There are over 400 stitches on the needles at the moment and each row is going at a torturously slow pace. |
|
The slinkiness made it cool. Other than that, the new film is at a slow pace. |
|
The old problems persisted, and efforts to locate funds continued at a frustratingly slow pace. |
|
Scores of police on foot and horseback lined the route as the protestors marched at a slow pace, bringing traffic to a standstill. |
|
The rest of the ride was at a slow pace so the horses would not get overheated. |
|
It's an elegant film but one that fails to engage, mainly because of the painfully slow pace. |
|
Rail user groups in the region were not impressed by the slow pace at which improvements were timetabled. |
|
His displeasure and irritation with the slow pace of progress at this weekend's Barcelona summit was plain for all to see. |
|
He had been striding back and forth, rubbing his chin in deliberation at an agonizingly slow pace. |
|
The debate can not proceed at the slow pace to which academics are accustomed. |
|
On the right, there is general dismay over the slow pace of decommunisation and the emergence of corrupt links between politics and business. |
|
The food is cooked, not nuked, and cooking takes time. The slow pace suits the service, which is charming. |
|
It is all part and parcel, it seems, of the slow pace of the hearing of proceedings in the federal judicature of this country. |
|
I can now work through Bach's Minuet in G major, BWV 114 without errors, though at a stately, slow pace. |
|
The whole thing bogs down to an annoyingly slow pace and then just confuses us with a weird ghost story. |
|
I was out the door and on my way to school in about forty minutes, walking at an unusually slow pace that one could almost consider moseying. |
|
He had walked away from teaching in 1984, opting to leave the slow pace and banker's hours for a graduate assistant's job at South Carolina. |
|
Access to social services is improving but at a slow pace and it is mostly skewed in favour of urban settings. |
|
Even if we always find things proceeding at a slow pace, we thank God for what we have seen and the meetings we attended. |
|
Russell and Burch would have been pleased that progress is being made, but appalled at its slow pace. |
|
|
The intolerably slow pace of specific claims resolution is common knowledge. |
|
There are, however, gaps in membership due to terms ending or resignations combined with the sometimes slow pace of re-appointment. |
|
Among the primary readjustment problems for this cohort were the poor economic situation, the attitudes and gossip of locals, inefficiency, and the slow pace of life. |
|
There is also something admirable about the slow pace of change in the U.S. quality media and their determination to hang onto the tried and tested formulas. |
|
He said the slow pace at which the deal was being negotiated was retarding the development of the park, which he said had remained closed to tourists for sometime. |
|
For me, the slow pace of our walk had not just meant taking in all that I came across, but also trying to retrace those steps I had taken with my grandfather. |
|
Whilst work on public administration is progressing, the slow pace of preparation of the judicial system to enforce the acquis is worrying. |
|
But that's totally different to someone who has a good reason to use the pavement, and does so at a slow pace, often stopping to give pedestrians their legal right of way. |
|
The government keeps using the lack of security as an excuse for the slow pace of humanitarian aid and reconstruction. |
|
When you are fifteen years old, tempus fugit has little relevance, and time seems to drag as you sit in your classroom waiting for the bell to ring, the minute hand crawling at an agonizingly slow pace around the clock face. |
|
The biggest worry is the slow pace of crop development due to cool weather. |
|
On the other hand, a slow pace is also an obvious problem, leaving the candidate countries frustrated. |
|
Also noteworthy, the slow pace of harvest has seen a sharp reduction in Canadian oat deliveries. |
|
The walkabout is done at a slow pace to give the person time to adjust to the environment and is often spread over the course of several visits. |
|
Back in New York, the slow pace and inward focus of her yoga practice was less fulfilling. |
|
Training an impartial, professional, and trusted Kosovo-based domestic police force also occurred at an excruciatingly slow pace. |
|
Because of the slow pace and small scale of most of those lumber operations, loggers often selected only the most merchantable trees, leaving the rest for future harvests. |
|
It took the entire day, but the slow pace indicated that it was probably a test to gauge public reaction. |
|
This slow pace results from a methodical and exhaustive research process. |
|
They pulled the elegant wagon on a slow pace along for a block and then made a U-turn beneath the Palmetto overpass. |
|
|
The cool water and slow pace of travel will make it much more pleasant. |
|
The auto industry is a huge snail moving at its own slow pace day to day. |
|
This echoes the literature, which identifies a slow pace of change in this respect, as well as a gap between policies and practice. |
|
The words and thoughts in Lewty's art never succumb to the urgent clip of 21st-century urban life but keep instead to an obsolete, invigoratingly slow pace. |
|
My progression is at a slow pace, so it makes sense it would take this long. |
|
It then starts to rise at a slow pace in 2010 until the end of the forecast period. |
|
The slow pace of climate change negotiations and diminutive ambition exhibited by negotiators was serious cause for alarm. |
|
When hitting a bounce wall, even at a slow pace, a ball bounces from it in a very powerful way. |
|
On the third occasion, Judge Kay, at the request of Judge Mahony, enquired about some proceedings being carried at a slow pace. |
|
Progress has been made in the deployment of the Joint Integrated Police Units, albeit at a slow pace. |
|
The major challenge is that, in spite of the Abuja Declaration, coverage progresses at a slow pace. |
|
The gender gap in primary school enrolment has narrowed in the past decade, albeit at a slow pace. |
|
But the slow pace of exercise indicates that these young people are more interested in coquetry than spoiling a perfectly good sweat-suit with sweat. |
|
Donkey-back excursions are organised to discover the surrounding area at a slow pace. |
|
Furthermore, it had to act prudently, considering the world recession and the slow pace at which the Swiss economy, affected as early as 1982, was once again on a growth path. |
|
Overall, progress seems to be moving forward at a slow pace. |
|
Beckett's slow pace looks natural and strategic. |
|
Government budgetary positions improved further in 1998, albeit at a rather slow pace, leaving budgets highly imbalanced on average in the euro area. |
|
The slow pace of activities at the sawmill had a direct effect on forest management, mainly with regard to the selection of species and the volumes to be felled. |
|
We can better appreciate why the slow pace and the esoteric side of a scientist's work can exasperate and weary those who expect from scientists an instant solution to their problems. |
|
|
It may be flawed – weak libretto, slow pace – but what an outrage that a work of such ineffable gorgeousness has just been lying around, heard once in a blue moon! |
|
When I last briefed the Council in January, I expressed my frustration at the agonizingly slow pace of the negotiations and the apparent lack of confidence among the parties. |
|
But mechanical dialogue, a slow pace and labouring under a huge debt to the classic Bladerunner, has it clunking along in second gear. |
|
We remain alarmed by the threat to humanity posed by the continued existence of nuclear weapons and of their possible use or threat of use and deeply concerned over the slow pace of progress towards nuclear disarmament. |
|
We've seen the same slow pace and dismissive attitude from the employer that we saw at the last round of bargaining in 2004 that led to a two-month strike. |
|
Our U. S. operations broke even in the quarter on a cash flow basis, similar to 2007, as the slow pace of the U. S. housing market continues to impact results. |
|
Some Japanese, conscious of the impatience of outsiders at the slow pace of reform in Japan, also complain that America and China are ganging up on them. |
|
Because contrary to the belief that the internet has dulled our attention spans, listening to hours of Serial's slow pace, concentrating, remembering and staying focused, brings a pleasure that no listicle ever could. |
|
The Snail puts Pinocchio's scant patience to the test by making him wait for nine hours at the door as it descends the stairs at its proverbially slow pace. |
|
In addition, the slow pace of reconstruction of schools and health facilities means that too many children are still having to attend school in temporary structures, or worse still, are dropping out of school altogether. |
|
This shift has affected both developed countries, although at a relatively slow pace, and emerging markets, which have seen a recent acceleration in demand, mainly for polycarbonate and high-index materials. |
|
The implementation of the Lusaka Protocol continues at a slow pace mainly as far as troop disengagement, mine clearing and the establishment of quartering areas are concerned. |
|
I do not know, Mr Byrne, if the European Commission is at risk of dying from Creutzfeldt-Jakob Disease, but given the slow pace of your lives, I can take pleasure in the fact that you will surely not die of a heart attack. |
|
The low number and slow pace of returns also continue to raise concern. |
|
Health literacy moves at a very slow pace. |
|
Whittle was unable to interest the government in his invention, and development continued at a slow pace. |
|
Although the recession reached its trough in June 2009, voters remained frustrated with the slow pace of the economic recovery. |
|
The surrounding scenery and wildlife are regarded as attractions of the village, as is the slow pace of life. |
|
Such slow pace of his journey is explained either by the resistance of Tunguses or by successful fur trade with them. |
|
From the time of Elizabeth I onwards the Court was severely criticised for its slow pace, large backlogs, and high costs. |
|
|
Most of the nearly 14,500 Eritrean refugees living in the Shimelba camp in Ethiopia continued to express concern over the slow pace at which the third-country resettlement programme is proceeding. |
|
The arbitration panel moves at a slow pace. |
|
We had been spoiled by savoring wide-open spaces at a slow pace. |
|
The privatisation of small enterprises is largely completed, but for medium and large enterprises it has proceeded at a slow pace over the last few years. |
|
However, as long as the process of chemical-weapons disarmament proceeds at a slow pace and huge quantities of chemical weapons exist, the possibility of their falling into terrorists' hands will remain as well. |
|
As 2009 progressed, prices in the international market evolved towards more traditional levels, contributing at a slow pace to an improvement in levels of milk production and to the stabilization of demand. |
|
The efforts in marketing and developing new products in recent years have allowed Novik to generate this sales growth and stand out in a market where the opportunities are at a slow pace. |
|
The Assembly, which also functions as the Legislature-Parliament during the transitional period, has focused almost exclusively on the Constitution-drafting process, albeit at a slow pace. |
|
Those issues were finally resolved in October 2009, and reintegration support is now forthcoming, albeit though at a slow pace, owing to a shortage of qualified national and available international implementing partners. |
|
A future rail transport market is already taking shape in the form of political statements of intent but, in practice, the process of implementation is advancing at a slow pace. |
|
The Director General advised that negotiations are on going and that issues are being resolved but at a slow pace so the expectation of the negotiations being completed by the end of June are questionable. |
|
Provincial suffrage for women extended across Canada at a slow pace with many provinces not passing enfranchisement legislation until after the Great War. |
|
The feeder is now on the slow side of the pattern and he makes only passes on a very slow pace, but he will do them behind the back or under the arms for more fun and visual effect. |
|
Civil society groups and political parties participated in monitoring constitutional reforms and political agreements, as the slow pace of reforms had been a major point of contention. |
|
The composition's slow pace is restful but also funereal. |
|
My nagging injury — and slow pace — limited my weekday training. |
|
The programme for the return to villages proceeds at a very slow pace. |
|
In the light of the magnitude of the challenges and the slow pace of certain reforms, we might remain reasonably sceptical about the expected results. |
|
She noted as well that the product evaluation methods are not up to date and that the re-evaluation of older but still widely-used pesticides proceeds at a very slow pace in Canada. |
|
The Jordanians are particularly sensitive to the slow pace of progress. |
|
|
Furthermore, there is a high level of frustration among diverse communities in Darfur at the slow pace of political change and their continued exclusion or marginalization. |
|
Due to the slow pace of informal negotiations, BAE Systems exercised its put option which saw investment bank Rothschild appointed to give an independent valuation. |
|
But the down side to that is a frustratingly slow pace, with space being given to endless metaphors instead of action, making it seem overly long. |
|