. |
|
In a nutshell, there was a requirement for a communication policy that reflected the entire company culture. |
|
To put it in a nutshell, human creativity is an indispensable impulse and an important factor for success in practically all walks of life. |
|
In a nutshell, we think the Board's prime responsibility is to focus on patients and how we can better change the system to serve them. |
|
In a nutshell, there are no public parks in the true sense of the word in the centre of towns and large municipal areas. |
|
In a nutshell, parliament is at once a State actor and an emanation of civil society. |
|
In a nutshell, the story relates the trials of a young man (Lord Arthur Savile) who is told by a cheiromantist (palm reader) that he will commit a murder. |
|
So, in a nutshell, if a galaxy's peculiar velocity is toward us and larger than its Hubble recessional velocity, then its light will appear blueshifted. |
|
In a nutshell, the proposal is not perfect, but acceptable, and I will be giving it the thumbs up. |
|
This, in a nutshell — moony sap woos feisty babe — is Stanton's narrative of his courtship of his wife, Julie. |
|
In a nutshell, baijiu is to China what apple pie is to America, if not even more so. |
|
In a nutshell, it asks for the simplest proof of any theorem. |
|
In a nutshell, the FTC was physical tough on Google but digitally soft on the search giant. |
|
|
In a nutshell, public space today is a central but complex feature of social life. |
|
And that, in a nutshell, is the difference between the novice and the Grand Master. |
|
In a nutshell, we took the information that he did give, that was legitimate, and just backtracked it to the hotel room he was in, and then simply did a photo identification. |
|
There, in a nutshell, is the source material for countless books. |
|
In a nutshell, producers are the ones who oversee a movie from beginning to end. |
|
That, in a nutshell, is the response of three right-wing media outlets to the new comedy documentary The Muslims Are Coming! |
|
In a nutshell, I suspect the highest nitrogen price period of the year has past. |
|
In a nutshell, in many countries the welfare state considers itself to be subsidiary to the labour market and the family. |
|
In a nutshell, the existing international legal instruments are inadequate to prevent weaponization of outer space. |
|
In a nutshell, there is no shortage of barley supply in the immediate outlook or feed grains, generally, for that matter. |
|
In a nutshell, this would allow you to look directly at your screen and the person on the other end of a video chat instead of looking like your eyes were cast down. |
|
In a nutshell, plenty of reasons not to miss this opportunity to vist Bulle, the land of cheese. |
|
In a nutshell, the important issue is whether the compromise of proceedings entered into by parties on the basis of a common mistake of law is void by reason of that mistake. |
|
In a nutshell, it is a retrograde, ill-thought-out proposal, which we shall be voting against. |
|
In a nutshell, weathering steel is not normally used for architectural applications. |
|
In a nutshell I was ready for the science and theory but I still needed a course that was realistic and practical. |
|
In a nutshell, there is nothing here that I see as dominating for market trade. |
|
In a nutshell, mixed origins could favour intragenerational ethnic mobility. |
|
In a nutshell, the new normal has shifted my priorities away from widgets and more towards policy, process and people. |
|
To put it in a nutshell, Europe has worked against itself, and in my view this is a further sign of its failure to conduct a rational diplomacy. |
|
|
In a nutshell that means higher completion rates, fewer zero outs, greater customer satisfaction, lower costs and hopefully greater profits. |
|
Add to this the meticulous colour mixing, the perpetual self-questioning and the readiness to go with the happy accidents that the acid can deliver, and you have Rosalind and her work in a nutshell. |
|
To put it in a nutshell, this system allows an increasing of the isochronisms accuracy on the long term thanks to a less important levee angle of the balance. |
|
That, in a nutshell, paints the grim reality of water and food security. |
|
In a nutshell, because the answer to that question determines whether or not there is a difference between putting a log in the woodstove, and putting a Jew in a crematory oven. |
|
Mr. David Lane: Just a week ago I toured both land-based and ocean-based closed containment facilities, and, in a nutshell, the waste issue still has to be dealt with. |
|
Such shortened documents providing guidance in a nutshell cannot contain all details and therefore, it is advised to consult the full guidance in case of any doubt. |
|
Using solid information and analysis, groups can develop their position on an issue, create compelling arguments and design a message that communicates all this in a nutshell. |
|
In a nutshell, through a set of annexes, CITES lists endangered species. |
|
If I had to put it in a nutshell, I would say that, nowadays, there are an increasing number of circumstances in which the law enforces professional secrecy and, at the same time, the duty to remain silent has become eroded. |
|
We wrote a lot about acupuncture as a method of treatment along the years, so it is very difficult to submit completely his principles in a nutshell. |
|
This in a nutshell is the problem of piracy. |
|
In a nutshell, I act as a secretary for the judge and the assessors. |
|
In a nutshell, these models, which are the foundation of all the technical and political decisions made within the WTO, and by extension in the different countries of the world, skew the perspectives for the future. |
|
In a nutshell, demand reduction experts work hard to reduce demand, development specialists attempt to curb supply, and law enforcement goes after the traffickers and dealers. |
|
In a nutshell, Mr Iperiotis became the victim of the internet's growing complexity, where individually benign systems all too easily metamorphose into a malicious bug. |
|
In a nutshell, this boxy baby combines quirky styling and the full shebang of equipment in order to stroke the ego of the attention-seeking buyer. |
|
In a nutshell, you can get rich and famous by being outrageous. |
|
In a nutshell, it's the spinning wheel moment. |
|
What I will be proposing are, however, significant improvements, transforming today's system into a better one. In a nutshell, the rationale underlying my reform is twofold. |
|
|
And that, in one mimed display of food disposal, is Doctors in a nutshell. |
|
This, in a nutshell, is the trajectory of Miliband's election. |
|
In a nutshell, that's the real problem here: the Co-op has been captured by insiders more interested in advancing their own careers than protecting the group's commercial health. |
|
In a nutshell, this programme aims to establish national peace programmes in countries emerging from conflict situations as well as in countries with potential for internal conflicts. |
|
In a nutshell, this is quite an abnormal situation, so you can count on full support from us, as well as from all the members of the Conference, cooperating in every way to achieve progress in this area. |
|
In a nutshell, the provisions for the mackerel box stipulate that there shall be no directed fishery for mackerel in the area, with the exception of vessels fishing exclusively with gill nets or hand lines. |
|
In a nutshell, those are the main outcomes of the L'Aquila summit. |
|
In a nutshell, this research report offers consolidated business information regarding the ultralight aircraft market. |
|
Many are familiar with the Occam's Razor theory which implies, in a nutshell, that the simplest answer is most often the correct answer. |
|
That's the plot in a nutshell, but Rock of Ages is an entire bowl of nuts that gives us much more than the central boy-meets-girl love story. |
|
In a nutshell, in this country we were resting on our laurels and pigheadedly thought we couldn't be bettered. |
|
And a clip of Robbie Williams taking his keks off on The Big Breakfast is a piece of 90s nostalgia in a nutshell. |
|
In a nutshell, a high pressure cell was present over the South African Highveld while another high pressure cell sat some 2000 km south of Madagascar. |
|
In a nutshell, Boto Mo I-Patrol Mo' is based on the idea of empowering our citizens to be vigilant in shaping how elections will turn out next year. |
|
In a nutshell, desulphurised iron is being reclaimed from the waste skull material scraped from the top of vessels transferring iron at the BOS Plant. |
|
McEwan's most recent novel is Nutshell, published in 2016, a short novel closer in style and tone to his earlier works. |
|