Andrew Yang and Tom Steyer, who have qualified for tomorrow's debate, did not come close to getting a delegate out of Iowa and have not come close to 10 percent in national polling.
|
|
Nobody can top it, and nobody has even come close.
|
|
It has not come close to stopping genocide (see chart).
|
|
Nobody is going to want to come close to Manafort.
|
|
Of course, that doesn't even come close to incriminating Obama.
|
|
Nothing has come close to the pain of this moment.
|
|
Sadly, we haven't come close to Neptune since the 1980s.
|
|
We've come close to eradicating AIDS and the Ebola virus.
|
|
Other platforms like Instagram and Snapchat do not come close.
|
|
Clinton to come close to catching him in some polls.
|
|
That didn't come close to flying even with his supporters.
|
|
"No thought process can come close to you," he says.
|
|
No one has ever come close to being a Barb.
|
|
And sadly, it didn't come close to ending the war.
|
|
"They can do this and nobody else can come close."
|
|
The teams have come close to a rematch many times.
|
|
From my experience, most newsrooms don't come close to that.
|
|
The benefits do not come close to outweighing the risks.
|
|
So far, nothing in the Trump administration has come close.
|
|
But the state has come close to expanding Medicaid before.
|
|
Max towel temperatures didn't come close to the canister warmers.
|
|
I said Biden has come close to a blowup moment.
|
|
"The Wild" (2006) doesn't come close to beating "Madagascar" (2005).
|
|
Northwestern has come close to a berth in the past.
|
|
Only once did United come close to forcing extra time.
|
|
Nobody has come close to painting a painting like that.
|
|
Those volumes do not come close to replacing U.S shipments.
|
|
How do we come close to leveling the playing field?
|
|
Only a handful of competitors out of 30 even come close.
|
|
None of Trump's recent tweets has come close to those figures.
|
|
Trump wouldn't come close to passing his own ideological vetting test.
|
|
Some of my clients don't even come close to these limits.
|
|
Before 2016, no woman had come close to winning the presidency.
|
|
Nor do economic conditions even come close to resembling Weimar Germany.
|
|
Those performances didn't come close to the crowds he's drawing now.
|
|
"The idea is to come close to breaking even," she said.
|
|
No one has come close to what Sissy Spacek does here.
|
|
The edtech market does not even come close to this estimate.
|
|
Few match the Model 3's range, but some come close.
|
|
No other media outlet has ever come close to such scale.
|
|
Only Justices Clarence Thomas and David Souter come close, at 77%.
|
|
Liberals do not come close to matching this kind of spending.
|
|
In reality, he has never come close to setting the record.
|
|
If they don't win, they're supposed to at least come close.
|
|
In that case, there really is nothing that can come close.
|
|
Only two candidates truly come close: Bob Dole and James Buchanan.
|
|
It just doesn't add up -- or come close to adding up.
|
|
Most people with 529 plans come close to Fidelity's 2K rule.
|
|
Hollywood romcoms usually don't even come close to such casual sweetness.
|
|
Some economists say it could come close, others say nowhere near.
|
|
Each time that I've come close, God has restored my faith.
|
|
He will meet, or come close to meeting, the second standard.
|
|
Ms. Mofford had come close to the governor's office once before.
|
|
Ms. Cline can't come close to sustaining her novel's early momentum.
|
|
The word outrage does not come close to describing this incident.
|
|
C. Sabathia) or haven't come close to meeting expectations (Jacoby Ellsbury).
|
|
Beer doesn't even come close, averaging just 29.9 milligrams per liter.
|
|
Nonetheless, some events can come close to offering an informative counterfactual.
|
|
But none has come close to the two highest-grossing nominees.
|
|
In previous votes, the May plan hasn't come close to passing.
|
|
But none have come close to the impact of the iPhone.
|
|
None even come close to the US in mass shooting frequency.
|
|
Her results haven't come close to measuring up to those expectations.
|
|
No other candidate is expected to come close to that total.
|
|
Cost savings don't come close to covering the premium being paid.
|
|
I've come close to the one I had with the cheese.
|
|
Deval Patrick, hasn't yet come close to qualifying for a debate.
|
|
The only other actress who could come close is Glenn Close.
|
|
So far, the results haven't come close to matching the rhetoric.
|
|
Melania Trump does not come close to this level of engagement.
|
|
No other president has come close in his first two years.
|
|
His budget doesn't seem to come close to covering the cost.
|
|
I've come close to injecting benzodiazepines, which are not water soluble.
|
|
And it may never come close to a vote in Congress.
|
|
The Florida senator did come close, with 32 percent of the Virginia GOP vote to Trump's 35, but it didn't come close to making up for his third-place finishes in the rest of the South.
|
|
I don't think Kaitlyn and I would've ever come close to that.
|
|
The annual reduction would then come close to 1.5 percent of GDP.
|
|
No company has come close to dethroning YouTube ad-supported video platform.
|
|
No one has made the sale or even come close to it.
|
|
In short, you can't come close to breaking even buying homeowner's insurance.
|
|
On Good Morning America, she says she didn't come close to leaving.
|
|
No one has ever come close to making geometric paintings like Lerner.
|
|
What it may do, though, is come close enough to be visible.
|
|
In no Asian country surveyed did America's image come close to improving.
|
|
I did that and have never even come close to that limit.
|
|
Halfway through the year, no pop album has come close to Melodrama.
|
|
Now we know Grace has come close to murder at least once.
|
|
But Defendants have not come close to making any of those showings.
|
|
In other words, the bills come close to being total abortion bans.
|
|
" — Max Harris, defendant "I know nothing I can say will come close.
|
|
Gannett and Tronc's deal had come close to being signed on Oct.
|
|
Many will come close, but we will never hear its like again.
|
|
Past attempts to repeal the death tax have come close to success.
|
|
I've even come close to admiring him once, against my better judgement.
|
|
Higgins' track record shows he doesn't come close to meeting those qualifications.
|
|
But friends, I have not even come close to scratching the surface.
|
|
Boy oh boy, do the QC 35s come close to being perfect.
|
|
You can come close enough to reach out and touch the water.
|
|
The G.O.P. still has not come close to addressing its complicity problem.
|
|
Clinton has come close to many people and has shaken many hands.
|
|
It's not a record-breaking catch, but wow does it come close!
|
|
People say they are this or that, but nobody has come close.
|
|
One woman had even come close to winning her party's presidential nomination.
|
|
But the Conyers brand is so strong none have really come close.
|
|
We have not even come close to unlocking the full potential there.
|
|
I've always wondered, but I've never come close to finding an answer.
|
|
While they couldn't quite meet face to face, they could come close.
|
|
But, most guys coming out since haven't come close to those figures.
|
|
And in Tuesday's elections, he didn't even come close to those targets.
|
|
It doesn't have to break the bank, but it might come close.
|
|
In the past, the two sides have never come close to agreement.
|
|
Viewers can come close to the fire but they are not scorched.
|
|
She didn't even come close to winning her home state of Massachusetts.
|
|
COTTON: Did you ever come close to closing investigation on Mr. Flynn?
|
|
In any case, they did not come close to overthrowing the government.
|
|
Sanders, would come close to matching the radicalism of the incumbent President.
|
|
At least one of his claims didn't come close to being true.
|
|
Congress also has come close to passing a nationwide 20-week ban.
|
|
Many didn&apost even come close to imitating a glass of wine.
|
|
Unfortunately, Cuomo's actions on clemency haven't come close to matching his words.
|
|
On Thursday, Mr. Moore seemed to come close to acknowledging his loss.
|
|
Last week, his campaign had hopes he could win or come close.
|
|
"We can't do Ferrari Red, but we can come close," he said.
|
|
A weapon is in your hands and they don't dare come close.
|
|
Despite the rhetoric, the government has never come close to reaching the target.
|
|
And it's not as if the NSA has come close to spying altogether.
|
|
It touched $60 briefly in June of 2015 and hasn't come close since.
|
|
"Unfortunately, most people don't even come close to saving that much," he writes.
|
|
Most of these places don't even come close to meeting Amazon's proposal requirements.
|
|
Depending on what happens in November, that number could come close to 40.
|
|
Because he'd never even come close to cheating on Lara for 15 years?
|
|
It's also still possible the storm will come close but not make landfall.
|
|
None have ever come close to the feelings I have for my coworker.
|
|
The Transformers films — which have traditionally fared well with foreign audiences — come close.
|
|
But there is little chance they will come close to ousting the president.
|
|
It's not anything I've ever seen anybody else even come close to doing.
|
|
The 360 Eye didn't even come close to fitting under my Ikea sofa.
|
|
"Material [Design] doesn't even come close to thinking about that world," Gallo said.
|
|
But Hughes insists that he didn't even come close to the Delta flight.
|
|
When it comes to perks, few employers come close to internet giant Google.
|
|
In caucus members' view, Ryan's bill simply doesn't come close to doing that.
|
|
Floyd's never even come close to doing to other fighters what Conor does.
|
|
It's a size 2 and doesn't even come close to zipping right now.
|
|
But when it comes to Israeli-Palestinian peace, America hasn't even come close.
|
|
The second-place streak, of 34 days in 1995, doesn't even come close.
|
|
But official statistics don't come close to reflecting the scale of the problem.
|
|
The facts do not come close to bearing out his claims on surveillance.
|
|
No one could ever come close to the choreography that Spears gifted us.
|
|
Bloomberg has come close to running for president before and then pulled back.
|
|
Both increased from 2018 to 2019, while the other services don't come close.
|
|
So far, the state's response hasn't even come close to what is needed.
|
|
And Danny O'Connor and Democrats didn't spend all that money to come close.
|
|
The problem is that the numbers don't even come close to adding up.
|
|
And service jobs do not come close to paying what manufacturing jobs do.
|
|
The police report said the bullets did not come close to striking anyone.
|
|
Tightening a few valves isn't going to come close to solving the problem.
|
|
While no candidate wins any demographic universally, Warren didn't come close with women.
|
|
They don't leave your fingertips entirely free of grease, but they come close.
|
|
Had she reached them — or had she come close — she would be president.
|
|
US car companies haven't come close to reaching the current 25,000 limit each.
|
|
Iranian missiles have already come close to hitting civilian targets in Saudi Arabia.
|
|
ESPN disputed that its offer would come close to such a number, however.
|
|
But don't worry — it won't come close enough to Earth to cause trouble.
|
|
But Wiggins hasn't come close to fulfilling his potential since he was drafted.
|
|
No other media company has come close to this kind of record before.
|
|
America is Israel's ultimate security guarantor, but Israel can't come close to reciprocating.
|
|
That "head" message couldn't come close to competing with Gillum's "heart" one. 2.
|
|
It remains to be seen if he can come close to meeting it.
|
|
Psychedelic drugs don't come close to the toxicity or abuse potential of cocaine.
|
|
No donors, however, have come close to the Adelsons in this election cycle.
|
|
It was the only way to come close to following all the action.
|
|
The Justice Department's latest work won't come close to ending the opioid crisis.
|
|
"I've had [clients] come close to making a mistake with a rollover," Kennedy said.
|
|
They had one guy out there and he couldn't come close to catching him.
|
|
No other SUV has ever come close to meeting and exceeding this rollover requirement.
|
|
Although the device hasn't been tested in space just yet, it has come close.
|
|
So even if what you say is true, how can you possibly come close?
|
|
The best drones have the best AI, and nobody's drones come close to DJI's.
|
|
The second chattiest canine, the Yorkshire Terrier, doesn't come close to the Samoyed's record.
|
|
What's more, it doesn't come close to topping optimistic projected viewership of 244 million.
|
|
This dog cannot catch the ball, nor even come close to catching the ball.
|
|
"Goldman Sachs hasn't come close to what it earned 10 years ago, " he continued.
|
|
But nothing has come close to replicating the success of his flagship Forearm Forklift.
|
|
While this year's temperatures are not expected to match 1995, they will come close.
|
|
The presidency doesn't come close, and Congress is near the bottom of the list.
|
|
Don't you dare even come close to apologizing although, yes, technically you've apologized already.
|
|
Each time that I've come close [to giving up], God has restored my faith.
|
|
However, no party is expected to come close to a majority of 1953 seats.
|
|
Yet, I haven't even come close to falling off or crashing the scooter once.
|
|
Unfortunately, the interface and usability of the product doesn't come close to Apple standards.
|
|
In this interview, it doesn't even come close to cracking the top five. 7.
|
|
To call it reality television doesn't even come close to doing the election justice.
|
|
What we have in terms of technology nobody can even come close to competing.
|
|
He's run there many years and come close many times to get that victory.
|
|
Teams that win a sequence of titles, or even come close, need superior talent.
|
|
Assuredly, PILT can't come close to addressing all the needs of counties like Mariposa.
|
|
In roughly 400 dates, he had not come close to anything resembling true love.
|
|
My total of just under $600 for six weddings didn't come close to that.
|
|
Clinton, Mr. Trump would not need to come close to 50 percent to win.
|
|
The "carry ceremony" has to be seen to even come close to being described.
|
|
Nothing else has ever come close to the 2.1 billion people connected by Facebook.
|
|
Combat operations by many militia and government forces come close to Turkey's long frontier.
|
|
No other candidates come close in terms of name recognition or net favorability rating.
|
|
No other team in baseball has come close to so many consecutive unfulfilled seasons.
|
|
And yet no competitor has come close to approaching Chyna's formidability in the ring.
|
|
None of these names come close to replicating Iguodala's impact, let alone Shaun Livingston's.
|
|
Estimates show that Typhoon Mangkhut may come close to Typhoon Haiyan in wind speed.
|
|
Because the Las Vegas slaughter does not even come close to being the deadliest.
|
|
" Twitter says the "defendants have not come close to making any of those showings.
|
|
I realize I didn't come close to covering everything important that happened this year.
|
|
Pay-per-view wouldn't come close to making up for box office ticket sales.
|
|
The money didn't come close to the $7,500 charged to get her nephew out.
|
|
"She didn't even come close to winning her home state of Massachusetts," Trump tweeted.
|
|
Stealing is his high, and, until he meets Bibi, nothing else has come close.
|
|
A century and a half after the Morningstarrs' disappearance, no one has come close.
|
|
Sprint's promises of a nationwide 43GHz network would never even come close to materializing.
|
|
But it didn't come close to covering all the costs of raising her daughter.
|
|
Carr's desperation 20-pointer from beyond midcourt didn't come close as the horn sounded.
|
|
Even if true, these don't come close to justifying a sweeping ban on speech.
|
|
The first step is clear, and has come close to fruition over the years.
|
|
There's no other country in the world that's come close to our capacity. None!
|
|
Still, Amazon's market share doesn't come close to the duopoly of Facebook and Google.
|
|
But will it ever come close to the audience enjoyed by its broadcast ancestor?
|
|
In the meantime, I let the viewer come close and see the 'pure' me.
|
|
A year after Pokémon Go's meteoric rise, no other app launch has come close.
|
|
He couldn't come close to those odds if he remained in the Democratic Party.
|
|
The average prices of their prescription drugs come close to $1,800, says Smith, of UMWA.
|
|
That still wouldn't come close to the $40.4 billion the budget cuts over 10 years.
|
|
It's pretty well understood that mainstream porn doesn't come close to representing real female pleasure.
|
|
After PewDiePie's 80 million and T-Series' 79 million subscribers, no other creators come close.
|
|
All of this stuff can't come close to replacing me actually being, you know, alive.
|
|
It's a horrific scenario that we've come close to on Earth, during the Cold War.
|
|
For that group, the tax credits would not come close to compensating for this increase.
|
|
It said the day was on track to hit or come close to $2 billion.
|
|
None of the candidates have come close to Trump's fundraising success in the second quarter.
|
|
The universal programs that some candidates have advanced "won't come close to that," he says.
|
|
But could No Man's Sky come close to the exact number of species on Earth?
|
|
Other objects, like icy comets, will occasionally come close to Earth in their elliptical orbits.
|
|
" Bilello added: "Average Americans would not come close to qualifying for inclusion in this program.
|
|
And an openly gay man has never come close to winning a U.S. presidential election.
|
|
Trump's budgets haven't come close to being enacted by Congress in the past two years.
|
|
But in all the times I've played him, he's never come close to breaking 80.
|
|
There's no one else among House Democrats who could come close to touching that number.
|
|
The only car able to come close to Bugatti's unbelievable Chiron is Koenigsegg's hybrid Regera.
|
|
Seriously, I've come close to breaking bones on every single Boosted Board I've ever tried.
|
|
Repeatedly tabbed as a preseason favorite, they haven't come close to winning anything significant… yet.
|
|
But it's also possible Trump could win all 11 states -- or come close to it.
|
|
No other sci-fi/fantasy franchise stats even come close to Star Wars or Rings.
|
|
If the hotel wasn't the epicenter of Miami that night, it seemed to come close.
|
|
No one under that price point has really come close to producing the same quality.
|
|
But since he retired in 2008 no Brazilian has come close to repeating his achievements.
|
|
That probably won't happen, though Democrats conceivably could come close if a large wave develops.
|
|
Interest in previous years has come close to that, but only right before Election Day.
|
|
But unfortunately, what he has now instructed EPA to do doesn't come close to that.
|
|
The only president to come close to Trump's negative differential was Bill Clinton in 1998.
|
|
He could influence the race significantly, even if he doesn't come close to winning it.
|
|
The second time didn't come close to the first, but it did include heavy petting.
|
|
No other specialized school has come close to admitting as many black and Latino students.
|
|
No one has yet to come close to crossing that threshold, at least not publicly.
|
|
The nuclear war scare of 2018 has not come close to the levels of 1950.
|
|
And there were thousands on the other side that had come close to the wall.
|
|
Not because these Federal funds pay for all these programs—they don't even come close.
|
|
They haven't come close to winning by that much in a midterm election since 1982.
|
|
And when you factor in reseller fees, the return doesn't even come close to $39,846.50.
|
|
Many hospitals have come close to the breaking point even in a bad flu season.
|
|
But an exchange with Mr. Cobb involving trickery may come close to violating federal law.
|
|
The bounce at Monday's open did not come close to making up for last week.
|
|
In some instances, the administration has come close to giving the Bannon forces their support.
|
|
Sanders didn't come close to the 29% Jimmy Carter took in 1976, the previous record.
|
|
Emmanuel Macron with his neatly cropped hair and well-cut navy suits doesn't come close.
|
|
So far no one has plunged off a cliff, although a few have come close.
|
|
Ms. Trump has not come close to that, but the appearance is still ethically blurred.
|
|
The second half can't come close to cashing the check the first half has written.
|
|
That's primarily because women's representation the United States doesn't come close to our Rwandan counterparts.
|
|
Preposterously plotted and crammed with overly potted history, "Darwin's Ghosts" doesn't come close to succeeding.
|
|
But the number of adopters has never come close to the number of available horses.
|
|
But none would come close to doing as much as driving a fuel-efficient vehicle.
|
|
They might not buy the shirt off an artist's back, but they have come close.
|
|
None of the Padres' regulars have come close to matching Alonso's slugging percentage this season.
|
|
Some of his more outsize and oafish peers come close, but none quite measure up.
|
|
But those discounted fares do not come close to covering the costs of the operation.
|
|
"I don't think we can even come close to competing in this game," he says.
|
|
The averages could also come close to erasing what's so far been a losing October.
|
|
It would not come close to being the worst thing that has happened to him.
|
|
In the past couple of years, Trout has even come close to getting his wish.
|
|
The game's closest analog, Destiny, doesn't come close to the ease of playing with friends.
|
|
Others didn&apost come close to earning back the money it cost to make them.
|
|
"Renewables cannot come close to meeting demand as it increases around the world," he said.
|
|
But even the Starr investigation or the Watergate investigation wouldn't come close to Mueller's compilation.
|
|
None of these fixes even come close to the scale Amazon, Google and Facebook have.
|
|
Democrats didn't come close to capturing the seat of the retiring House Speaker Paul Ryan.
|
|
And Stephen Hauschka, man, he did not even come close to making this field goal.
|
|
If anyone has experience dealing with trolls, then I come close to being that person.
|
|
Despite Google Deep Dream's masterpieces, computational creativity hasn't come close to producing its Sistine Chapel.
|
|
She's seen the legislation come close to passing — and then fall short — so many times.
|
|
Yet it remains unclear whether Mr Federer has truly come close to regaining his peak form.
|
|
Few artists can come close to Carey's signature high-octave whispers or her deep, rich delivery.
|
|
Calling this sculpture brown — which it is — also doesn't come close to its understated visual dynamism.
|
|
Apple's AirPods come close, but the lack of sports-friendly features has always been a problem.
|
|
They are antiseptic words that don't come close to describing what happened on May 143, 2019.
|
|
But nothing has come close to conjuring up that same definitive "Team Gold", "Team Blue" divide.
|
|
Because nobody's numbers add up, or come close to adding up," he told CNBC's "Squawk Box.
|
|
Standard & Poor's, a credit-rating agency, expects insurers to come close to breaking even this year.
|
|
When we come close to the end of our life, what's really important makes itself known.
|
|
We never see Carolina even come close to shedding a tear over the men around her.
|
|
Annual cost savings of 220 million euros, taxed and capitalised, come close to justifying that amount.
|
|
When they were selected in 1959, no one had come close to leaving the earth's atmosphere.
|
|
Why it matters: Retailers are already racing to come close to Amazon's shipping prices and speeds.
|
|
This is still not government policy, though Mr Salvini has come close to calling for it.
|
|
But some scientists think it's a fool's errand that won't come close to solving the problem.
|
|
I haven't come close to clipping anyone, but I can see that the danger is there.
|
|
Unfortunately, Mr. Steven hasn't made any catches yet, though SpaceX says the boat has come close.
|
|
By itself, foster care won&apost come close to resolving the plight of Haiti&aposs children.
|
|
He didn't come close to winning, but the aim was to draw attention to climate change.
|
|
After all, Electroland has something no other festival can come close to: a theme park setting.
|
|
And these particular donations don't even come close to the size of the corporate tax cut.
|
|
This would not be the first time that Meredith has come close to buying Time Inc.
|
|
Humpback whale songs don't quite hit the same ratio at Zipf's law, but they come close.
|
|
Yet, merely by being on the ballot in November either would come close to the presidency.
|
|
He infiltrated our world in a way that nobody else has ever come close to doing.
|
|
Basically, she's accumulated a level of social notoriety most of us will never come close to.
|
|
No presidential candidate has ever come close to hitting the 28500 percent mark with that demographic.
|
|
Combat operations by many militia and government forces come close to Turkey's long frontier with Syria.
|
|
That would come close to Mr McDonnell's pledge to "get rid of the bloody universal credit".
|
|
I think the NFL doesn't even come close to that on the level of being offensive.
|
|
Trump last week boasted that "nobody is going to come close" to defeating him in 2020.
|
|
Since Bush's 1988 victory, no Republican has won it or even come close to winning it.
|
|
He cannot come close to generating enough revenue directly for the club to recoup this investment.
|
|
Showers come close tonight and early tomorrow, but only the beaches see anything meaningful or measurable.
|
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No other event or thing could even come close to making me feel that happy again.
|
|
The other studios don't come close, as the second-place studio, Universal, is accounting for 13%.
|
|
"I don't know anyone else who's come close to that, and he's done it," Duda said.
|
|
Instead, most years, I pay nothing, as I never come close to using all of it.
|
|
He didn't come close to winning Iowa or New Hampshire, which all but ended his campaign.
|
|
No eyeglass company in the United States - the biggest market for both firms - would come close.
|
|
Citigroup countered that the evidence did not come close to suggesting it contributed to Rusnak's losses.
|
|
In none did he come close to Cruz — or even to 20 percent of the vote.
|
|
I'm apparently lazy and don't pursue my dreams because I've never come close to a spaceship.
|
|
That's faster than any coffee drink would work, but the SnowPlus vape doesn't even come close.
|
|
Just like it's not guaranteed that Democrats will win or come close in the districts above.
|
|
At these times, he would come close to crying, and he would withdraw to be alone.
|
|
Despite the doom and gloom rhetoric, we have yet to see anything come close to that.
|
|
But what we are shown of Swan's work does not come close to clearing that bar.
|
|
But on Thursday, the Trump administration missed that deadline — in fact, they didn't even come close.
|
|
It's incredibly difficult to address everyone, because I know nothing I can say will come close.
|
|
Its HIV success story did not extend to the Beira corridor—it didn't even come close.
|
|
This simple approach obviously won't come close to solving the college gap between rich and poor.
|
|
Her contemporary art descendants in the adjacent galleries don't come close to instilling the same effect.
|
|
The figure doesn't come close to what arts groups pushed for over the last several days.
|
|
That would mitigate the peril to our democracy, but it wouldn't come close to eliminating it.
|
|
That kind of movement is a common sight throughout, but it doesn't come close to abandon.
|
|
Improvement happens in fits and starts, but my skill doesn't come close to matching my commitment.
|
|
By dint of having come close to that farmer, knowing about it, I'm probably something closer.
|
|
It doesn't come close to Into the Breach's tactical choreography or its confrontation with collateral damage.
|
|
If those counts are anywhere close to accurate, this effort won't even come close to succeeding.
|
|
The employment carnage of other natural disasters, like Hurricanes Katrina and Sandy, doesn't even come close.
|
|
The highest bracket, 45% for incomes over €40,000 do not come close to 65% as claimed.
|
|
A high bar to meet, yes, but did anything on Broadway (or even Off) come close?
|
|
In some ways we don't have anything like it anymore, though widget centers have come close.
|
|
The public funding did not come close to matching the spending by third parties, notably Amazon.
|
|
The public funding did not come close to matching the spending by third parties, notably Amazon.
|
|
Then he | will come | close to | take a | look + + + Take off | you skirt | so he | can . . .
|
|
The storm is expected to turn back toward the Northeast and could come close to Bermuda.
|
|
Thursday's photo op is designed to push plans that don't even come close to being adequate.
|
|
The FT also reported that Unilever and Hormel had come close to bidding, but walked away.
|
|
Yet fixing some of the Cruz amendment's problems wouldn't come close to fixing the overall bill.
|
|
" Senator Johnson said: "The skinny bill in the Senate doesn't come close to meeting our promises.
|
|
She seemed to understand my mom on a level I haven't even come close to matching.
|
|
Over the past 28503 years, Americans have not even come close to that level of turnout.
|
|
What is now discussed doesn't come close to being real tax reform for the American people.
|
|
At $307 million, the Powerball jackpot doesn't even come close to cracking the game's top 10.
|
|
If the legislation was up to just Democrats, the bill wouldn't have come close to passing.
|
|
The Rockets trailed wire-to-wire, never even forging a tie, though they did come close.
|
|
So far, Trump's defenders haven't even come close to making a convincing argument in his favor.
|
|
The truth is that most surfers don't come close to what we see in highlight videos.
|
|
No amount of tax increases or alternative spending cuts could come close to funding that shortfall.
|
|
And then there's Wonderland, a place that no movie adaptation can even come close to portraying.
|
|
All the other animals combined don't even come close — and globally it's a very similar picture.
|
|
Trump is a national threat like no one else who has come close to the Presidency.
|
|
Well, our shoots have never even come close to approximating what goes on in Brimstone & Glory.
|
|
So all I'm getting at, is you don't think any of the rivals will come close.
|
|
Control of the bridge is now unclear as the militants in Raqqa come close to defeat.
|
|
Hockey is a vortex of madness that only arcane ice mystics can come close to understanding.
|
|
He added that there are more asteroids that come close to Earth than there are comets.
|
|
Some types of mystical religion come close to atheism in their understanding of God as unimaginable.
|
|
Never have we thought, or even come close to the thought, of making underwear for a phone.
|
|
Though she got a tough grilling from the moderators, Trump did not come close to damaging her.
|
|
"If you do that, your presidency will not come close to being a success," he told Trump.
|
|
Without someone like Trump on stage, there's no way the Democrats can come close to those totals.
|
|
The Razer Blade 215 also didn't even come close to that 2144Hz sweet spot in older games.
|
|
The blaze has come close to at least four ranches, but crews have protected them, Rooker said.
|
|
Before 2008, no woman had come close to being nominated for president on a major party ticket.
|
|
These monetary costs don't come close to the dire environmental impact plastic bottles have on the planet.
|
|
Not many people can match Bey in the theatrics department, but Michael sure does come close. 10.
|
|
These six organisms don't even come close to representing the sheer variability of wildlife our Earth holds.
|
|
The actions of Pelosi and Schiff do not come close to meeting the Constitution's definition of treason.
|
|
His awkward metaphors about birthday parties and tricycles don't come close to, say, this vanilla-flavored gem.
|
|
Forecasts made by Qorchi suggested the sanctions would not come close to pushing Qatar into recession, however.
|
|
No other headphones I've tested have come close to Bose or Sony in terms of noise canceling.
|
|
But that satisfying ending won't come close to capturing what made this show special at its height.
|
|
"There is no other species on the planet that has come close to doing that," said Hare.
|
|
No other company has come close to making a phone camera as consistently great as the iPhone's.
|
|
In percentage terms, neither would come close to the debt expansion during President Barack Obama's two terms.
|
|
When it comes to salacious murder cases, few can come close to the saga of Amanda Knox.
|
|
But whether any athlete can come close to matching Bolt's dominance and charisma is a different matter.
|
|
There is no role I have ever played that has, or will ever, come close to this.
|
|
Milan still has a long way to go to come close to rivaling London or New York.
|
|
ZTE has recently failed to come close to rivals like Apple, Samsung and fellow Chinese firm Huawei.
|
|
I have never won it and, if I am being honest, I've never come close to winning.
|
|
There's a reason that no lightweight has even come close to the record for UFC title defenses.
|
|
Pruitt's simplistic equation of scientific norms and regulatory norms does not come close to meeting this requirement.
|
|
Now Donald Trump has come close to precipitating another constitutional crisis by smearing and seeking the removal
|
|
Today's crop just won't come close to providing the vast sums needed for his single-payer plan.
|
|
In reality, they do not even come close to owning the worst emission offenders in the city.
|
|
Perhaps you're picturing them in your head, now: homeless, indigent, perhaps even criminal — did I come close?
|
|
Most employees, however, do not even come close to the regular limit, let alone put in extra.
|
|
People who come close to maxing out their 221(k) plans have a few things in common.
|
|
When it comes to the case of the Central Park Five, he has never even come close.
|
|
In the last four years, Nevada has come close to requiring universal background checks at least twice.
|
|
In midterms past, Democratic turnout tends to come close to equaling Republican turnout with a Republican president.
|
|
"Questioningly" was a forlorn, jangly ballad, and "Don't Come Close" replaced cranked amps with ringing guitar licks.
|
|
I suppose Paul McCartney is the only one who could come close, but then he's a Beatle.
|
|
Immunization campaigns have succeeded in most countries and have come close in Pakistan, but persistent problems remain.
|
|
"I couldn't define it or categorize it or even come close to figuring it out," he says.
|
|
Heartbroken doesn't come close to how I, and how I know many of you will be feeling.
|
|
He did come close once: But, but, but hold on yourself, Spicer—what are you talkin' about?
|
|
It wasn't a winning issue then and certainly hadn't come close to being a winning issue before.
|
|
The harsh reality for Warren is that she is unlikely to come close to hitting those targets.
|
|
As 2016 come close to an end, it's pretty safe to say that this year totally sucked.
|
|
"It clearly will not come close to getting the 60 votes that it needs," Schumer told reporters.
|
|
It had been 10 years since a South African golfer had won and nobody had come close.
|
|
As a practical matter, a de minimis exception will come close to repealing the Johnson amendment completely.
|
|
And though confirmation with complete certainty is impossible, Dr. Delgado said he believes they have come close.
|
|
In none of those games did it come close to controlling the ball even half the time.
|
|
"They have the burden of proof and they have not come close to meeting it," Cipollone said.
|
|
No subject since the election has come close to producing this kind of anger toward The Times.
|
|
California and Northeastern peaches are still an option, but many Southerners say the flavor doesn't come close.
|
|
The upcoming Pixel 4 with its native Assistant capabilities may even come close to realizing it, too.
|
|
There's little sign Biden is in any hurry to even come close to the average nominee, however.
|
|
His other videos haven't really come close to that, but they're just as highly produced and elaborate.
|
|
Even as the economy thrived and kept expanding, they&aposve rarely come close to that 60% mark.
|
|
The only competitor that can come close is the Genesis G90, which is also worth checking out.
|
|
"For any team that's come close, the idea of an expanded World Cup sounds exciting," Bradley said.
|
|
Ever since, these two metropolises have come close often, yet somehow always choked or simply fallen short.
|
|
The upcoming Pixel 4 with its native Assistant capabilities may even come close to realizing it, too.
|
|
It's hard to beat presents under the tree, but these babes come close ... no wrapping paper required.
|
|
Corsi appears to have come close to facing criminal charges of his own in the Mueller probe.
|
|
No country outside the United States has come close to producing more players than the Caribbean nation.
|
|
But it has become clear that Twitter is unlikely to ever come close to Facebook's audience size.
|
|
Not because of Navalny, who polls show would not come close to beating Putin if allowed to run.
|
|
But according to his comments on "Fox News Sunday," Trump hasn't come close to approaching him about it.
|
|
Match has numerous unique features to meet new people that no other site has even come close to.
|
|
Nevertheless, growth in the region is not likely to come close to rates seen in the boom years.
|
|
Both Ista and Techem boast Ebitda's in excess of €300m and any financings would come close to €2bn.
|
|
The Constitution also has a specific definition of treason that Schiff's comments do not come close to satisfying.
|
|
Recent votes on this issue have come close to success, and now is the time to try again.
|
|
While she's certainly heavy, India's bundle of joy does not come close to the heaviest baby ever born.
|
|
We may never achieve a sense of perfection when it comes to email, but many services come close.
|
|
In "Jane the Virgin," at 9, Jane and Michael come close to reuniting, sending Rafael into a funk.
|
|
"I don't think I've seen any cost savings which even come close to that level globally," he says.
|
|
The film doesn't even come close to passing the lowest bar of equality, the often-discussed Bechdel Test.
|
|
She came short of reaching six-figures in fundraising in 2016 and didn't even come close in 2014.
|
|
Perovskite solar cells, a more recent discovery, already come close to silicon's performance and may be more efficient.
|
|
But South Florida has one vulnerability that city planners and government leaders haven't come close to fixing: flooding.
|
|
The only thing that might come close is "Rockets-era Dwight Howard," but Dwight doesn't deserve that, man.
|
|
At one point, no one even come close... because they were afraid that he might sexually harass them.
|
|
But back to the only person who's come close to answering the question of what's west of Westeros.
|
|
A handful have come close, but most formulas veer too dark, too light, too pink, or too olive.
|
|
But a fitness band that doesn't come close to accurately measuring running distances is frustrating, or even ridiculous.
|
|
Euro zone finance ministers failed to reach an agreement with the IMF last week, but did come close.
|
|
The state attorney general's office says the DNA evidence "does not come close" to proving Williams' innocence. 4.
|
|
The storm's center may come close to the capital of Manila, before moving out to sea toward China.
|
|
To even remotely come close to what it was like to experience that firsthand is a daunting task.
|
|
And for those who just want smart lights that'll work, no other system can come close to Hue.
|
|
And he has begun to unify Congo's opposition, which no other politician has ever come close to doing.
|
|
The check doesn't come close to making up for the six-figure income Fleming had as a miner.
|
|
None of it would come close to pushing even the Gear VR's power limits, let alone the Rift's.
|
|
The Post reported that lawmakers on Thursday didn't come close to agreeing on how to redraw the map.
|
|
None of the new businesses, however, have come close to outweighing the old revenues that Goldman has lost.
|
|
He would go on to be re-elected 12 times, and never come close to losing his seat.
|
|
My view it was a close to a wash, but Trump needed a win and didn't come close.
|
|
However the Swedish Construction Federation, says many more are needed to even come close to the government's target.
|
|
Low revenues are a big part of the problem; they do not come close to funding current spending.
|
|
This is a remarkable achievement, as no other state has come close to considering a state carbon tax.
|
|
They have come close though, especially in 1989, when Princeton faced Georgetown and East Tennessee State played Oklahoma.
|
|
No country in the Americas or Western Europe has come close to suffering an economic calamity like this.
|
|
I also believe humankind hasn't come close to tapping the full potential it can extract from technological advances.
|
|
However, the former Welsh international has come close to signing for several clubs, including former employers Sheffield United.
|
|
With a fall like today, not many people will be brave enough to come close to the market.
|
|
That experience may not have come close to full-on polyamory, but it was something I'd been craving.
|
|
Japanese offerings such as the Toyota Tundra and Nissan Titan can't even come close to the F-Series.
|
|
More importantly, however, none of these companies has even come close to getting those projects off the ground.
|
|
The puzzle is why the United States has taken so long to even come close to catching up.
|
|
But they failed to come close to a conviction in the Senate and ultimately boosted Mr. Clinton's popularity.
|
|
"He doesn't come close to being qualified," said Ellen Yaroshefsky, a professor of legal ethics at Hofstra University.
|
|
"And that didn't even come close to what people have said about me," she said, with a laugh.
|
|
The current system is worth watching because it will come close to the historical record for low pressure.
|
|
A row over state pensions has come close to dismantling Merkel's coalition with the center-left Social Democrats.
|
|
What's certain is that earnings won't come close to the expectations that the market priced in last year.
|
|
"So far no one has plunged off a cliff, although a few have come close," Michael Powell writes.
|
|
This sharper partisan appeal has allowed them to come close to equalizing the partisan composition of the district.
|
|
Domestic output has gone up, but it hasn't come close to making up for the loss from imports.
|
|
But a proposal to eliminate -- or come close to eliminating the politics from politics -- is just as bad.
|
|
And, this amount does not even come close to the business losses from recalls and stock price devaluation.
|
|
The only titles that really come close are the choice-driven narrative games of David Cage's Quantic Dream.
|
|
In terms of qualifications, Mr. Perry, a former governor of Texas, doesn't come close to his immediate predecessors.
|
|
Nobody has done what I've done, and nobody has come close in the first two years of office.
|
|
This is Romo's fourth attempt to make a cut at a PGA tournament, and he hasn't come close.
|
|
And Tyrion's concerns prove to be valid: Daenerys does come close to meeting her end during the battle.
|
|
The amount of money placed on bets in Nevada could come close to Super Bowl numbers, he said.
|
|
Esports, though growing rapidly in popularity, has not come close to spawning a star of Ronaldo&aposs caliber.
|
|
The two senators are running neck-and-neck for second place, but neither will come close to Trump.
|
|
No one in Wayland Baptist program history had ever come close to the elder Culver&aposs historic mark.
|
|
Or the convention could settle on a compromise candidate who didn't even come close on the first round.
|
|
By contrast, no other proposal from federal lawmakers has come close to the scope of the CARE Act.
|
|
Sure, you can open a can, but that doesn't come close to the glory of the fresh fruit.
|
|
He works himself into stupors with a tireless pursuit that other people don't even come close to reaching.
|
|
Perhaps you've come close to filling an entire pillowcase with candy after a night of trick-or-treating.
|
|
"There is simply no other vehicle or car company that could even come close to offering what Tesla does."
|
|
It's easily the best phone, battery life-wise, that I've ever tested; only the bigger Huawei phones come close.
|
|
They do not even come close—ergo all the nutballs who jumped off of medieval castles to their deaths.
|
|
And shelf-stable pudding in the US can't even come close to the Milky, Israel's beloved, purple-packaged pudding.
|
|
Estonia is one of just five NATO member states meeting the recommended threshold; Latvia and Lithuania don't come close.
|
|
The scientists emphasized that their work did not even come close to reawakening consciousness in the disembodied pig brains.
|
|
"He wants to make it stick this time because he has come close to losing everything," a source said.
|
|
None have come close to German Steffen's time which was set in a now-banned synthetic suit in 2009.
|
|
That said, the sixth-generation Mustang, in all its variations, can't come close to matching its former glory days.
|
|
The only person to ever come close to being removed from office through this method was President Richard Nixon.
|
|
Trump is already on course to come close to winning 1,237 delegates -- enough to clinch the Republican nomination outright.
|
|
They'd come close, they'd go far away, they'd go up, they'd go down, and we'd have some missing time.
|
|
After all, it's not like current HD broadcasts come close to the quality of a regular Blu-ray disc.
|
|
And no casino in the world had -- at that time, had ever even come close to anything like that.
|
|
Bixby at least doesn't come close to fulfilling the promises made in the media push around the product's launch.
|
|
For the past week, the iPad's price point has matched, or has come close to matching, Black Friday prices.
|
|
The likes of Domino's Pizza and KFC have struggled to come close to expectations that were once sky-high.
|
|
Whole Foods' hundreds of retail locations obviously don't come close to  Walmart's 5,000 in the United States alone.
|
|
We've come close in some areas, but some areas have been below average, which makes the hole even deeper.
|
|
However, none of our moons come close to the size of this one, which creates a puzzle for astronomers.
|
|
The U.S., U.K., and Mexico come close, with 96, 90, and 89 average monthly apps installed in 2017, respectively.
|
|
But these changes do not come close to paying for the size of the tax cut that Republicans propose.
|
|
"Their appearance and texture come close to that of real chicken, but HuffPost editors detected something off," she said.
|
|
No one expected Beauty to come close to its debut, which clocked in at a record-setting $235 million.
|
|
No minimum wage increase can come close to the cascading effects of a wider distribution of ownership and profits.
|
|
Though power demand in the booming Mekong region is soaring, these dams will not come close to satisfying it.
|
|
Ryan has had no leadership role in the House, and he can't come close to matching Pelosi's fundraising prowess.
|
|
For that reason, robots like these will need some more work before they come close to replacing human workers.
|
|
That means that most people won't come close to one of the new smartphones, at least not right away.
|
|
None of the other territories come close to that figure; next in line is the U.K., with $29.5 million.
|
|
Recently, military jets on missions for the U.S. and Russia have come close enough to visually identify each other.
|
|
Often, people crumble because their assessment of the situation does not come close to the reality on the ground.
|
|
Since Asuka arrived in NXT late last year, nobody has beaten her—and honestly, nobody has even come close.
|
|
How can Fantastic Beasts ever come close with a message of "environmentalism and conservation of endangered animals is important"?
|
|
Though you can eat Ezell's in many places these days, the other ten don't come close to this location.
|
|
When they come close, Elkin seems to, in fact, be writing about contemporary cosmopolitanism, not the nineteenth-century flâneur.
|
|
PARIS — Two rounds of French Open tennis haven't come close to turning Marco Trungelliti of Argentina into a millionaire.
|
|
Such euphemisms do not come close to the "truth" of warfare, in the mountains of Italy or anywhere else.
|
|
Democrats' inability to come close is in large part because they can't win over white voters in the state.
|
|
But only three have even come close to winning: In 1992, Brown finished a distant second behind Arkansas Gov.
|
|
We entrust our children—our futures—to teachers, but we don't come close to paying them what they deserve.
|
|
Pompeo is poised to come close to a record on opposition votes received by a secretary of State nominee.
|
|
O, has tried to become the liberal counterpart to Fox News, but hasn't come close to Fox's ratings success.
|
|
The bottom line is that PACE won't come close to helping the very people cited by those promoting it.
|
|
According to Acampora, the blue chip stock index could come close to hitting 25,000 by the end of 2017.
|
|
Zoo director Pierre Caille said visitors are allowed to touch the rhinos when they come close to enclosure walls.
|
|
O'Reilly "has not even come close to rebutting this First Amendment presumption" that favors releasing the documents, Batts said.
|
|
Many have compared him to President Trump, although Trump has never come close to Bolsonaro's consistent praise of violence.
|
|
Instead, Donald J. Trump won the presidency, beating the only woman to ever come close to the Oval Office.
|
|
While he won't come close to Barkley's impressive numbers, he should put up some steady stats for fantasy players.
|
|
But on this day, the Chargers couldn't come close to replicating last week's wild-card round victory in Baltimore.
|
|
The arguments against the exceedingly modest reforms in the FIRST STEP Act don't come close to meeting this burden.
|
|
Although some big banks have failed to return to their all-time highs, many have at least come close.
|
|
So far, none of the many, many scandals to hit Trumpland have even come close to sinking his presidency.
|
|
And, you know, I've always said that we're not opposed to signing a deal—we've come close many times.
|
|
I mean, look at the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame: we're never come close to even being nominated.
|
|
But being married, with children, a big mortgage, and several businesses, it wouldn't come close to meeting my needs.
|
|
The high percentage of people who strongly disapprove would come close to dooming Trump if it holds for 2020.
|
|
Twice, he has come close: Juventus was runner-up to Barcelona in 2015, and to Ronaldo's Madrid in 2017.
|
|
But she doesn't expect her income to come close to the six figures she made earlier in her career.
|
|
In none of them does it come close to where it started this year, at around $60 a barrel.
|
|
The E.I.T.C. hasn't come close to making up for soaring pretax inequality, but it has made a meaningful difference.
|
|
First, in all probability COVID-85033 will not come close to the severity of any of the great pandemics.
|
|
Peter Roskam (R-Ill.) in a district the party hasn't come close to winning in more than a decade.
|
|
But those new funds do not come close to compensating for the money that the bill would strip away.
|
|
But they have not come close to the sort of public campaign that would put intense pressure on senators.
|
|
The Dodgers have come close, at least, losing the 2017 World Series to Houston and last year to Boston.
|
|
Yet somehow during her time at the red center Moira doesn't come close to falling apart as Offred does.
|
|
But nothing, and we mean nothing, can come close to the perfection that was Pizza Hut's Stuffed Garlic Knots.
|
|
Mr. Philbin argued that what Mr. Trump sought from Ukraine did not come close to a campaign finance violation.
|
|
Eugene McCarthy, who had come close to defeating LBJ in the New Hampshire primary, and JFK's brother, Robert Kennedy.
|
|
You will not have excuses, will not be given a choice and will have to come close to me.
|
|
But nothing will ever come close to what Sony achieved with the first PlayStation controller all those years ago.
|
|
We've never come close to hitting our deductible and we get a better rate if we pay in cash.
|
|
Several Democrats have also advocated increasing taxes, but the revenue generated would not come close to funding their proposals.
|
|
While it hasn&apost disappeared, it&aposs come close enough that I feel relatively confident saying millennials killed it.
|
|
The good news for Cara's Postmates spending habits ... she doesn't come close to Post Malone and his $40k tab.
|
|
Democrats have already won several deeply red state special elections around the country and come close in several others.
|
|
Nevertheless, their debut still holds a vital quality that none of their work since has come close to recreating.
|
|
It was the most violent flooding California had ever seen, and no storms have come close to topping it since.
|
|
WATCH: Ten Questions You Always Wanted to Ask a Saudi Matchmaker Have you ever come close to firing your gun?
|
|
NASA's Center for Near Earth Object Studies keeps track of the asteroids and comets that come close to our planet.
|
|
This to me is my favorite part … So I was thinking, 'Have I ever come close to anything like that?
|
|
The world's oldest living human — the 116-year-old Susannah Mushatt Jones of Brooklyn, New York — doesn't even come close.
|
|
You can be damn sure Cruise's won't come close to matching the insanely sick special effects from the original series.
|
|
We're talking about results that no pedicure can achieve and no foot cream can come close to, all for $229.
|
|
Members of Congress prize their ability to control federal spending, and most presidential budgets never come close to full enactment.
|
|
But Hillary Clinton could come close enough to effectively decide the Democratic nomination if she wins big across the Northeast.
|
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It does this by rendering blue gridlines in the air when you come close to walking out of your playspace.
|
|
I'm not saying that Verizon set out to replicate Inspector Gadget's beloved Gadgetmobile, but damn if they didn't come close.
|
|
Israel and Hamas fought three wars from 2007-2014 and have come close to all-out conflict several times since.
|
|
There, creative director Alessandro Michele has spun a web so peculiar and grand, it captures everyone who dare come close.
|
|
The have only come close to such a high level once since then when, hitting 135,20183 tonnes in March 2018.
|
|
"It does not come close to millions," she said, without elaborating on how Israel's researchers had calculated those lower figures.
|
|
Mashable tried more than 20 of the VR experiences at this year's Sundance alone, and nothing anywhere has come close.
|
|
I never come close to meeting my deductible and begin to feel like therapy isn't a viable option for me.
|
|
Theaters would have to average more than $65,000 each in order for "Endgame" to come close to hitting that level.
|
|
Neither Buttigieg nor any other 2020 Democrat has come close to matching the Trump campaign's first-quarter fundraising haul, however.
|
|
While thermometers are expected to reach into the mid-90s only at inland locations, typically cooler areas will come close.
|
|
But if you look at megachurches on a global scale, Lakewood's weekend attendance of about 52,000 members doesn't come close.
|
|
These are the best prices that we've seen so far on Samsung's 2019 lineup, and other retailers haven't come close.
|
|
She has also come close to pinpointing the winning margin in other races that a majority of her profession missed.
|
|
And Buttigieg is right: He won't win the nomination -- or come close -- without making inroads in the black community. 2.
|
|
Though four other states have mandates in place, none of them come close to the terms New York just passed.
|
|
"It was a little surreal, the last time I couldn't even come close to hitting a ball out," Conforto said.
|
|
For many consumers, the savings from low fuel costs doesn't even come close to the added cost of health insurance.
|
|
Thomas said the U.S. military has come close to killing Islamic State leader Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi in recent years.
|
|
And at Playa El Doradillo, baleen whales come close to the shore and put on fantastic shows for beach-goers.
|
|
He signed my t-shirt, and I have never come close to being as happy in a singular moment since.
|
|
He would get very tired, come close to nodding off, and then a jolt of energy would shock him awake.
|
|
Passenger transportation numbers have accelerated since the start of the year even as freight volumes have come close to stalling.
|
|
Bright, with a screenplay by Victor Frankenstein and Chronicle scribe Max Landis, doesn't even come close to saying anything meaningful.
|
|
Williamson is vanishingly unlikely to win, or even come close, but the amount of press attention she's getting is troubling.
|
|
That will not come close to paying for the commission's ambitious ideas, which would cost 40 billion pesos a year.
|
|
"Rapinoe, who is an outspoken critic of Trump, told Jones, "To say it's disappointing is ... it doesn't even come close.
|
|
But that model hasn't appeared, and even the rosiest expert estimates say it won't come close to being revenue-neutral.
|
|
"I have come close enough to [mental illness] where I know I am not completely well myself," said Springsteen, 69.
|
|
Biden and Sanders would also break that record should they win; the just-turned-70 Elizabeth Warren would come close.
|
|
In that survey I would probably show as liberal, but that does not come close to explaining my sociopolitical beliefs.
|
|
The only works that come close to the first Cubist canvases are the so-called "Monster" paintings from 1924-27.
|
|
They definitely have a learning curve but come close to delivering the robust toolkit you'd find on desktop editing software.
|
|
To say that Ward uses and repurposes found and familiar objects doesn't come close to the power of his work.
|
|
In the near term, neither party is likely to come close to the 60-vote majority needed to break filibusters.
|
|
And the kind of program tweaks that have been discussed by budget cutters don't come close to closing that gap.
|
|
The only campaign to even come close received a mediocre reception, raising a mere 3 percent of its $250k goal.
|
|
The app has come close to snagging the No. 1 spot on the Top Grossing chart before, Sensor Tower notes.
|
|
The pharmacy sends what it can back for credit, but it doesn't come close to replacing what the hospital paid.
|
|
That represented an all-time high — a high that we haven't come close to regaining over the past 15 years.
|
|
So this drop in viewership isn't hugely surprising, but streaming viewers haven't even come close to making up for it.
|
|
I don't even really know what words to offer, because words feel hollow; they don't come close, and I'm sorry.
|
|
"He didn't come close to the standard of 'substantial assistance,'" prosecutor Andrew Goldstein told the judge at the sentencing hearing.
|
|
For now, none of his declared opponents come close to Mr. Netanyahu and his conservative Likud Party in the polls.
|
|
If Sanders wins California and no one else clears 15% statewide, he would probably come close to winning 400 delegates.
|
|
Some notable exceptions come close — Dean Obeidallah and Maysoon Zayid's "The Big Brown Comedy Hour" is performed throughout the year.
|
|
I haven't found a more budget-friendly option that's as hydrating, but Neutrogena's Hydro Boost Gel Moisturizer may come close.
|
|
Mr. Buttigieg, who nearly deadlocked Mr. Sanders in Iowa and New Hampshire, did not come close to him on Saturday.
|
|
Just getting out to grocery shop was such a relief that I would come close to crying in the store.
|
|
But while the efforts so far have lowered the city's emissions, none have come close to erasing its carbon footprint.
|
|
Pleco is handy for quick translations, and includes audio files so I can come close to getting the pronunciation right.
|
|
But sources with knowledge of the discussions said a wall alone does not come close to meeting White House demands.
|
|
In "The Jungle," Mr. Marsalis for the most part finds the sweet spot, despite stretches that come close to pastiche.
|
|
The group he assembled was told for months it wouldn't win this season, wouldn't come close to reaching the playoffs.
|
|
But it does not come close to covering operating costs, which last year amounted to a loss of $415 million.
|
|
So you come close to being in those lonely Texas hills and in the clubby mustiness of the U.S. Congress.
|
|
"When you're having sex, when you climax or come close, connect with your intention and send it energy," Herstik says.
|
|
Ryan has not won at the top level, but he has come close, finishing second at this year's Daytona 500.
|
|
First, we managed to come close to our old time target (20 minutes) instead of our regular length (30 minutes).
|
|
But the FBI's probe, in any event, wasn't designed to ascertain the truth, or at least come close to it.
|
|
The Republican presidential nominee's campaign has never come close to raising $100 million in a monthly reporting period this cycle.
|
|
But even if Haspel disavows torture, it wouldn't come close to erasing concerns to a degree that would favor confirmation.
|
|
The Rockets trailed wire-to-wire, never even forging a tie, though they did come close, getting within five late.
|
|
In zero states has the number of primary votes even come close to the number of Republican general election votes.
|
|
Their budgets also had a lot more slack; basic necessities didn't even come close to consuming nearly half their income.
|
|
While the modern primary system has not seen a brokered convention, both the Republican and Democratic parties have come close.
|
|
Trail leaves the Navy in despair — here, we see him come close to hanging himself — because of its brutal, institutional bigotry.
|
|
In most dimensions, the best sphere packings discovered to date didn't even come close to the density limits this method generated.
|
|
Indiana once looked like a potentially winnable state for Cruz — but he didn't even come close, losing by about 16 points.
|
|
LEVIN: And those six countries, they don&apost even come close to making up the majority of Muslims in the world.
|
|
Despite the need and entertainment factor, on my best day vacuuming I could never come close to what this thing gets.
|
|
The book has come close several times to being turned into a movie over the three decades since Good Omens' publication.
|
|
Rottman said the government had come close a few times to charging journalists under the Espionage Act, but never did so.
|
|
And yet, the red-robed judges opined, there is no sign that the NPD could come close to fulfilling its goals.
|
|
This isn't the first time that a bobsleigh race has come close to — or in complete — contact with a racetrack employee.
|
|
Perhaps the 5 Pro could have come close to the XT's detail if it took a lighter touch with noise reduction.
|
|
The person with the longest documented life in modern times, Jeanne Calment, reached 122, but no one else has come close.
|
|
Maybe that won't involve you making an EP with Young Thug, but with a song this invigorating, you'll probably come close.
|
|
Companies have conducted site searches in the past, but none have come close to the scale of the Amazon HQ2 search.
|
|
You will do more interviewing here — of victims, suspects, witnesses — than you will ever come close to in any other unit.
|
|
On an OFO day, however, pipeline operators can fine users if the actual shipments do not come close to matching nominations.
|
|
The rally, however, doesn't come close to bitcoin's run in late 2017, when it hit all-time highs of around $20,000.
|
|
DaVinci's most iconic frescos can't even come close to the sfumato in this photo — where does Castilla end and Newt begin?
|
|
The underpinnings of life have complexities that the sought-after simplicities of the laboratory mouse have not come close to cracking.
|
|
That said, we haven't even come close to removing the underlying shame and stigma at the heart of society's fat-phobia.
|
|
Right now this separation is killing me, but in my heart I know that nothing would come close to separating us.
|
|
The mortgage is $9 and the rent is $17, but we come close to breaking even after taxes, utilities, and maintenance.
|
|
Right now this separation is killing me, but in my heart I know that nothing could come close to separating us.
|
|
I didn't think anything could come close to touching the magic that is SkinMedica's TNS Essential Serum until I discovered this.
|
|
Israel and Hamas have come close to serious conflict in recent weeks after four months of violence along Gaza&aposs border.
|
|
Players with Anunoby's profile are incredibly valuable in the modern NBA, even if they don't come close to reaching Leonard's heights.
|
|
That is a topic that we don't ever come close to, even when we think we are trying to be lighthearted.
|
|
Also, the restaurant industry is inspected frequently—no national restaurant chain could come close to having that as a business model.
|
|
Pablo has been riding bikes in New York for more than two decades and had come close to accidents many times.
|
|
The antenna lines on the frame spoil the effect somewhat, and overall, the manufacturing quality doesn't come close to an iPhone.
|
|
But abortion funds, while they provide a lifeline for many women in need, can't come close to filling the funding gap.
|
|
He expects the company to come close to break-even in 2017 and to book a small net loss this year.
|
|
But let's face it, none of those come close to being the best Doug Brown videos you can find on YouTube.
|
|
That legislation ensure Iran does not come close to possessing a nuclear weapon, with close to a 1-year breakout timeline.
|
|
It's unlikely the appeal will come close to being fully funded, given the focus on developing crises in Syria and Yemen.
|
|
The big difference is that many other games never come close to reaching those numbers, let alone reach them so quickly.
|
|
While most people would be terrified to come close to a shark that big, Ramsey was at peace with the moment.
|
|
But none of these even come close to being the most important feature of iOS 11: Do Not Disturb While Driving.
|
|
The two companies had already come close to a merger in 2006 but opposition from the Italian government blocked the deal.
|
|
But if you're really serious about photography, the iPhone doesn't come close to the power of a stand-alone DSLR camera.
|
|
As he performed his 2002 track, "Come Close," she smiled and waved her arms ... then got serenaded with the final verse.
|
|
Garland had come close to being nominated before, undergoing the intrusive vetting process and meeting Obama for an interview in 2010.
|
|
There is no guarantee that players who go through a slump of such magnitude come close to regaining their old form.
|
|
You come close, they'll rip your hair out and steal your food from your bowl and throw poop at your head.
|
|
The tax plan and child tax credit expansion recently proposed by President Trump do not come close to offering workable solutions.
|
|
That's usually not a bad thing in a pastry, but it didn't come close to resembling Cheez-Its or pizza crust.
|
|
You could buy every other fan on this list and still not come close to the price tag of the TP04.
|
|
As well intentioned as his intent may have been, ObamaCare did not come close to what was promised to we citizens.
|
|
WE HAVE NOT BEEN PERSISTENTLY AT THAT LEVEL AND WE'VE COME CLOSE TO IT BEFORE AND WE'VE SEEN INFLATION TAPER OFF.
|
|
It's because of Donald Trump, an astonishing figure unlike any who has ever come close to assuming power in this country.
|
|
Despite pledges to change that sort of behavior once he became President, Trump has not done so -- or even come close.
|
|
This said, the AFBF says that 85033's numbers do not come close to breaking the highs set during the 1980s.
|
|
"Until recently, no 's' surname had ever come close to the girls' top 1000," the Web site Baby Name Wizard notes.
|
|
Historically, the totals that each party's candidates post in the primary come close to the partisan division in the November election.
|
|
Though other varieties like the Zestar and the SweeTango have come close, it's hard to match the Honeycrisp's sweet, refreshing crunch.
|
|
Unfortunately, none of these moments in the film come close to the plain spoken words of Lisane Basquiat at the screening.
|
|
The brash, obstreperous, high-macho bombast of Schnabel's work does not come close to Picasso's intelligent, sensitive, and brilliantly bold art.
|
|
But a number of AI experts say that while China can come close, it will be hard to catch up completely.
|
|
The big picture: China "won't be able to come close to the U.S. in a tit-for-tat battle," writes CNBC.
|
|
Those numbers also undersold Iguodala's actual on-court impact, considering they don't come close to capturing the value of his defense.
|
|
In Iceland, you can visit a glacier and also come close to some of the most active volcanoes in the world.
|
|
Since then, health workers have come close to ridding the world of just two other diseases: polio and Guinea worm (dracunculiasis).
|
|
I didn't come close to that but it was good to throw the ball like I want to throw the ball.
|
|
Few elections of more recent vintage have come close to that mark, with 60.1% turnout in 2016 and 58.6% in 2012.
|
|
Connecticut, Oregon and Delaware have all come close to passing the compact in recent years; they should get it done now.
|
|
I quickly found the quality of health care in Texas did not come close to what I receive in New York.
|
|
Financially, no other domestic club can hope to compete and so, as a result, few can come close on the field.
|
|
The sides have not come close to a settlement at any point in the 28 months since Bouchard filed the lawsuit.
|
|
Iran has never enriched at the level of purity needed to produce a weapon, inspectors say, but they have come close.
|
|
No one has managed to beat Nadal and Djokovic in the same clay-court tournament, and Tsitspas did not come close.
|
|
But health workers say only a house-by-house approach can come close to ensuring enough doses are distributed each month.
|
|
No one has come close to beating his streak (the nearest challenger won 20 consecutive games), though Holzhauer is closing in.
|
|
While she did not explicitly admit to Mr. Kimmel that she had signed such an agreement, she seemed to come close.
|
|
The criminal justice system does not come close to addressing sexual abuse, especially when the events lie far in the past.
|
|
In fact, Mr. Northam, a Virginia Military Institute graduate with a strong Southern pedigree, didn't even come close to matching Gov.
|
|
Only Dinamo Kiev, which reached the semifinals in 1999, has come close to winning the Champions League in the years since.
|
|
The Dow Jones Industrial Average did come close to 30,000 points, hitting an all time high of 29,398 on Valentine's Day.
|
|
According to the proprietor, his forebears started the stroopwafel recipe here and many have imitated it, but never have come close.
|
|
By sheer dollar volume, the Chinese won't be able to come close to the U.S. in a tit-for-tat battle.
|
|
I worked so hard to just come close to my peers, which I didn't do, because they were so technically skilled.
|
|
None gives Americans comfort that he or she could do better than, or even come close to, Trump's record economic results.
|
|
Case-in-point to the district's independent nature: no Democratic gubernatorial candidate has come close to carrying the district since 2002.
|
|
That game gave Oklahoma a marquee victory that, going into the weekend, Utah and Baylor had not come close to matching.
|
|
Software service companies and civil liberties groups have urged Congress to update ECPA for years, and previous efforts have come close.
|
|
The Apple Watch Series 3, released in 2017, was the first to come close to living up to Apple's original vision.
|
|
In a crowded field, Sanders has never come close to his 2016 strength, shedding more than half of his old support.
|
|
How a sketchy 'biblical' diet was sold to MAGA America Still, overall, white evangelicals haven't come close to fully jumping ship.
|
|
But Emanuel told reporters that the $10,000 bond "doesn't even come close" to what the city spent investigating the alleged attack.
|
|
If you add up all the NDCs worldwide, they don't come close to keeping us below 2°C of global warming.
|
|
It's come close to victory with Justin Wong and Mike Ross in recent years, but so far, no first place finishes.
|
|
In fact, most candidates in the 25 person field have not come close to clearing the qualifications for the third debate.
|
|
No other modern president has come close to such failing grades from the American people at about 277 days in office.
|
|
But that can't account for the entire decline, and it doesn't come close to excusing humans' roles in causing outright extinctions.
|
|
But development rights have been so far collectivised in many cities as to come close to undermining the very notion of property.
|
|
However, Russia has come close to American ships and planes in the past, which sadly doesn't make Friday's episode all that novel.
|
|
And, yes, again, Trump has come close to 46% approval before -- he got to 45% in June 2018 and in January 20163.
|
|
Chances are, if you have to force yourself to do something, you probably won't come close to finishing it any time soon.
|
|
This a football town to the core, and our squad has come close on occasion, but like this city, they lose, too.
|
|
But inflation hasn't come close to the BOJ's target as companies remain wary of raising wages, leaving households cautious of boosting spending.
|
|
Ultra Sun boasts 100+ new creatures from last year's iteration, and no, I haven't even come close to catching them all yet.
|
|
But Meadows himself has admitted that their proposal is unrealistic — and won't come close to making up the difference in revenues anyway.
|
|
"We haven't seen supply (of the Switch) even come close to catching demand," a GameStop executive said on a post-earnings call.
|
|
Herman, 38, has never played the Masters and had not come close to winning in 105 career starts on the PGA Tour.
|
|
The storm is the fifth to make landfall in Taiwan (or come close enough to affect the island) so far this year.
|
|
"If they have a large space motion, then the chance they will come close to another background star is high," says Sahu.
|
|
Hard to wonder why they're doing so well, even if their parties don't come close to matching the excellence of their product.
|
|
We hadn't had sex exactly but we'd come close, and afterwards she was apologetic because she'd been the one to kiss me.
|
|
If Sanders manages to beat Clinton in New York, or even come close, it would have a seismic impact on the race.
|
|
The only thing that's even come close to the Hear experience for me is the sound-centric John Krasinski film Nobody Walks.
|
|
This does not come close to stopping it; but it does mean inmates must be creative when it comes to art supplies.
|
|
In South Carolina, however, neither Warren nor Sanders come close to Biden, who sits with a stronghold of 43 percent of support.
|
|
But the Court again decided that such tallying was not required; it said the Hialeah ordinances did not come close to constitutionality.
|
|
Moreover, the electrical generation capacities we have at present do not come close to meeting the needs of an all-electric fleet.
|
|
Bresch, started the hearing by arguing that the company isn't making profits that come close to the more than $224 sticker price.
|
|
I think I'm a good hands-on dad, but I still don't think I come close to doing the work she does.
|
|
As far as I can tell, that phone doesn't exist yet — though the Light Phone 2 sounds like it may come close.
|
|
" Kavita, 25 "I am a TB (Tuberculosis) patient and because I am Dalit, the doctor will not even come close to me.
|
|
The only rival that has come close to unseating Beats from its established dominance among athletes has been Apple's own-brand AirPods.
|
|
Its sedan Model S and SUV Model X didn't come close to that type of production number in that amount of time.
|
|
For one, it could help us better predict which asteroids are going to come close to us, and how close they'll get.
|
|
The fact that Mr Trump appears to have come close to setting red lines on North Korea does not alter that analysis.
|
|
Bully for them, but that means that more than 234 percent of the population hasn't even come close to experiencing broadband speeds.
|
|
The fractured left has failed for decades to come close to winning Colombia's presidency, overshadowed by right-wing contenders who promised security.
|
|
While some cities have enacted bans against local governments' use of the technology, no comprehensive federal bills have come close to passing.
|
|
To come close to doing all of this justice on screen, you'd need — well, something exactly like a 12-part HBO miniseries.
|
|
It doesn't come close to Deliveroo or Uber, but the startup has more money on its bank account than most food startups.
|
|
Nothing quite replicates the heady rush of first love, but Call Me By Your Name might come close – it's that swoon-worthy.
|
|
It looks good, runs well and is brimming with specs in a unibody aluminum frame that competitors haven't come close to matching.
|
|
The only other battery packs I've seen come close are ChargeTech's, which retail for $249 and are a little bulkier in design.
|
|
He's come close in the past, agonizingly close, and when it didn't happen he was so crushed he couldn't even stand up.
|
|
State confident in his guilt The new DNA evidence "does not come close to showing Williams is actually innocent," the documents state.
|
|
A handful of other teams have come close to matching those high-water marks, and most of them captured championships as well.
|
|
But that conversation, and others surrounding his book, didn't come close to being the first time Cruz happily discussed pornography on camera.
|
|
Recap: Four years ago, Spain's two-party system fragmented, and no single party has come close to winning a parliamentary majority since.
|
|
"The upcoming round of bids is irrelevant because no one will come close to matching price expectations," one of the sources said.
|
|
I'd heard others talk about health insurance for their pets, but seven years in, the numbers hadn't come close to making sense.
|
|
" Only once, in the entire novel, do two regular people come close to tossing aside all inhibitions and getting it on: "Noya.
|
|
Director Pierre Caille said visitors are allowed to touch the rhinos when the animals come close to the walls of their enclosure.
|
|
As others have noted, the GOP platform does not come close to representing the views of Republican voters on money in politics.
|
|
I'm not sure when, exactly, Mr. Trump thinks America was great, but Trumponomics wouldn't come close to bringing the old days back.
|
|
However, that doesn't come close to replacing the 25 million jobs that are predicted to be eliminated by 2027 because of technology.
|
|
Biden steadied some nerves in Detroit, but he didn't come close to answering all the questions that still hang over his candidacy.
|
|
Some nearly did in the years before steroid testing, when home run records fell, but no batter has come close to hitting .
|
|
THERE IS NO WAY WE CAN COME CLOSE TO 3% IN A LONG TERM BASIS IF WE DONT GET COMPREHENSIVE TAX REFORM.
|
|
Her small voice doesn't come close to matching the world-weary groan of Dietrich or the ferocious feline yowl of Ms. Lemper.
|
|
The closest thing I think could come close is probably the Gathering of the Juggalos but I haven't attended that festival (yet).
|
|
Clinton on Tuesday, adding that they hoped to come close and then start winning more delegates in contests starting in late March.
|
|
The Publishers Weekly list, which tracks closer to Bookscan and which Regnery says it will use from now on, doesn't come close.
|
|
On top of that, you can program automatic motion sensors that make the mirror turn on when you come close to it.
|
|
The spending also reshaped the race for other candidates who couldn't come close to competing with what the Bloomberg campaign was doing.
|
|
The extinction rate we've seen in the past 400 years doesn't come close to rivaling the Big Five — at least not yet.
|
|
It's like how a Taco Bell taco doesn't come close to one made in a Mexican taco truck, it's just totally different.
|
|
There is no single dominant platform for news like there is for video and music — although Facebook is beginning to come close.
|
|
Simply returning to previous levels would be a significant win for American farmers — but it would not come close to $473 trillion.
|
|
As Adair said of Trump, "I can confidently say no major US politician has come close to those sorts of low levels."
|
|
I haven't tested any alternatives that come close to the quality and performance of the Simplehuman Touch-Free Dual-Compartment Trash Can.
|
|
But younger retirees and those on the verge of retirement haven't come close to making up what they lost in the recession.
|
|
She didn't come close anywhere else and was relegated to fourth place, after Biden, Sanders and Bloomberg, in a number of contests.
|
|
Unlike Clinton, who won two of the first three early states, the former vice president had come close to bottom before ascending.
|
|
Britain First calls itself "a patriotic political party and street movement" but has never come close to electing a member of Parliament.
|
|
While an impressive effort given the obvious limitations of the Mega Drive's hardware, it did not come close to the arcade original.
|
|
She also said she supported developing the ESM "to give it tasks that come close to those of a international monetary fund".
|
|
Arab citizens make up a fifth of Israel's population and for the first time have come close to proportional representation in Parliament.
|
|
No amount of basic income proposed thus far, however, could come close to replacing things like Social Security, food stamps, and Medicare.
|
|
It's also hard to imagine who else but Ryan could come close to securing the 22019 votes needed to be elected Speaker.
|
|
Government forces and allies have routed rebels and come close to encircling Aleppo, a divided city half held by rebels for years.
|
|
"I haven't even come close to those future-type considerations," Jerry Jones said Sunday after Dallas' 24-22 loss to the Jets.
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"I have come close enough to [mental illness] where I know I am not completely well myself," Springsteen told Esquire last year.
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I did come close, once, during the summer between my freshman and sophomore years in college — or at least I thought so.
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Come close to the screen because we have a lot of information to get through and we're going to do it fast.
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But a diamond ring, silk dress, or designer bag couldn't come close to Mike Nipper's gift to his wife of 51 years.
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But a government source told CNBC that the rate will come close to 100 percent of Mylan's sales of EpiPen through Medicaid.
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Chepngetich, who has clocked the third fastest marathon of all-time, did not come close to matching that in the punishing conditions.
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Under the law, though, they should have paid 55% tax on gifts -- a figure that $52 million doesn't even come close to.
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Malaysia has come close to eliminating human malaria, but has seen thousands of people infected with a species of monkey malaria parasite.
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New Delhi has an aircraft carrier and nuclear-powered submarines in its fleet, he said, assets Pakistan can't come close to matching.
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Confident that the league had not come close to reaching that point, Cuban responded with an estimate of 5 to 10 percent.
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Tiafoe — known as "Big Foe," and one of the few black players on tour — could not come close to duplicating Tsitsipas's effort.
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The level of hypocrisy shown by pro-choice advocates does not even come close to that of the so-called pro-lifers.
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My gut tells me I am open to love, but the times I've come close to it are few and far between.
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If you add up all the country pledges worldwide, they don't come close to keeping us below 2°C of global warming.
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What those new provisions will be, and whether they would come close to maintaining insurance coverage at levels seen under Obamacare, is unclear.
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But the project quickly stalled amid international opposition and various domestic complications, and the Chinese companies have not come close to beginning extraction.
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Twitter stock has failed to come close to its peak of $74 per share in December 2013, a month after its public offering.
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I will admit that I didn't come close to these speeds in my time with the Boosted Mini, and I didn't want to.
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The Medicaid reimbursement "doesn't even come close to the expenditures" for an abortion, a counseling manager at one facility told Kimport and Rowland.
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Wages for most working people don't even come close to what is needed to pay for housing and to survive in the area.
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Wallen says his small headlining tour last year didn't come close to evoking the reaction of the one that just ended March 30.
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It won't come close, because the bill will likely address airports, water pipes, railroads, and more, along with the stuff you drive on.
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But despite Harvey's coastal devastation, the first 24 hours of the storm, at least, has not come close to matching forecasters' worst fears.
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Facebook is often seen as an untouchable behemoth in the social media realm, a site so big that no competitor can come close.
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We gave Facebook ample time to comply with the law, but their two-page spreadsheet doesn't come close to meeting their public obligation.
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Still, not even the viral pigeon dating game has come close to the cultural spread and buzz Dream Daddy received upon its release.
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That's ultimately why May decided to postpone the Brexit vote, as she couldn't come close to mustering the support to get it through.
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Their claimed nine-hour battery life off one charge is so good that I've never been able to come close to draining them.
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She's a bona fide screw-up, a person who will never come close to being anyone like Madison and seems content with that.
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"There's no competition for the next two or three years that can come close this level of fidelity in the waveguides," he argues.
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Avegant's product, while superior in image quality and focus at a distance, doesn't come close to producing these levels of tracking and interaction.
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Nintendo's attempt to miniaturize the NES after 30 years doesn't even come close to being as small as this tiny faux console is.
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Summarizing Donald Trump's worldview isn't easy, but this may come close: The world is a violent place, and it demands a violent response.
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"TSA has not come close to doing a thorough security assessment of the airports in Cuba," he said, referring the Transportation Security Administration.
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"Playing a team like Gonzaga requires an efficient performance, and we did not come close to that," Loyola Marymount coach Mike Dunlap said.
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Ironically, when it comes to weird beers, Dogfish Head didn't come close to topping some of the other offerings from this year's festival.
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The Democrats have not come close to generating the kind of viewership interest that the Republicans did in the run-up to 20193.
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The Prime Minister has never come close to losing a vote in the Commons on Brexit, so her position was never under threat.
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The company sells trackers for as low as $15 here in the States — something Fitbit and Apple can't come close to competing with.
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"Today, more than 99 percent of our customers do not come close to using a terabyte," Comcast executive vice president Marcien Jenckes says.
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However, Zhuhai, billed as China's biggest airport when it opened in 1995, has never come close to its 35 million passenger annual capacity.
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All of the drugs I've ever put up my nose don't even come close to like how I feel—the love I feel.
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No production cars come close to being that fast; for comparison, the fastest "regular" Model S speeds up to 103mph in 2.4 seconds.
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The only change is they are one step closer to getting help, typically help they could not have even come close to affording.
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Half the girls in school want to be like her, and the other half hate her because they know they'll never come close.
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And if you can get the price down to 30 or 35 million [dollars] per mission, nobody else can come close to that.
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That's astounding, when you consider the billion dollar corporations that sink millions into ad campaigns that never come close to such a feat.
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According to Justin Hartley's interview with Us Weekly, fans have not come close to cracking the mystery that is Jack's (Milo Ventimiglia) death.
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The same applies to the parliamentary elections: Marine Le Pen's Front National will do well, but will not come close to commanding majorities.
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Black people have very real, tangible enemies in this country—Justin Bieber doesn't even come close to making the top of that list.
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And the mild-mannered headline "Ahead of Vote, Promised Treasury Analysis of Tax Bill Proves Elusive" doesn't come close to doing it justice.
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He doesn't come close to matching the experience of those other men or the objectivity of those other men in their previous positions.
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Younglai also talked about the director's responsibility in selecting actors that come close enough to resembling the physical appearance of the chosen subject.
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The votes are still being counted, but Trump's two remaining rivals, Ted Cruz and John Kasich, don't even appear to have come close.
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Both countries have also come close to signing some sort of deal in the past before talks fell apart or suffered a setback.
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Representative Hank Johnson, a Georgia Democrat, introduced a bill in 2013 seeking to abolish the practice, but it hasn't come close to passing.
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The traditional pump uses air-based suction to stimulate milk production — but for many women, it doesn't come close to simulating breast-feeding.
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These deaths, above 30,000 a year, exceed or come close to the annual death toll from HIV/AIDS when that disease was rampant.
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Democrats, on the other hand, are busy spending resources against each other in the primary and haven't come close to Trump's fundraising success.
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While Smith doesn't come close to Williams' hyperactive, pop culture loving, frequently transfigured Genie, he successfully puts his own spin on the character.
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And in the end, science — an institution terminally invested in believing itself honorable — will sort of come close to admitting that it isn't.
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The commission has come close to legal battles over the issue twice this year, and a third challenge would not be a surprise.
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Not to give my girl the cold shoulder or anything, but La'Porsha didn't come close to nailing that because no one really could.
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After taking a freaking beating I failed the mission and got partial pay that didn't come close to patching my mechs back together.
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The logistics of the campaign's organizing and volunteer efforts were outstanding — did any other campaign come close to her phone banks and outreach?
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That's part of why Texas' minority party candidates must win some support from Republicans to even come close to winning a statewide race.
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While there are other options, including Twitter and Snapchat and Oath, none come close to the scale and targeting options that Facebook provides.
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Extell's most expensive units — high-floor apartments that Mr. Barnett said will list for around $4 million — could come close to record territory.
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I don't know what brand it was, but to this day nothing has come close to being as delicious as that beer was.
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They did not come close to filling the church, which could hold several hundred people with its rows of pews and horseshoe balcony.
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The number has not changed despite several academic assessments concluding that death certificates did not come close to tallying the storm's fatal toll.
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My nightly skincare regime, it probably goes without saying, doesn't come close to the glow I experienced at the on-site Chuan Spa.
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With its attainable starting price, the Pixelbook Go provides a shockingly luxurious portable computing experience that similarly-priced laptops couldn't come close to.
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"The bottom line on current alcohol taxes in the United States is that they don't come close to covering the costs," Naimi said.
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Last season, Shakhtar ended a 263-game unbeaten run for City, but it did not come close to replicating that win this time.
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Dick estimated that he has around 1,500 unreleased tapes of his brother's songs, though he hasn't come close to listening to them all.
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Why doesn't Congress investigate the French program to extrapolate elements that would come close to meeting the requirements of both Republicans and Democrats?
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No court has ever come close to holding that the Federal Election Campaign Act's ban on political spending by foreign nationals is improper.
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Doctors come close to putting her on a ventilator when one of the only two antibiotics that still work for her kick in.
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But because there are no specific codes established for this procedure, reimbursement doesn't come close to covering any effort to do this well.
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" — JIMMY FALLON "That's right, 'Parasite' is the first non-English speaking film to win best picture, though some Arnold Schwarzenegger movies come close.
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Pedro Sánchez, Spain's caretaker Socialist prime minister, won a repeat national election in November, but did not come close to a parliamentary majority.
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The bottom lineCubo's AI alerts parents to unsafe sleep conditions without any wearable devices, a feature that few monitors even come close to.
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The Samsung Galaxy Buds are also one of the only pairs of truly-wireless earbuds to even come close to topping the AirPods.
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But tuition paid by students doesn't come close to covering the cost of public colleges and universities, which educate 80 percent of undergraduates.
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However, that doesn't even come close to Spotify's free service, which has around 40 million songs, if you don't mind the occasional ad.
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Economists can come close to an answer, enabling the company to make better decisions about which benefits to include and which to scrap.
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Fitch projects total system credit growth to come close to 10% this year, with consumer loans accounting for around 25% of this growth.
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Pinterest has plenty of cash: It raised around $1.5 billion in venture capital funding and has come close to profitability in the past.
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The only president to come close was George H.W. Bush with 8 Cabinet changes, but that was over his entire 4-year term.
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Basically, he's the bad ass every country star with a pair of balls wants to be, but can't come close to ever being.
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"The only bloodfeeding insect that may come close is the blackfly," Michael Riehle, an entomologist at the University of Arizona, told Tech Insider.
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That could see the club come close to Manchester City's new "long-term" deal with Puma, signed last season for a reported $860 million.
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It has to face the challenge of being compared to Twitter with its slowing user growth and monetization that doesn't come close to Facebook's.
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Marvel's latest simply doesn't have enough time left in theaters to come close, especially with Avengers: Infinity War only a handful of weeks away.
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For admissions to Georgetown to come close to equaling payment for unpaid labor, its credential would have to be worth its weight in income.
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Alliance CEO Carlos Ghosn contends the carmakers couldn't have come close without that partnership, which reportedly generated 5.7 billion euros in "synergies" last year.
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Outspoken, opinionated, brash, bold, blunt, irreverent, inflammatory — none of these words come close to doing justice to the self-made woman's way with words.
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The reveals didn't even come close in magnitude to the previous rounds (wow, Sasha took off her helmet — who could have seen that coming?).
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"If they want to come close to the European Union so badly let them prove that they can," the former Dutch foreign minister said.
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Over the next six months, to come close to their goal by raising $1.15 million with the help of family, friends and strangers alike.
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St. Louis figured it could get about $235 million from those sources for a new Rams stadium, so Las Vegas could presumably come close.
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But if the movie can come close to the emotional grace and creative idiosyncrasy of Hogancamp's art, then Oscar may not be far behind.
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In fact, no one will ever come close to being the icon, advocate, unconventional royal, and, ultimately, tragic figure as the Princess of Wales.
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There are of course many different services providing Broadband and TV packages, but few come close to this option when it comes to entertainment.
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But this year, in a crowded field, Sanders has never come close to his 2016 strength, shedding more than half of his old support.
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In typical fashion, Rick and Aaron come close to getting bitten, but come out unscathed and with a truck full of supplies for Negan.
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As a tool in the customer engagement arsenal, bots have value, but right now, they don't come close to living up to the hype.
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"It is submitted that the facts alleged by the applicant do not come close to establishing a qualifying breach of duty," his lawyer argued.
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During their performance of "Señorita," Shawn Mendes and Camila Cabello appeared to come close to kissing right at the end of the song.
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The 90 seats it is expected to win, combined with around 80 for the Socialist Party (PSOE), would come close to an overall majority.
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What was so shocking was that no film has ever come close to reaching $300 million, let alone $350 million, in its opening weekend.
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We don't yet know how secure it will be, or whether it will come close to the efficiency of Touch ID and fingerprint reading.
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While both sides played the inducement game, Reagan was only a governor and couldn't come close to offering up the same level of perks.
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So perhaps by this time next year, someone will have perfected the cable replacement — or at least come close enough for most of us.
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Corporate tax receipts, mainly from Ireland's large cluster of multinational firms, have more than doubled in recent years and rarely come close to forecast.
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With the size and price of Clinton's fundraiser, that number will likely come close to topping $20083 million by the end of the week.
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While there are many mobile calendar apps out there, none of them come close to Sunrise as they're not as polished and well-designed.
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Though the campaign trail doesn't come close to the level of pressure felt in the Oval Office, it's long been considered a reasonable test.
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Gilmore said experts have noted that banning abortion outright, as several U.S. states have come close to doing in recent months, violates humans rights.
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The glass surfaces can feel slippery, however I haven't come close to dropping the phone even once during all my testing (which is unusual).
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Psychologically, learners are left doubting how any basic knowledge picked up early on could even come close to translating into an industry-standard website.
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Her fourth and probably final government has already come close to collapsing twice, in arguments over immigration and a scandal over a former spymaster.
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"The (FBI) investigation doesnt come close to honoring and respecting the women who came forward to share their stories," Democratic Senator Jeff Merkley said.
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There's just no way that we, as a startup company in the education space, can even come close to being able to afford that.
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They had come close before for many weeks in mid and late 2015 into early 2016, but soybean oil spoiled the fun each time.
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But that doesn't necessarily come close to giving enough funding to poor districts, which often require more money to educate students from disadvantaged backgrounds.
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Sure, the memes it has inspired have spread all throughout the internet, and the #BirdBoxChallenge has come close to putting people in the hospital.
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It seemed far away from my house on the Huerfano County line, like it would have to cross impossible acres to even come close.
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Prior to Minecraft, available via Ghostly International, he put out a clutch of productions that didn't come close to engaging with a mass audience.
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Koch will come close to the overall NASA record currently held by Scott Kelly, who spent 340 days in space from 2015 to 2016.
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In a run-off ballot, which would take place in June, he is the only candidate who might come close to beating Ms Fujimori.
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And that "took several years," which "does not come close to the level of driving that is needed to calculate safety rates," Paddock said.
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As a young queer woman, I didn't come close to being suave, but something about the way he described the encounter gave me hope.
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We attempted the game's seventh case, "The Banker's Quietus", and—spoiler—did not come close to solving it inside of our allotted stream slot.
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"Right now, this bill doesn't come close to being narrow enough [to pass constitutional scrutiny]," Lee Rowland, an ACLU senior staff attorney, told VICE.
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Cramer interprets the low multiple as a signal that investors do not trust that Ensco will even come close to meeting the earnings estimates.
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Floating through the game's destruction makes me thankful that the events in this virtual world have never come close to being realized in space.
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I think there are some other events that come close to this 'perfect balance' as you say, but most mainstream events really do not.
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The Intel-powered ZenFone 2 was able to stand toe-to-toe (or at least come close) with many of 2015's flagship smartphones.
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When the victim's mother saw Aranda, whom she had never seen before, come close, she asked if they should move out of his way.
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The purchase shows that NBC Universal is the only company that can come close to matching Disney's portfolio of franchises, theme parks and merchandising.
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Stroud, winless in 276 starts on tour, has come close with a playoff loss in Hartford in 2013, but has never lifted a trophy.
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Several high-income countries have already come close to eliminating trans fat through laws limiting the amount that can be included in packaged food.
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Cantonese is the only Chinese language that has come close to accomplishing this (helped greatly by the separateness of Hong Kong under British rule).
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According to an analysis from the news and research group Climate Central, through April, the globe had come close to the 1.5-degree threshold.
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But with just over 3,000 pieces going into its construction, it doesn't even begin to come close to Austin Granger's record-setting K'NEX creation.
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The young people longed to come close and touch the cows' teats, but, since they weren't invited, out of pride they kept their distance.
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"Perdue is going well beyond what Tyson has done, and no other big poultry producer has come close to those two," Ms. Garces said.
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There is no amount of elimination of program waste or fraud that will come close to making a dent in a bill that large.
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It is difficult to think of a recent movie that has come close to the acclaim-versus-quality ratio of A Star is Born.
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In no other industry does worry about regulatory change come close — most other small-business owners are much more concerned about taxes than regulations.
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Lee said the prices have probably come close to the bottom though analysts say it is still possible oil could take another leg down.
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No Saudi leader has come close to exercising this degree of absolute authority since the death of the Kingdom's founder, Ibn Saud, in 1953.
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