The phone consumes only 3 microwatts of power—which is about 10,000 times less than what a current smartphone consumes.
|
|
"We're moving from a world that consumes goods and commodities to a world that consumes services," he said in an interview.
|
|
"What information consumes is rather obvious: it consumes the attention of its recipients," Herbert Simon, a noted economist, wrote in 1971.
|
|
"The chorus of 'Track 10' consumes and consumes, until it ends, and the listener can't remember living in a world before they heard it."
|
|
" He went on, "Mexico will produce everything it consumes.
|
|
India consumes a tremendous amount of music on YouTube already.
|
|
America consumes a vast majority of the world's opioid supply.
|
|
It annually consumes some 2.7 billion cubic metres of gas.
|
|
It now produces a third of the oil it consumes.
|
|
Five percent of the population consumes half the nation's healthcare.
|
|
Overall, Mexico consumes around 860,000 barrels of gasoline per day.
|
|
The district consumes the northern part of Franklin County, Ohio.
|
|
Every day, the world consumes 95 million barrels of oil.
|
|
One in ten American wine drinkers still consumes white zinfandel.
|
|
Poland consumes around 16 billion cubic meters of gas annually.
|
|
India imports almost 80 percent of the crude it consumes.
|
|
When that unforgiving frustration seeps into me, it consumes me.
|
|
He admitted to cocaine use, too, and still consumes alcohol.
|
|
For at least parts of each day, it consumes him.
|
|
It streamlines an expensive process that traditionally consumes many months.
|
|
Credit risk is the one that consumes the most capital.
|
|
China consumes a lot more meat than any other country.
|
|
He consumes massive amounts of cable TV every single day.
|
|
Poland consumes around 16 billion cubic metres of gas annually.
|
|
Each South Korean consumes about nine times more than that.
|
|
He consumes one meal a day, always before 33 p.m.
|
|
This hateful spirit envelops him, consumes him and animates him.
|
|
The world consumes 100 million barrels of oil a day.
|
|
Infestation starts when a host accidentally consumes a nematode's eggs.
|
|
In fact, the billionaire consumes about 50 books per year.
|
|
In total, she consumes 500 to 5003 calories a day.
|
|
The bacteria then produces carbon compounds the giant shipworm consumes.
|
|
India aims to produce more of the coal it consumes.
|
|
Digital politics consumes a steadily increasing share of campaign spending.
|
|
What consumes her most is elemental: What if he dies?
|
|
Self-made billionaire Bill Gates consumes about 50 books a year.
|
|
He also recently stopped drinking sports drinks and only consumes water.
|
|
On average, the crowd consumes about 7 million liters of it.
|
|
The United States consumes about 75 bcfd of gas on average.
|
|
The device also consumes much less oxygen than a conventional ventilator.
|
|
"No business consumes more of my time right now," Culp said.
|
|
America consumes 220% less coal than at its peak in 258.
|
|
"My peer group consumes content differently than Gen X," Penna said.
|
|
The world consumes about 400 billion gallons of gasoline per year.
|
|
It has nothing of the revolutionary fire that consumes Mr Sanders.
|
|
Eventually, she seductively wraps her partner up, liquefies and consumes him.
|
|
"Europe consumes 8 million tonnes of beef a year," he said.
|
|
Our country is one of those whose youth consumes the most.
|
|
Pension spending consumes a third of federal spending before interest payments.
|
|
Nearly everyone on Earth consumes some form of fermented food regularly.
|
|
When the consumer consumes, we catch the material on the spot.
|
|
Krystian also consumes cow blood he gets from a local abattoir.
|
|
The process of breaking down food for energy also consumes energy.
|
|
Mexico should produce what it consumes may be resonating with more
|
|
With limited manufacturing capacity, Nigeria imports most of what it consumes.
|
|
China still consumes a lot more meat than any other country.
|
|
It produces and consumes much of the world's goods and materials.
|
|
The average American consumes about 77 grams of sugar per day.
|
|
Malaysia currently produces 60 percent of the rice that it consumes.
|
|
Now he barely consumes any food and eats only to exist.
|
|
Here, her outrage consumes her and she doesn't give a shit.
|
|
Synlight itself consumes a large amount of energy, however, Hoffschmidt said.
|
|
Because steel and aluminum aren't final goods – nobody directly consumes steel.
|
|
Cover: Fire consumes an area near Porto Velho, Brazil, Friday, Aug.
|
|
Paybarah: His aides talk about how Bloomberg consumes data and info.
|
|
She consumes a lot of food with sour cream in it.
|
|
No one consumes more political, and politicized, media than political elites.
|
|
In addition to the tea, Ferriss also consumes a small breakfast.
|
|
The U.S. consumes over 9 million barrels of gasoline a day.
|
|
This is our problem to finally crack before it consumes us.
|
|
A megafire is a fire that consumes more than 100,000 acres.
|
|
"Netflix is the main way my generation consumes media," he said.
|
|
China consumes more than 100 million tonnes of soybeans every year.
|
|
"It's just about that freedom, how it consumes me," he said.
|
|
China already consumes twice as much meat as the United States.
|
|
She becomes a unique kind of demon, one that literally consumes life to sustain itself; like a vampire, only rather than suck her victims' blood, she consumes their life-force with her giant, bestial left arm.
|
|
"Already, Alzheimer's consumes one in every five Medicare/Medicaid dollars," Tanzi said.
|
|
Croatia annually consumes gas volumes slightly higher than the terminal's planned capacity.
|
|
He consumes about 30 milligrams of marijuana a day through the patch.
|
|
He consumes an entirely liquid diet, save for a carb-free dinner.
|
|
Croatia annually consumes gas volumes roughly equal to the terminal's planned capacity.
|
|
The power it consumes would run a few old-fashioned light bulbs.
|
|
Each shot consumes three units of ammo from the 18-round clip.
|
|
It changes you, snatches your good common sense, and consumes your thoughts.
|
|
For context, the United States consumes about 19.4 million barrels per day.
|
|
He consumes a pack a day and avoids anywhere he cannot smoke.
|
|
China, the world's second largest economy, consumes nearly half of industrial metals.
|
|
And it only consumes a third as much power as USB 3.
|
|
It's matching what it consumes with equal amounts of purchased renewable energy.
|
|
A laundry, for example, consumes lots of water and electricity, Ogolla said.
|
|
Plus, this way we know exactly how much food each penguin consumes!
|
|
"The average kid consumes 7½ hours of media every day," he said.
|
|
He only consumes Cherry Coke Zero for breakfast, sure evidence of psychopathy.
|
|
She said that she consumes about twenty-five hundred calories a day.
|
|
India already consumes oil derived from a GM rapeseed grown in Canada.
|
|
The search for parking consumes time and fuel valued at 733 pounds.
|
|
Africa's most advanced economy consumes about 400,000 barrels of oil per day.
|
|
In the moment, as we experience happiness or pain it consumes us.
|
|
The average American consumes nearly 20 pounds of fresh tomatoes a year.
|
|
A weird indentation in one closet consumes much of the hanging space.
|
|
" In 2003, he wrote that "Allison consumes but she still doesn't produce.
|
|
The technology we consume today increasingly consumes us, for good and ill.
|
|
This consumes about $1 a day, reducing the budget available for food.
|
|
By one estimate, California produces seven times more marijuana than it consumes.
|
|
Britain consumes 212% more carbon emissions than it produces; America, about 8%.
|
|
The United States consumes roughly 20 million barrels of oil per day.
|
|
Agriculture consumes the majority of water (80 percent in the United States).
|
|
As the debate consumes Washington, there are sometimes unusual points of agreement.
|
|
China still consumes as much coal as the rest of the world
|
|
A start-up that loses money and consumes capital for some period?
|
|
It consumes your life and turns you into someone even you don't know.
|
|
Acquiring drilling rights consumes "a lot of the capex we invest," he said.
|
|
The US currently consumes about 47% of Mexico's avocado exports, according to APEAM.
|
|
In India, about 70% of the plastic the country consumes is simply discarded.
|
|
But having to hold planes in storage consumes extra cash in increased inventory.
|
|
Padma Lakshmi consumes nearly 8,000 calories a day when she's filming Top Chef.
|
|
In either mode the Liberty consumes standard petrol, so is easy to refuel.
|
|
Bill Gates is an avid reader: he consumes about 50 books a year.
|
|
It consumes a lot of your life in ways that you wouldn't expect.
|
|
The average Indian phone user now consumes more mobile data than most Europeans.
|
|
Yet it consumes even more gold (33,089 tonnes) than it unearths (426 tonnes).
|
|
Anything grim consumes me, i guess it is a build up over time.
|
|
In reality, and for the most part, this dread consumes only one party.
|
|
One topic consumes the vast majority of President Trump's inner circle: North Korea.
|
|
The app also shares detailed information on how much data a video consumes.
|
|
But Facebook deleting its Page could ignite a fire that consumes the network.
|
|
Today, Medicaid consumes between 20 to 85033 percent of a typical state budget.
|
|
When a founder goes ballistic on his own company, the turmoil consumes all.
|
|
Buying gadgets or using any kind of online service consumes carbon and energy.
|
|
The national capital region alone consumes 2.2 million tonnes of petcoke a year.
|
|
China singlehandedly consumes as much coal as the rest of the world combined.
|
|
Most improbable, Anna consumes cases of Merlot and an incapacitating quantity of opioids.
|
|
Ray consumes books and articles at a superhuman pace and is endlessly curious.
|
|
One of them will demonstrate sustainability by generating more energy than it consumes.
|
|
The average user consumes this News Feed content over 45 minutes a day.
|
|
These networks can automate anything that generates, consumes, measures, switches or stores energy.
|
|
Indonesia has been producing more chicken than it consumes, putting pressure on prices.
|
|
Cuba consumes roughly 170,000 barrels of oil a day and produces about 50,000.
|
|
He consumes Arby's Beef 'n Cheddar sandwiches the way other humans consume cashews.
|
|
In some states, Medicaid now consumes more than half of their operating budgets.
|
|
In an Associated Press interview Sunday, Trump talked about what media he consumes.
|
|
MICHAEL WIRTH: Well, look, the world consumes 2140 million barrels of oil today.
|
|
The energy savings depends in part on how a specific home consumes energy.
|
|
He consumes more media -- primarily by watching cable TV -- than any president ever.
|
|
Half the population consumes sugary drinks on a given day, according to the CDC.
|
|
They got that way by diligently analyzing how the West manufactures and consumes information.
|
|
It's interesting – like other countries, Australia consumes almost none of the aluminum it produces.
|
|
In order to prevent bao from leaving her, the mother consumes her dumpling son.
|
|
The terrorists certainly take advantage of the politically correct madness that consumes the West.
|
|
The renewable resource now provides a quarter of the electricity Ireland consumes every year.
|
|
However, "second India" still consumes media in a traditional manner, predominantly through printed press.
|
|
In this way, the corporate customer "virtually" consumes the power from the renewable project.
|
|
Each year, the care of dying seniors consumes over 25 percent of Medicare expenditures.
|
|
Running any factory consumes energy, but Saitex is extremely smart about reducing its use.
|
|
Agriculture consumes some 80% of the state's water, far outstripping industrial or municipal use.
|
|
He said CNPC consumes as much as 60 billion kilowatt hours (kWh) each year.
|
|
In doing all these things, a human brain consumes about 20 watts of power.
|
|
It often becomes a dark trap that consumes you with greed, envy, and vanity.
|
|
Apple says that despite these developments, it consumes 30 percent less energy than before.
|
|
"We want to do that for pretty much everything that someone consumes," Michael said.
|
|
Every page is different and most of what consumes power happens in the background.
|
|
In many cases, the more glucose a tumor consumes, the worse a patient's prognosis.
|
|
He is so committed to a largely liquid diet that he rarely consumes water.
|
|
It is now a fanless device that consumes less than 5W when it's on.
|
|
Social networks are now critical to how the public consumes and shares the news.
|
|
As it stands, the average American consumes about 3,400 mg of sodium per day.
|
|
Like the cable outlets he consumes, the president is no stranger to self-promotion.
|
|
Mica consumes the air in a material gesture, complimenting the sparkling salt seen earlier.
|
|
The more fearful you are, the more satisfied IT is when it consumes you.
|
|
California produces more cannabis than it consumes — three times as much, by conservative estimates.
|
|
The United States consumes about 75 bcf per day (bcfd) of gas on average.
|
|
The activism that consumes much of Mr. Ruffalo's time comes from a deep place.
|
|
A wounded Ryan might well sit back and watch, as the world consumes Trump.
|
|
That's almost enough energy as the average American household consumes in a whole week.
|
|
As the black hole consumes the star, it creates brilliant flares in X-ray wavelengths.
|
|
Pig farming also consumes vast quantities of water in a country frequently affected by drought.
|
|
"Let's take a person who consumes 2,000 calories daily and maintains her weight," Weinandy says.
|
|
Asia accounts for 75% of the world's coal demand—China alone consumes half of it.
|
|
The platforms have their part to play in reducing the polarization that now consumes us.
|
|
If your pet consumes something he shouldn't, contact poison control or your vet for advice.
|
|
Yes, but: Blockchain isn't a silver bullet, and consumes a great deal of energy itself.
|
|
If dark magic consumes rare creatures, are the people who use it all innately wicked?
|
|
Some of the goods China would once have sold to foreigners it now consumes itself.
|
|
Stunned, the fish is easy prey for the cone snail, who engulfs and consumes it.
|
|
One of the benefits of having a smaller screen is that it consumes less power.
|
|
The average American consumes between 150 and 170 pounds of sugar in a single year.
|
|
CHINA is so vast, it quickly becomes the largest market for almost anything it consumes.
|
|
The manufacturing of bottled water consumes three times more water than ends up being sold.
|
|
I love the company and I love my job, but it hugely consumes your time.
|
|
" Sanders has no history of heart disease, does not use tobacco and consumes alcohol "infrequently.
|
|
There's the deep love that consumes your every thought, kind of like an Ariana Grande.
|
|
Since it's an LED bulb it also consumes less energy than a standard incandescent bulb.
|
|
The quality of the information one consumes determines the quality of work one will produce.
|
|
But she says that doesn't work with they way the audience consumes content these days.
|
|
Cuba's domestic market consumes about 160,000 bpd of fuels, mostly fuel oil for power generation.
|
|
This also consumes oxygen in water, harming the ecosystem of the aquatic environment, said Prescott.
|
|
A blaze that consumes more than a hundred thousand acres is known as a megafire.
|
|
Fire consumes everything and anything, even if that thing is the last of its kind.
|
|
But Iraq relies on imports from neighboring countries for 70% of the water it consumes.
|
|
That way the Internet of Things really only consumes power when they're actively in use.
|
|
President Trump threatens Iran, a bodyguard scandal consumes France and Pakistanis head to the polls.
|
|
Treating pain properly requires specialized training; it consumes vast amounts of time few doctors have.
|
|
If a country consumes more than it produces, it will import more than it exports.
|
|
The problem is, that isn't how journalists use statistics, or how the public consumes them.
|
|
Ski Dubai says the facility "only consumes as little energy as an average sized hotel."
|
|
That may be why the genus Tulipa, of all the flowers she grows, consumes her.
|
|
It consumes her, and it breaks my heart that I cannot give her this wish.
|
|
I know Bill would be tremendously saddened by the intense rhetoric that now consumes Washington.
|
|
And the toxins that wildlife consumes makes its way up the food chain into people.
|
|
I'm not sure love is love if it consumes you, if it dominates your thoughts.
|
|
Thailand consumes about 2.5 million tonnes of its sugar production domestically and exports the remainder.
|
|
Yet each found moments in the music to suggest the womanly longing that consumes them.
|
|
The irony is that the King consumes everything he was once so afraid of losing.
|
|
The sheer volume of lunacy abounding at HubSpot consumes roughly half of Disrupted's 258 pages.
|
|
I imagine the worst-case scenario for every potential outcome, and the terror consumes me.
|
|
An orange smear that consumes the brain — a feeling we have all had at some point.
|
|
By comparison, nearby Vietnam consumes 5 million dogs every year, the Asia Canine Protection Alliance says.
|
|
Outrage — even if it's warranted, even if it still consumes you — can't be your angle anymore.
|
|
The initiative in New Zealand only consumes about 1 percent of Machine Zone's capacity, he said.
|
|
The more fossil fuels a country consumes, the harder it is to wean itself off them.
|
|
Back in 2010, software engineer Raffi Krikorian estimated that every tweet consumes 0.02 grams of CO2.
|
|
The world currently consumes more fish per person than ever before—about 20 kilos a year.
|
|
Although China constitutes just one-fifth of the world's population, it consumes half of its pork.
|
|
Normally, the body breaks down carbohydrates into glucose, and that's what your brain consumes for energy.
|
|
Asia is by far the worst hit region as it consumes much more than it produces.
|
|
Asia consumes more oil than any other region, accounting for more than 1003% of global demand.
|
|
When someone consumes food contaminated with Cyclospora, it infects the small intestine, according to the CDC.
|
|
Alvin, and the millions of overbanked like him, consumes financial services in a wholly new way.
|
|
The company says it is also sharing more information on how much data a video consumes.
|
|
Asia consumes some 70 percent of global LNG, yet very little of it is freely traded.
|
|
Technically, that's as much meat as every human in the planet combined consumes each year, too.
|
|
But knitting the euro zone closer together will be the task that consumes his political capital.
|
|
"We're now creating this go-to destination that consumes visit on a daily basis," Liu said.
|
|
Trump reportedly consumes nearly a dozen Diet Cokes a day, according to the New York Times.
|
|
Pac-Man consumes pellets and power-ups while also avoiding ghosts, just like the original game.
|
|
Envy of Superman's Christ-ness so consumes Mr. Affleck's Batman that he's dreaming in messiah complexes.
|
|
Britain currently consumes 700,000 tonnes per year of plate steel, increasing at around three percent annually.
|
|
The more the black hole consumes, the hotter it gets and the more it pushes back.
|
|
Their relationship jeopardizes Cece's marriage and consumes Cece's thoughts far more than her son's condition does.
|
|
Mars colonies are a worthy goal, but not one that consumes the attention of government policymakers.
|
|
The United States consumes 82 percent of Mexico's agricultural exports, amounting to $26.6 billion last year.
|
|
This is through Liv uncontrollably transforming her personality into the dead person whose brains she consumes.
|
|
The country is making more of what it consumes, and consuming more of what it makes.
|
|
"This consumes our conversation," Shedd said of his current life in the place he calls home.
|
|
But the clock is ticking to invent something that can consume plastic before it consumes us.
|
|
Instead, it consumes fallen leaves and depends more on its inhabitants to break down its prey.
|
|
They enjoy much of the process, but it consumes enough of their time, effort and money.
|
|
Kenya produces 180,000 tonnes per year but consumes about 500,000 tonnes, according to 2019 government figures.
|
|
China consumes 55m tonnes of pork annually, as much as the rest of the world combined.
|
|
Kenya produces 180,000 tonnes per year but consumes about 500,000 tonnes, according to 2019 government figures.
|
|
They mostly live in cramped apartments where the rent consumes any humanitarian aid they may receive.
|
|
Economists say maintaining a large bureaucracy which consumes the bulk of state expenditure is increasingly untenable.
|
|
China, the world's biggest iron ore market, consumes about 90% of Iran's exports of the material.
|
|
Britain produces only 7% of the fruit it consumes and 53% of its vegetables, she added.
|
|
A lot of the former consultants feel sick with guilt, so much that it consumes them.
|
|
But it could be immigration that consumes much of the caucus's energy ahead of the Sept.
|
|
Meanwhile, an entire generation of struggling youths consumes violent anti-Semitic propaganda on a daily basis.
|
|
The tonnage of CO2 humanity emits simply dwarfs the tonnage of carbon-based products it consumes.
|
|
The state consumes more than 2670,2000 square miles, making it nearly twice the size of Germany.
|
|
By contrast, only one in every 15 drinkers, about 12 million Americans, consumes alcohol every day.
|
|
Not that Úrsula is entirely to blame for the violence that consumes nearly everyone around her.
|
|
For every unit of fossil fuels it consumes, Copenhagen intends to sell units of renewable energy.
|
|
But the mortgage is four per cent, which consumes a mere 15 per cent of income.
|
|
For now, enjoy the better web before Google fully consumes it all and does whatever it wants.
|
|
For comparison, the entire human population consumes about 400 million tons of meat and fish every year.
|
|
So remarks from a president — especially a president who tweets and consumes news so voraciously — were expected.
|
|
Gaming also consumes time that could be spent building relationships, creating a business or pursuing your dreams.
|
|
I got less than that, but I also tried the off-road mode, which consumes more battery.
|
|
At near-continuous use (8,000 hours a year) it consumes an extra 16,000 kWh over 100 years.
|
|
Each of these consumes, on an annual basis, in the region of 400m tonnes of other animals.
|
|
The current generation of blockchains gets criticized for how much energy it consumes to power the network.
|
|
The financial industry which consumes 30% of all US corporate profits, compared to 10% thirty years ago.
|
|
In fact, immigrants have had a hand in that: a growing population consumes more goods and services.
|
|
By 2020, the Swedish business says that it will produce as much renewable energy as it consumes.
|
|
The bacteria consumes this alcohol and turns into vinegar, which is what gives kombucha its sour taste.
|
|
It's also for the writers who report on its conclusions and the public who consumes psychology news.
|
|
In an average day, Obie consumes 15,000–20,000 calories to power himself through hours of punishing training.
|
|
According to the bitcoin energy consumption tracker at Digiconomist, bitcoin currently consumes 66.7 terawatt-hours per year.
|
|
It is hoped that the project will be "net zero", producing as much energy as it consumes.
|
|
As a result, it imports most of what it consumes and markets are full of Chinese products.
|
|
China is the largest national steel producer and makes far more of the metal than it consumes.
|
|
The United States currently imports almost half of the 2628,28500 metric tons of orange juice it consumes.
|
|
This observation is apparent to anyone who regularly consumes political news, and Google Trends backs it up.
|
|
Once a year, on the day after Christmas, a heavy, desolate, unique kind of depression consumes me.
|
|
When violence is celebrated, evil consumes good and insurgency turns into a kind of distortion of civilization.
|
|
Cotton alone consumes 10 percent of the world's agricultural chemicals and 25 percent of the world's pesticides.
|
|
RAM consumes power, so having less of it is another factor contributing to the iPhone's efficiency lead.
|
|
It consumes more gasoline and invites you to get uncomfortably close to a speeding ticket — or accident.
|
|
I was especially moved by the carnal, crimson canvas "The Fire that Consumes All Before It" (83).
|
|
Then he'll have a dessert of mixed berries or dark chocolate, which he consumes before 9 p.m.
|
|
In Saudi Arabia, each person consumes an average of 70 gallons a day – double the global average.
|
|
Meanwhile, the American healthcare system consumes nearly 18 percent of GDP, up from 13.1 percent in 1995.
|
|
Did you know this country consumes more than 8.6 billion chickens in the course of a year?
|
|
FiveThirtyEight counted it all up and found that Johnson consumes 821 pounds of cod in a year.
|
|
Then he has to figure out a way to break free of it before it consumes him.
|
|
Cows burp up methane, and a single bovine consumes up to 11,000 gallons of water a year.
|
|
The state produces far more marijuana than it consumes; the surplus is sold illegally across state lines.
|
|
At 19, he cofounded Napster, a file-sharing service that would change how the world consumes music.
|
|
The typical American consumes about one liter — a little over four cups — of drinking water a day.
|
|
But America now produces almost as much oil as it consumes, thanks to the shale-oil revolution.
|
|
Britain consumes about 21% more carbon emissions than it produces; the European Union as a whole, 22012%.
|
|
"It just consumes you; it takes everything that you have, every waking moment," he told Theater Mania.
|
|
For the moment, this is just a test, since it consumes far more energy than it creates.
|
|
The more unsettling the show seems, the more brainspace it consumes, and the more obsession it breeds.
|
|
Whether we like it or not, responding to emails consumes much of our time on the job.
|
|
The terminal targets southeastern and central European markets, besides Croatia which consumes 2.7 bcm of gas annually.
|
|
Neighboring California, where growing conditions are ideal in many areas, produces much more cannabis than it consumes.
|
|
Today, the United States consumes, per capita, some of the largest amounts of electricity in the world.
|
|
Other studies have shown that cell phone use alters brain activity and how the brain consumes glucose.
|
|
"The good news is that nobody on Earth consumes anywhere near that amount of glyphosate," said Berezow.
|
|
Given the average rate at which China consumes soybeans, these stocks would last just over four weeks.
|
|
The goal here is stop this type of thinking in its tracks before it consumes your energy.
|
|
He consumes the private histories of Abednego and Mamma Agnes, leaving a trail of devastation behind him.
|
|
The U.S. electric power sector consumes more energy than the transportation sector, which includes automobiles, planes and trains.
|
|
Property market data is also solid and this part of the Chinese economy consumes a lot of metal.
|
|
A few months ago, one expert suggested that the average Briton consumes 238 teaspoons of sugar each week.
|
|
With an area about half the size of Rhode Island, a wildfire consumes part of a Canadian province.
|
|
The report said society would have to enact "unprecedented" changes to how it consumes energy, travels and builds.
|
|
The nocturnal feasting consumes prodigious amounts of that climate-changing element in the form of small, planktonic creatures.
|
|
China accounts for about half the coal the world consumes each year—far more than any other country.
|
|
But the problem with lithium ion batteries is to make them consumes a huge amount of energy. Filthy.
|
|
Most importantly, it began supporting lower-resolution videos last year, providing information on much data each video consumes.
|
|
That would reduce a wage bill that consumes 2000% of government revenue, freeing billions for badly needed investment.
|
|
Moving toward my Ph.D. as a first-generation college student, in an inherently privileged artistic craft, consumes me.
|
|
U.S. livestock consumes 70 percent of all antibiotics, according to a 2014 Britain-commissioned Review on Antimicrobial Resistance.
|
|
Constantly battling the Miami heat, he consumes large quantities of electrolytes before game day so he doesn't melt.
|
|
Winds of change blow across the country Texas produces and consumes more electricity overall than any other state.
|
|
This makes playback smoother and consumes less battery — it's better in every way, at the cost of flexibility.
|
|
" As news of Campbell's death consumes headlines, a friend of the woman describes Campbell as "a beautiful soul.
|
|
Thermo Fisher also instituted a regular dividend in 2012, which now consumes about $240 million of CFO annually.
|
|
So maybe the alcohol someone consumes isn't actually the best way of determining their value as a person.
|
|
China accounts for nearly half of global consumption of industrial metals, while the United States consumes nearly 2490%.
|
|
Cuba must import between 60 and 70 percent of the food it consumes, while agriculture is largely stagnant.
|
|
Even straightforward reporters too often uncritically channel these critics whose hate of "the Clintons" consumes and blinds them.
|
|
At those prices, demand for oil is high, and the kingdom consumes about a third of its production.
|
|
China accounts for nearly half of global consumption of industrial metals, while the United States consumes nearly 10%.
|
|
After one month of storage, a strain of bacteria, Propionibacterium shermanii, consumes lactic acid and releases carbon dioxide.
|
|
By 2020, the IKEA Group wants to produce as much renewable energy as it consumes in its operations.
|
|
Making transformative change through the American political system is excruciating, and generally consumes lifetimes worth of man hours.
|
|
The state consumes the most in America, with seven million cans a year, or five cans per person.
|
|
An adult without celiac disease generally consumes, on average, between 5 and 15 grams of gluten per day.
|
|
China makes up almost a fifth of the world's population, but produces and consumes roughly half its pork.
|
|
Social media consumes the public imagination like the giant statues of tyrants from former times consumed public space.
|
|
Bitfury says it constantly consumes at least 45 megawatts of energy, though Mr. Gogokhia suspected it was more.
|
|
He fears missing bedtime for his three children, and worries about "the ungodly amount of caffeine" he consumes.
|
|
He keeps it in check with medication and therapy, but every once in a while, it consumes him.
|
|
"The development still consumes potable water from the city," Sandrine Guendoul, a Veolia spokeswoman, said in an email.
|
|
America consumes large quantities of energy, so this expanded production has not yet made the country energy independent.
|
|
He was unable to say how many packets of crisps the prime minister consumes in a typical day.
|
|
China, which consumes half of the world's coal, continues to build more coal plants at home and abroad.
|
|
Mozilla's promise that Firefox consumes less computer memory raises hopes that it should also use less battery life.
|
|
How many resources a baby consumes has to do with where and how she (and her family) lives.
|
|
"There is a structure and logic to the violence that consumes life 'on the road,'" says Dr. Reid.
|
|
India is the second-largest wheat producing country though it consumes its entire product and is insignificant for exports.
|
|
Similar to your other smart devices, this one works via USB power supply and consumes only 10W of electricity.
|
|
Its public sector consumes 57% of GDP, six points above even that stripped-pine model of Scandinavian solidarity, Sweden.
|
|
Running this kind of furnace, says Bill Davis, the company's boss, consumes only 15% of the energy it produces.
|
|
This abduction turns out to be a practice run for the extended snatching that consumes much of the story.
|
|
"I'm the only person on Top Chef who consumes every single thing that's made," Lakshmi told PEOPLE last March.
|
|
Before that, it was Pennywise the Clown from It, who literally consumes children and has really lame dance moves.
|
|
The damage caused by delusions of gang-stalking is progressive, until it consumes every moment of a sufferer's life.
|
|
Tracking exactly how much of the power a business unit consumes comes from coal, say, is not always straightforward.
|
|
If you include Hong Kong, China consumes 40% of Taiwanese exports, most of it courtesy of the contract manufacturers.
|
|
The Swedish business says that by the year 2147.5, it will produce as much renewable energy as it consumes.
|
|
The United States consumes about 20 million barrels of oil per day, nearly half of which is for gasoline.
|
|
As a rising middle class consumes more meat, that gap worsens, for animal feed is mostly made of grain.
|
|
Google announced in a blog post that it now purchases more renewable energy than it consumes as a company.
|
|
The trekking business consumes the ground floor; Maya sleeps upstairs in the room that once belonged to Jwalant's sister.
|
|
If it is parasite-free, by contrast, most of the carotenoids it consumes will be used to create colour.
|
|
Their intake is much less than that of the average British child, who consumes 22kg of sugar per year.
|
|
Monju was designed to burn plutonium from spent fuel at conventional reactors to create more fuel than it consumes.
|
|
China produces and consumes about half the world's steel, and has an estimated over-capacity of 0.93 million tonnes.
|
|
Over the past year, the world has been producing 1.5 million barrels per day more oil than it consumes.
|
|
As everyone consumes gallons of clickbait from sites like Buzzfeed, another form of satire now has room to grow.
|
|
The Buremese python has found a comfortable niche in the Everglades, where it consumes a wide variety of prey.
|
|
"I'm the only person on Top Chef who consumes every single thing that's made," Lakshmi told PEOPLE last March.
|
|
She consumes so little social oxygen that people around her tend to get a bit high, laughing at anything.
|
|
But Inwood marble is so porous that acid rain consumes it, and much of the original structure is gone.
|
|
It does not deter crime, and it consumes resources that could be used to actually make our communities safer.
|
|
Poland, which consumes around 16 bcm of gas annually, also wants to buy more gas on the spot market.
|
|
It consumes him and becomes his own personal mountain that he has to overcome while it pushes everyone away.
|
|
It is high time to put this trend to bed, before it consumes the country that we all love.
|
|
Party members said the new propaganda push means political study now consumes more of their time than ever before.
|
|
Moffett said about 70 percent of the country consumes Time Warner content through some platform other than A&T.
|
|
The simulation consumes about 40 percent of the Arduino board's program memory and about 42 percent of its SRAM.
|
|
The world is already producing more than 1 million bpd than it consumes, with oil stockpiles at record levels.
|
|
Over the past decade and a half, much of the world has changed the way that it consumes media.
|
|
That dichotomy between aggression and welcome obviously consumes commentary about the Sanders movement, but at a much higher pitch.
|
|
It is a gap that we must urgently narrow, before our human footprint consumes the earth's remaining wild places.
|
|
Now she acts all high and mighty, saying she doesn't watch TV news and only consumes news by print.
|
|
Medicaid currently consumes 16 percent of all state spending, according to the Medicaid and CHIP Payment and Access Commission.
|
|
What is the mean between no exercise and The Rock's workout regimen (and the excess of cod he consumes)?
|
|
However, it appears to me that rhetoric overwhelms policy, and politics consumes much of the oxygen in this city.
|
|
That tapeworm preemptively consumes its requisite daily diet of investment dollars regardless of the health of the host organism.
|
|
Wray's remarks suggest he has decided to dip his toes into the artificial intelligence debate that consumes Silicon Valley.
|
|
Wray's remarks suggest he has decided to dip his toes into the artificial intelligence debate that consumes Silicon Valley.
|
|
Mr. Trump's base and the news media he consumes believe that Europe is being overrun by violent Muslim refugees.
|
|
Basketball consumes his time and energy, and he tries to coax the same single-minded focus from his players.
|
|
If you are reading this you are likely a person who consumes a lot of news on the internet.
|
|
It's been one that we have a very intimate relationship with, so I think it disproportionately consumes our thinking.
|
|
The stage was an unsightly mess — and a perfect symbol of what 21st-century capitalism consumes and spits out.
|
|
Mexico grows some 703 varieties of corn and consumes more of the grain per capita than almost anywhere on earth.
|
|
Burial consumes "valuable urban land" and can also pollute the air and soil with embalming fluids, separate research has found.
|
|
There are a few problems with that — performance deteriorates, it consumes a lot of bandwidth and there are privacy issues.
|
|
Recent news reports have revealed that Trump consumes his intelligence information the way an eighth-grader researches assignments on Wikipedia.
|
|
While art objects are often beautiful and meaningful, this business model consumes resources and puts more material into the world.
|
|
TYRUS: Joey Chestnut consumes over 20,000 calories in 10 minutes at this year&aposs Fourth hot dog eating contest. Wow.
|
|
The only current compute platform that can exceed the Tesla claims is the Nvidia Pegasus, which consumes significantly more power.
|
|
Today, every single electricity system in the world is overbuilt, generating more than it consumes, to compensate for this waste.
|
|
Farmers throughout East Africa now face food shortages, as the plague consumes both crops in the field and in storage.
|
|
Netflix alone consumes a mindblowing 15 percent of global internet traffic according to a report in October of last year.
|
|
That would hit demand for metals in China, which consumes more than six times as much copper as America does.
|
|
Taiwan produces small amounts of wheat and corn, relying heavily on imports, but produces most of the rice it consumes.
|
|
On the one hand, he has made protectionist noises, such as saying that Mexico should produce the food it consumes.
|
|
Your phone's GPS circuitry, which determines your geographic location for mapping and fitness features, consumes a lot of battery power.
|
|
To take part in the Global Drug Survey 2018, an anonymous study of how the world consumes drugs, click here.
|
|
The average person in the developed world consumes 22002 times as much sugar as people did even during Atwater's time.
|
|
And it consumes just 30 watts of power, which is half of the electricity used by the average light bulb.
|
|
Calvin is a tangible fear, but he also represents the loneliness that latches onto us and, over time, consumes us.
|
|
In just four hours, the system uses the same amount of electricity an average household consumes in an entire year.
|
|
In America, we live in a consumerist society, which powers our economy and consumes the paycheck of the average American.
|
|
Bitcoin mining also consumes a lot of energy and produces a lot of emissions, which is making climate hawks nervous.
|
|
It barely had the overwhelming coffee flavor I was dreading predicting as someone who very rarely consumes the magic bean.
|
|
Right now, mining bitcoins consumes as much power as the entire country of Bulgaria, according to the cryptocurrency website Digiconomics.
|
|
Based on these findings, the researchers estimate the average adult consumes 2,000 pieces of microplastic every year from salt alone.
|
|
That growth has a long way to go if China ever consumes as much per person as Mexico (see chart).
|
|
Given the country consumes several million barrels more than that daily, many analysts had assumed exports would grow more slowly.
|
|
Just four hours of operation consumes as much electricity as a four-person household in a year, the Guardian noted.
|
|
To say it's been a head-spinning, tumultuous time for journalists, and everyone who consumes media, would be an understatement.
|
|
The root cause is a malignant federal healthcare bureaucracy, one that consumes more than 40 percent of all healthcare spending.
|
|
For breakfast, he orders two plates of plain bacon strips, which he dips in ketchup and consumes in rapid succession.
|
|
If we fail to engage in these activities, it is because such effortful cognition consumes a very limited mental resource.
|
|
Roughly 80 percent of what she consumes is vegetable in origin; her family's meals are prepared by a private chef.
|
|
Aciman's words are chosen with almost chemical precision to create a vivid and exact portrait of how young love consumes.
|
|
China, which produces and consumes about half the world's steel, saw output hit a record 831.7 million tonnes last year.
|
|
Most Navajo get by on fewer than five gallons of water per day, while the typical American consumes about 28500.
|
|
If not done carefully, doing so can ignite an alternative narrative that consumes the original meaning and spreads like wildfire.
|
|
He believes, rightly, that Nigeria needs to produce more of what it consumes, and he wants to spur local production.
|
|
China, which produces and consumes half the world's steel, has cut some 220 million tonnes of capacity since January 2016.
|
|
It uses 4,000 gallons of water per minute to stay cool and consumes enough power to run 8 thousand homes.
|
|
According to the International Dairy Foods Association, the average American consumes more than 23 pounds of ice cream per year.
|
|
You always have the option of lighting one on fire for a damage bonus, but doing so consumes the arrow.
|
|
China consumes about 55 million tonnes of pork a year, half of the global total, but production is highly cyclical.
|
|
If she so much as consumes buffalo milk or butter, the buffalo themselves will get sick and stop producing milk.
|
|
The state consumes the most in America, at about seven million cans per year, which is five cans per person.
|
|
The U.S.D.A. reports that in the United States, food waste consumes between 30 to 40 percent of the food supply.
|
|
And it's not just the moment seen in the trailer, when John Cena's character consumes beer in a nontraditional way.
|
|
They pay a fortune for their cabs and are required to take the Knowledge test, which consumes years of effort.
|
|
Making the way the U.S. consumes food more sustainable, though, means more dramatic, high-level shifts in values and policy.
|
|
The United States consumes 80 percent of the world's opioids despite having only five percent of the population, Geng said.
|
|
Although Africa is home to 16 percent of the world's population, it consumes only 3.3 percent of global power production.
|
|
Currently, the average American consumes more than 22015,2140 milligrams a day, an amount often found in a single restaurant meal.
|
|
A single Mekong dam proposed for Cambodia, the Sambor, could produce more electricity than all of what Cambodia currently consumes.
|
|
Cover: A firefighter battles the Morton Fire as it consumes a home near Bundanoon, New South Wales, Australia, Thursday, Jan.
|
|
The 750,000 tonnes represents only about half of the roughly 1.5 million tonnes of Russian oil Belarus consumes each month.
|
|
In China pork is what matters—the country consumes as much hog meat as the rest of the world combined.
|
|
Given the themes of the episode, it's surprising that the cliffhanger isn't whether she destroys the egg or consumes it.
|
|
JPMorgan Chase recently reported that gasoline alone consumes 6900 percent of the income of those in the lowest 2628th percentile.
|
|
Extracting oil from Alberta's oil sands consumes a lot of energy, and it is harder to refine than lighter crudes.
|
|
With its economic growth and rampant infrastructure construction, China consumes as much coal as the rest of the world combined.
|
|
For many glaciologists, the scientific work that they perform on glaciers consumes less time and effort than surviving the journey.
|
|
Housing, which consumes 40% of all the EU's energy and belches out 36% of its carbon, requires the biggest overhaul.
|
|
The company has created specialized processors to make TensorFlow faster and reduce the power it consumes inside Google's data centers.
|
|
Mexico imports about 10 million tons of corn from the United States a year, nearly a third of what it consumes.
|
|
If China and India consumes at the rate that we're all consuming, then we'll be using the resources of five planets.
|
|
It's a shame that this concept is obscure, because it consumes most of our computing power for most of our lives.
|
|
It has already been mentioned that Theory of Mind consumes more brain processing power than any other higher-level neurological activity.
|
|
Theresa Rowley, of Grand Rapids, Michigan, told WZZM that she consumes at least one can of her favorite beverage a day.
|
|
Impossible Foods told CNBC in July that Asia, which consumes nearly half the world's meat, was the company's No. 1 focus.
|
|
China consumes about 28% of the world's meat, including 49% of pork, so it's a significant factor in the world market.
|
|
He wanted to know where people her age were investing, how they were investing, and how the next generation consumes information.
|
|
He consumes between 1700-1800 calories a day, carefully noting each one in a journal so he doesn't go off track.
|
|
The United States consumes nearly all of its own tomatoes, exporting just 6 percent, according to the U.S. Department of Agriculture.
|
|
The nights may not be as sleepless as they once were, but for Tabata, FFXV still consumes much of his time.
|
|
Called the giant shipworm, it lives inside a long shell where it consumes noxious chemicals at the bottom of muddy lagoons.
|
|
Everything you do consumes "activity points," which means that you have to make tough choices about how you spend your time.
|
|
Vibrio, a pathogen that consumes the symbiotic algae living in corals and is associated with the white syndromes, dominates polypropylene debris.
|
|
That's not a good bargain, particularly, for the Western world that already consumes calorie-dense but nutrient-poor foods in excess.
|
|
Over the course of thirteen hours, he consumes an incredible five stone's worth of chow mein, lemon chicken, and ice cream.
|
|
Today, the average American consumes more than 20 pounds of ice cream each year, according to the International Dairy Foods Association.
|
|
So I've been lucky, but also resourceful, but mostly just decidedly un-picky about what my kid wears, uses, and consumes.
|
|
A Facebook AI, trained under Big Sur, consumes countless paintings from what look like French impressionist artists and begins painting itself.
|
|
The World Health Organization (WHO) says the farm sector consumes around 80 percent of all medically important antibiotics in some countries.
|
|
Nounou said the headline referred to the effort to move from a print-focused generation to one that consumes news online.
|
|
To generate more power than it consumes, B House catches the rays of Singapore's tropical sun with large rooftop solar panels.
|
|
In a culture being redefined by the way it consumes, what to make of people who collect things, who keep things?
|
|
The average American consumes about 77 grams of sugar per day, some of which comes from processed dips, sauces, and spreads.
|
|
Part history, part mystery, part critical appreciation, this demented love story consumes the reader just as the painting did Mr. Snare.
|
|
What's the word for when something is on fire and you can't look away as it consumes everything in its path?
|
|
Let me remind you that the parasitical finance industry now consumes some 30 percent of all U.S. corporate profits, and counting.
|
|
Hannan is forthright when I bring up the unsustainable levels at which the world consumes beef, and in fact, all meat.
|
|
Bottom line: As bitcoin mining consumes more electricity, some energy-related exchange-traded funds are worth a buy, according to McDonald.
|
|
Worldwide, each person 15 years and older consumes 13.5 grams of pure alcohol per day, according to the World Health Organization.
|
|
How this happened is a story of a rupture in the way the academy produces and consumes people with scholarly credentials.
|
|
Using new techniques to see what a predator consumes, researchers discovered that eels, albatrosses, penguins and others may consume jellyfish frequently.
|
|
Standing on the lunar soil looking back at Earth, you would see quite the sight as the planet's shadow consumes you.
|
|
Cooling Summit requires 4,000 gallons of water a minute, and the supercomputer consumes enough electricity to light up 6.33,100 American homes.
|
|
Overall, the village generates about seven times as much energy as it consumes, and the surplus is sold to the grid.
|
|
But in a country that by some measures consumes more butter per head than anyplace else, that is a fine point.
|
|
So the tech industry, which consumes nearly 335 tons of gold yearly, will only need more and more of the metal.
|
|
Partly as a result, the average Utahn consumes a staggering 248 gallons of water a day, nearly triple the American average.
|
|
It consumes his time, his energy, his attention: All he does is sit in the lab behind his microscope, studying nematodes.
|
|
This sprawling plant, near Äänekoski, a town in the centre of the country, consumes 6.5m cubic metres of wood a year.
|
|
For instance, the self-made billionaire is an avid reader and once admitted that he consumes about 50 books a year.
|
|
Agriculture consumes more freshwater than any other human activity, and nearly a third of that water is devoted to raising livestock.
|
|
That means it will eliminate the use of fossil fuels, and support the generation of more renewable energy than it consumes.
|
|
Calling a charter school a public school is like calling a defense contractor a public institution because it consumes public funds.
|
|
The power contract for the Portland smelter, which consumes about 10% of the state of Victoria's electricity, ends in mid-2021.
|
|
We're seeing in all sorts of businesses where a company makes a good or service and somebody consumes it over here.
|
|
GARNER All those lunchtime martinis Arthur Schlesinger Jr. consumes in his memoir, "A Life in the 20th Century," are pretty inspiring.
|
|
And since the United States in general heavily consumes imports, Luis said he believes "any" border tax could lead to higher prices.
|
|
Hong Kong consumes more seafood per capita than anywhere in Asia besides the Maldives, eating around 150 pounds per person, per year.
|
|
The Ford company, synonymous with rapacious practicality, encounters the completely impractical pinnacle of motorsport and literally can't compute the resources it consumes.
|
|
Now that I'm about a year and a half into my transition, my depression no longer consumes my life and is manageable.
|
|
Like everyone else, I love Thanksgiving, but I don't love this statistic: the average American consumes around 3653,2365 calories each turkey day!
|
|
Bitcoin consumes more energy than the entire nation of Switzerland, according to new estimates published by researchers at the University of Cambridge.
|
|
"Pakistan's edible oil consumption is around 4.50 million tonnes while India consumes 24 million tonnes; the scales are too wide," Sathia said.
|
|
"Allison consumes, but she still doesn't produce," Moore wrote of his then-wife in a December 2003 column in the National Review.
|
|
If the Trump campaign is forced to concentrate on Georgia and Arizona, it consumes time and money he could be devoting elsewhere.
|
|
Bitcoin mining is known to be an energy-intensive operation, with a recent study saying it consumes as much energy as Switzerland.
|
|
By now, you know that the U.S. consumes 80% of the world's opioid painkillers while comprising just 5% of the world's population.
|
|
Spending on government salaries, pushed up by pay rises and more hiring, consumes 48% of revenues, more than in any OECD country.
|
|
In just over an hour, the man, Matt Stonie, consumes a massive amount of food you'd find at a Super Bowl party.
|
|
For instance, many Americans do not know that a clothes dryer consumes more energy than almost any other appliance in the home.
|
|
One way or another -- whether through out-of-pocket spending, taxes or forgone salary -- health care ultimately consumes 18% of our incomes.
|
|
Scores of countries have anti-dumping duties on stainless steel, mostly from China, which produces and consumes about half the world's output.
|
|
While Indonesia is Asia's top gasoline importer, it also produces about 850,000 barrels of oil a day—half of what it consumes.
|
|
He consumes about 50 books each year; that's 10 times more than the typical American, who reads four, according to Pew Research.
|
|
Healbe says its wrist devices work by measuring the amount of glucose a person consumes, miraculously without taking a sample of blood.
|
|
The Model S consumes about a third the CO2 per KM of an equivalent gas car, Tesla says Tesla was surprised too.
|
|
Egypt consumes around 3 million tonnes of sugar annually but produces just over 2 million tonnes, with the gap filled by imports.
|
|
In one of these compartments is the crew, which consumes water, food and oxygen, and then produces waste based on this intake.
|
|
In fact, according to a recent UN report, Canada consumes more prescription opioids on a per-capita basis than any other country.
|
|
As the Count consumes more wine, the guilt all colonialists must suppress or delude themselves out of feeling begins to creep in.
|
|
"I wanted to make a film that's two minutes long without using paper that consumes itself as it goes," he tells FastCoDesign.
|
|
"The hyperloop promises to produce more energy than it consumes" by installing solar panels on top of the vacuum tubes, she said.
|
|
China makes and consumes around half the world's stainless steel, which is used to protect against corrosion in buildings, transportation and packaging.
|
|
Meanwhile, as the Trump family consumes the nation's attention with its colossal self-absorption and ethical delinquencies, the temperature keeps rising. ♦
|
|
But because of Russia's larger population and industrial base, it consumes more oil at home, leaving Saudi Arabia the leader in exports.
|
|
When he breaks his fast, he'll have bone broth and some red wine, though Dorsey didn't specify how often he consumes alcohol.
|
|
When the body consumes excess fructose, it has a spasming effect of the GI tract that can lend to the cleansing effect.
|
|
When someone consumes this amount of weed, for so long, it's time for an intervention, and fortunately Apple Music just completed one.
|
|
The United Arab Emirates, which consumes about 1.5 billion gallons a day, is trying to make its desalinated water more environmentally friendly.
|
|
Lost in the bluster and bombast has been the kind of detailed policy talk that traditionally consumes candidates this time of year.
|
|
He avoids processed and fried foods and drinks green smoothies through which he consumes "a pound of spinach every day," Mary said.
|
|
There is a hunger for information in this digital age as the public consumes the news on their smart phones and tablets.
|
|
Action Bronson doesn't just consume food; he consumes the culture and history of the places he visits and the dishes he eats.
|
|
Related: A Circus-Inspired Cake Maze Consumes an LA Gallery This Zoetrope Cake Is Explosive Performance Artist Strangles Peeps and Crushes Cakes
|
|
As he comes at you, he's almost totally engulfed in his own swirling, blood-red cape, which consumes most of the cover.
|
|
But the average American consumes just over three grams of sodium per day, which is actually in the sweet spot for health.
|
|
It is also the nation's premier exporter to other states: By one estimate, the state produces seven times more than it consumes.
|
|
I don't want them stuck with the image of Karla dying in the desert, a moment so heavy it consumes everything else.
|
|
Every action you take consumes one spoon, but because you are healthy and able-bodied, with unlimited spoons, it's no big deal.
|
|
Over half of the world's oil supply and a growing percentage of the natural gas it consumes is transported through these waterways.
|
|
Metabolising 100 ounces of fat consumes 290 ounces of oxygen and produces 280 ounces of carbon dioxide plus 110 ounces of water.
|
|
Space is so powerful and so full of resources that it will change the way humanity consumes energy, information, goods and services.
|
|
Bitcoin mining "consumes a large amount of electricity and also encourages a spirit of speculation in 'virtual currencies'", according to the document.
|
|
Animating Harris's commitment to such extreme resistance is the profound unfairness of modern America, a subject that consumes much of his book.
|
|
I was reading an interview you did with Elizabeth Wurtzel where she said she basically no longer consumes art created by men.
|
|
In order to keep going, Greene tells us, each cell in your body consumes some 10 million of these molecules every second.
|
|
I do think that at my school, Fortnite has become something that consumes a lot of time from nearly all the students.
|
|
But as Mr. Borges later explained to The Times, Beyoncé eats a "plant-based breakfast daily" and consumes no meat on Mondays.
|
|
It could disappear in a year or it could be the new way that everybody consumes content for the next 100 years.
|
|
More worrying is the risk of environmental backlash, for a sector that is both energy and water intensive, and consumes plentiful plastic.
|
|
India consumes up to 1,000 tonnes of gold per year to make jewellery, offer to deities or as a hedge against inflation.
|
|
That the birds are singing at all in Africa needs explanation, for singing consumes energy which might be deployed for other purposes.
|
|
The rest of the world has begun to fundamentally rethink its dependence on China to make much of what the world consumes.
|
|
Conservatives say Medicaid spending, which consumes a major and growing portion of the federal and states' budgets, needs to be reined in.
|
|
Though something of a gimmick, once lit up the giant candle slowly and sentimentally consumes itself over the span of the exhibition.
|
|
And I think that is important to say amid all this clamoring that gawks at, consumes, and possesses black lives and deaths.
|
|
The question consumes him to the point where he, an articulate man with considerable language skills, finds himself at a loss for words.
|
|
But the United States stands out for the sheer amount of opioids like Vicodin and Oxycontin it consumes, fueling a deadly drug epidemic.
|
|
China is the largest national producer and makes far more steel than it consumes, selling the excess output overseas, often undercutting domestic producers.
|
|
"Secret Eater" by Shaun Johnson and Tierra takes its name from a term describing someone who consumes large quantities of food in private.
|
|
I think new user interfaces aimed at how the human mind truly consumes information will cause a major shift in our media consumption.
|
|
"Hovering in adverse winds is a task that consumes a human pilot's attention, but automated flight control achieves 'rock steady' precision," he said.
|
|
Both comforting and intrusive, the couch's spine consumes most of an off-kilter frame that offers barely enough room for mother and son.
|
|
But modulating it, in order to impress data upon it, can be done by a chip that consumes almost no power at all.
|
|
Plus, transporting 1,000 paper bags across the country with a truck consumes much more fuel than transporting 1,000 thin plastic bags, Wagner says.
|
|
The average American consumes 280,280 milligrams of sodium (one and half teaspoons) each day, well above the recommended 2,300 mg for most people.
|
|
Cuba consumes between 600,000 and 700,000 metric tons of sugar a year and has an agreement to sell China 400,000 metric tons annually.
|
|
By comparison, the country consumes only 3trn cubic feet a year, almost half of it from the declining resource of the North Sea.
|
|
"Even though [the debate] consumes a lot of my time and other people's time, it's sort of beside the point," Jacobson told Grist.
|
|
It's also highly fuel-efficient, compared to most fire sculptures: Le Attrata consumes about 80 gallons of fuel over four hours of shows.
|
|
Sebag said it consumes 27.5 megawatts of electricity but the company will open three more facilities this year and will use 180 megawatts.
|
|
Even with its large battery, this phone consumes a lot of power when connected to LTE and runs out of juice comparatively quickly.
|
|
So for now a big data centre consumes tens of megawatts of power, almost all of which is transformed, literally, into hot air.
|
|
All of these factors shape how we define good taste, how that applies to cheese, and how that applies to who consumes it.
|
|
China, which consumes some two-thirds of global sea-born iron ore, will release official trade figures for last month on Oct 8.
|
|
The average person in Europe and the U.S. consumes around 5003 kilograms (11.5 pounds) of chocolate each year, according to Erste Asset Management.
|
|
China is the largest national steel producer and makes far more than it consumes, selling the excess output overseas, often undercutting domestic producers.
|
|
It consumes over half of discretionary spending, though only about 16 percent of the total budget (including Social Security, Medicare and other programs).
|
|
Suit-up as the iconic webhead and join him on his journey to save New York City from the crime that consumes it.
|
|
Thanks to massive government subsidies, Chinese smelters can now make nearly 11 million more metric tons of primary aluminum than China actually consumes.
|
|
Livestock farming is a major driver of greenhouse gas emissions, consumes a tenth of the world's fresh water and causes large-scale deforestation.
|
|
From 1999 to 2017, the cost of family health insurance coverage has more than doubled the amount of take-home pay it consumes.
|
|
At times he seemed to zone out, but when he's engaged, Mr. Clinton consumes a speech the way Guy Fieri does a sandwich.
|
|
This bitcoin "mining" allegedly consumes more power than most countries use each year, and its electricity usage is roughly equivalent to Bulgaria's consumption.
|
|
The Guardian says Her Majesty's secret agent consumes 19 vodka martinis across the 26 Bond films compared to 16 of the gin variety.
|
|
The four-inch-long (10-cm) species consumes parasites and dead tissue off skin of other reef fish in a relationship benefiting both.
|
|
"We know that marijuana doesn't have any negative effects when somebody consumes it, apart from getting sleepy," the billionaire-turned-politican told Reuters.
|
|
It continues to be popular in the Middle East, particularly Saudi Arabia, which consumes more Captagon than any other country in the world.
|
|
It is an inescapable reality of health care that paperwork consumes a lot of time and costs a lot of money to administer.
|
|
But at the same time I felt a bone-chilling fear that just rises from the pit of your stomach and consumes everything.
|
|
Currently the average American consumes about 270 calories a day in the form of sweeteners, equal to about 13 percent, the guidelines said.
|
|
Weaving cultural criticism with her own experiences, Massey uniquely touches on the complicated histories between famous women and the world that consumes them.
|
|
But considering that more than 40 percent of our country's population consumes news on Facebook, finding alternative perspectives shouldn't have been that hard.
|
|
Now it consumes more of the average family's budget than health care, transportation or food, and in most places it rivals housing, too.
|
|
Though they have often been glamorized as vicious carnivores, at least one species, scientists now say, consumes and digests "copious amounts" of seagrass.
|
|
They also have a lot of time to talk about themselves and their discontent, which eats at some and all but consumes others.
|
|
At barely 100 downhill yards from tee to green, it consumes just one-seventieth of the overall length of Pebble Beach Golf Links.
|
|
I'm a high school senior, and I've witnessed and experienced how stress surrounding grades, standardized test scores and extracurriculars consumes high school students.
|
|
That has raised questions about G.E.'s ability to keep paying its current dividend, which consumes about $8 billion a year, analysts estimate.
|
|
Each flap consumes a chunk of your climbing stamina, while not providing as much height as you could have gotten just from climbing.
|
|
Cooper smartly lets you decide and then sends Jack spiraling toward oblivion, a downward trajectory that consumes the second half of the movie.
|
|
The escalating feud, though, goes beyond mere West Wing melodrama, the sort of who's-up-and-who's-down scorekeeping that typically consumes Washington.
|
|
There are now only about 100 cases in the world each year, but the effort to eradicate it consumes $1 billion a year.
|
|
Bangladesh consumes an average of 2 million such pills a day, estimated two officials at the Department of Narcotics Control (DNC) in Dhaka.
|
|
Even before taking the drought into account, the UN estimates that the average North Korean consumes approximately 1,640 calories of food each day.
|
|
The current two-building campus consumes more than one percent of Sweden's total power production and that will also double, he told Reuters.
|
|
To put that in perspective, the whole of Ukraine produces around 224.2095 bcm of gas per year and consumes almost 31 bcm annually.
|
|
Scientists have evidence that the average American woman may ingest around 98,000 tiny plastic particles every year, while the average man consumes 121,000.
|
|
Why it matters: Trump attracted three times the attention of all the Democratic candidates combined, underscoring how he consumes the social media conversation.
|
|
The video streaming company alone consumes a whopping 15 percent of the world's internet traffic, according to a study conducted in late 2018.
|
|
While London burns and civil war consumes the country, Aubrey continues his research, desiring only calm so that he can work in peace.
|
|
But if you want a glimpse of the regret and shame and confused pride that consumes many veterans after war, you're in luck.
|
|
Like many of you, one of life's greatest challenges for me has become unplugging from the noise that consumes so much of our lives.
|
|
This recipe for "Quick roast beef and roasted carrots" consumes over an hour of your precious time that you could otherwise dedicate to television.
|
|
China consumes nearly 50 percent of the world's copper, so when its economy is on the rise, the price of copper tends to soar.
|
|
It is not green, nor is it made with humans, but the glee with which my fiance consumes the stuff still weirds me out.
|
|
China consumes around a third of global fertilisers, with rapid growth in use in recent years driven largely by higher fruit and vegetable production.
|
|
The case is all aluminum and consumes a mere 12 liters of volume, compared to the 10803 liters a typical tower might take up.
|
|
The pensions bill consumes more than half the government's non-interest spending and, if nothing is done, will within ten years gobble up 80%.
|
|
The brain consumes about 20 percent of the energy the body uses, and the main source of that energy is blood sugar, Espeland said.
|
|
DEMAND: China accounts for around half of global copper demand, estimated at 2774 million tonnes this year, while the United States consumes nearly 20.6%.
|
|
When a country collectively consumes more of a deadly, addictive drug, it's obviously going to have more deaths as a result of those drugs.
|
|
In about 4 billion years or 1603 billion years, the sun will swell into a red giant after it consumes all of its helium.
|
|
The incentive from social media, which giddily consumes and rewards pretty pictures from exotic places like Tokyo, is too strong for me to resist.
|
|
Long hair, the campaign argued, "consumes a great deal of nutrition" and thus threatened "human intelligence development" by depriving the brain of necessary energy.
|
|
Along with a 163 percent performance increase, the 835 also consumes up to 25 percent less power than the previous-generation chip (820/821).
|
|
In many cases, the reasoning is the same: removing the standard means the company can make stuff that's smaller, lighter, and consumes less power.
|
|
The result is that the company claims OAS consumes only 5 litres of water compared to up to 150 for a 15 minute shower.
|
|
How it works: Facebook's business model is to grow as big as possible and sell ads against a mass audience that consumes its content.
|
|
Netflix alone consumes a staggering 15 percent of global internet traffic, according to the new Global Internet Phenomena Report by bandwidth management company Sandvine.
|
|
The company says it is also sharing more information on how much data a video consumes, so that people can make more informed decisions.
|
|
Naturally, it shares the same bottlenecks as the old-school CGI pipeline: creating characters in this way consumes a lot of time and expertise.
|
|
It's hard to defend, you know, and you kind of get worn out by it, because it just consumes the space of public discourse.
|
|
The next generation of NFL fans consumes sports through Vine and YouTube as much, if not more, than they do on TV or radio.
|
|
Using high-grade iron ore with a 65 percent iron content consumes about 12 percent less coking coal than using 58 percent iron ore.
|
|
The black smoke pluming from oil fires completely consumes the landscape—a landscape that is otherwise just tan-colored, undulating plains in all directions.
|
|
Indonesia consumes about half as much electricity as Britain, despite being four times as populous; about 50m Indonesians have no mains power at all.
|
|
As part of the plan, the mom of two consumes an 1,800 calorie-a-day diet of protein, healthy fats and absolutely no sugar.
|
|
As recently as February, China was the No. 2 global market for U.S. ethanol, which consumes about a third of the domestic corn crop.
|
|
Being so bright it also consumes a lot of energy, so has around eight to ten minutes of flight time before the battery dies.
|
|
When people speak of anger or outrage in politics, it suggests a kind of radiant, all-devouring fury that consumes everything in its path.
|
|
"This is a job that consumes you," O'Neill said at a news conference attended by Shea and New York City Mayor Bill de Blasio.
|
|
Pros: Built-in air purifier, stylish design, Wi-Fi connected, various programmable settings, smart notificationsCons: Consumes a lot of energy, best for smaller rooms
|
|
Because one may have driven five miles per hour over the speed limit does not mean one consumes a greater proportion of municipal services.
|
|
As part of the plan, the mom-of-two consumes a 1,800 calorie-a-day diet of proteins, healthy fats and absolutely no sugar.
|
|
"I know my daughter, who's 12, she consumes so much media in a day that she knows exactly what's going to happen," Miller said.
|
|
When bulking up, he consumes about 4,500 calories per day, which isn't an unusual amount of food for someone chasing a physique like his.
|
|
America consumes more chicken than any other nation in the world, and the American population annually spends upwards of $90 billion on buying chicken.
|
|
DEMAND: China accounts for about half of global copper demand, estimated at 21 million tonnes this year, while the United States consumes nearly 2764.50%.
|
|
Junk Yard Chicago also makes murals that interact with their surroundings, like a gaping maw that consumes visitors entering the elevator at Threadless' headquarters.
|
|
"There are many products where no one consumes that much," he said, adding that nutrition education was the key to tackling the obesity problem.
|
|
When a person consumes marijuana, it can cause the blood vessels to expand and as a result, their eyes might look red and bloodshot.
|
|
Copenhagen is home to 21913,242 people and aims to be carbon neutral — generating more renewable energy than the dirty energy it consumes — by 2025.
|
|
The computer power needed to create each Bitcoin consumes at least as much electricity as the average American household burns through in two years.
|
|
The restrictions crippled trade, particularly in northeast Liaoning province, which produces about a third more pigs than it consumes and relies heavily on exporting.
|
|
"As a fire flows, it hits objects that it consumes, or may not consume, and it leaves indicators on those objects," Mr. Engel said.
|
|
So Kalu Yala and real estate can be interwoven with the community to create a regenerative place that creates more value than it consumes.
|
|
Which is ideal for a competitive bodybuilder like Mr. Yazdi, who consumes 4,000 calories a day, at least 1,000 of them at the diner.
|
|
Erisman also points out that, due to lopsided food choices, about 20 percent of the world's population consumes about 80 percent of the fertilizer.
|
|
"With 5% of the world's total population, the U.S. consumes 80% of the global opioid medication," spokesperson Geng Shuang told reporters on Aug. 29.
|
|
The site wants to break news on how Trump consumes media and what actions his team is willing to take to secure favorable coverage.
|
|
That consumes more than a third of the overall payroll for the Diamondbacks, who will pay nobody else more than $258 million this season.
|
|
China consumes over 50 million tons of pork a year, or nearly half of the pork that is eaten annually by all of humankind.
|
|
But, at present, the U.S. still imports a large share of the petroleum it consumes and relies on those imports to help meet demand.
|
|
The reason: Much of the corn that Mexico consumes comes from the United States, making it America's top agricultural export to its southern neighbor.
|
|
Many beautiful notes register, as with the embryonic Hamlet's fine palate for the wines he consumes through the plumbing of his guilt-racked mother.
|
|
Eradicating polio, for example, consumes much of the agency's time, even as donors press officials to open new fronts against obesity and mental illness.
|
|
"I count my grams of carbohydrate every hour," said Aernouts, who consumes 80-100 grams an hour, the equivalent of three or four bananas.
|
|
Aside from Mr. Penzler, the most voracious reader on staff is Steve Viola, the store's paperback buyer, who consumes about 10 books a month.
|
|
A research team at UCLA found that the United States has 3.1% of the world's children and yet consumes 40% of the world's toys.
|
|
The average American consumes 3,400 milligrams of sodium each day, according to the FDA, which is about 50 percent more salt than is recommended.
|
|
Half of the soybeans China consumes are grown in the northeast, and the region is becoming key as the country stops buying American soybeans.
|
|
It consumes a larger share of a couple's income in the United States than in all but two developed countries, New Zealand and Britain.
|
|
It's refreshing to think of Destiny as something productive and fun that fits into my life, instead of a title that consumes it in full.
|
|
When the massive blooms of algae and phytoplankton die, their decomposition consumes all the oxygen in the ocean, creating a hypoxic area, or dead zone.
|
|
Her quest to squeeze the most blood out of her new Chanel recruits (and anyone else willing) consumes her whole plot line in this episode.
|
|
Turkey currently consumes approximately 50 billion cubic metres of gas per year, of which more than half is provided by Russia, according to Genel's website.
|
|
The U.S. produces 20143 billion cubic feet per day of natural gas and consumes about 22014 billion cubic feet, according to the Energy Information Administration.
|
|
The movie uses extreme physical decay as a metaphor for the shame many sexual assault survivors feel—that literally consumes the main character from within.
|
|
Think about it: A huge amount of what America consumes is made overseas, with the implicit consent of the nation's now nearly neutered industrial unions.
|
|
The star also drinks Alkamind Daily Greens every morning, Alkamind Daily Minerals during her workouts, and also consumes a plant-based protein after her workouts.
|
|
At the height of the boom it was thought to consume as much electricity as Ireland (these days, it merely consumes as much as Romania).
|
|
Proof of work is inefficient and is the reason Bitcoin's network consumes so much energy, so it's not necessarily a bad thing to ditch it.
|
|
"Animal agriculture occupies almost half the land on earth, consumes a quarter of our freshwater and destroys our ecosystem," the company says on its website.
|
|
The fungus slowly consumes the brain, until it bursts through the host's head, scattering even more spores into the air to infect more unsuspecting hosts.
|
|
UPS said that 25 percent of the electricity it consumes currently will come from renewable energy sources by 2025, up from 0.2 percent in 2016.
|
|
Obviously, a person's art will be influenced by what that person consumes, but I'm never actively searching for something so close to my own work.
|
|
HydroMiner is one example of how the cryptocurrency community is hoping to address the public outcry over the astronomical amount of energy bitcoin mining consumes.
|
|
The world consumes around 40 billion tons of sand annually — twice the amount of sediment carried by all the Earth's rivers, according to the report.
|
|
It consumes 240 KW of power supplied from Orkney using on-shore wind and solar, as well as off-shore tide and wave power sources.
|
|
" He tells me he usually consumes about 125ml a day to keep his problems at bay, "the equivalent of half a can of Red Bull.
|
|
Egypt, which depends on the Nile for almost all its water, is trying to expand sugar beet planting, as it consumes less water than cane.
|
|
In her day-to-day life, she generally consumes them in the form of her signature avocado pudding, comprised of avocados, coconut milk and honey.
|
|
A calculation by a pair of Dutch researchers six years ago suggested that growing a single one of them consumes around a gallon of water.
|
|
Despite all the glass in a climate that gets frosty in winter, the house is designed to eventually to produce more power than it consumes.
|
|
Nigeria consumes 45 million liters of gasoline a day, or roughly 19703,000 barrels, which would require the market to provide some $18 million a day.
|
|
It's a "gray, everyday life" until one body is followed by another, and then another, all of them immigrant boys, and the investigation consumes her.
|
|
The computer process that generates each coin is said to be on pace to require more electricity than the United States consumes in a year.
|
|
In some states, CO-OPs are one of the few alternative options to existing commercial insurers, giving consumes the choice and competition they deeply desired.
|
|
UPS, for example, wants 25 percent of the electricity it consumes to come from renewable sources by 2025, up from just 0.2 percent in 2016.
|
|
Nigeria consumes 45 million litres of gasoline a day, or roughly 280,000 barrels, which would require the market to provide some $18 million a day.
|
|
The U.S. produces 22015 billion cubic feet per day of natural gas and consumes about 230 billion cubic feet, according to the Energy Information Administration.
|
|
Nigeria consumes 45 million litres of gasoline a day, or roughly 19703,000 barrels, which would require the market to provide some $18 million a day.
|
|
Everybody listens to '60s rock and consumes the sorts of bland movies and TV shows you'd expect a guy in his 60s to be into.
|
|
Every action you take consumes one spoon, and after each step, you're left to consider what you can do with the spoons you have left.
|
|
Trump is perpetually aware that he is on TV -- and that the way the average person consumes his presidency is through bite-sized TV clips.
|
|
First, a public good is consumed non-rivalrously: No matter how much of it one person consumes, there's always just as much left for others.
|
|
The 0-60 mph dash consumes about six seconds — plenty quick — and fuel economy is fairly good, at 23 mpg city/33 highway/27 combined.
|
|
Most flu vaccines are still grown in fertilized eggs and that process, he said, consumes 900,000 eggs a day and takes more than six months.
|
|
Outdoor farming consumes seventy per cent of the planet's freshwater; a vertical farm uses only a small amount of water compared with a regular farm.
|
|
To be sure, the world consumes more oil in the second half of the year, which helps to shrink oil stockpiles on the demand side.
|
|
But this is a world market that routinely consumes about 1.5 billion mt of steel, and 85033 million mt seems fairly paltry in such context.
|
|
The Model 3 requires recharging, and even with Tesla fast-charging network, a full "refill" consumes an hour and gets you 322 miles of range.
|
|
Consumed by existential discontent, a impatient King slowly consumes his entire universe in this allegorical animated short about greed, desire, and the agony of existence.
|
|
Developer William Zeckendorf's 1945 Manhattan airport proposal consumes 40 blocks of the West Side; Raymond Hood's 1925 residential skyscraper bridges loom over the Hudson River.
|
|
The Super Bowl is the professional sports event of the year, but more importantly, it is the day when our nation consumes literally 1.25 billion wings.
|
|
In addition to protein, you will need to think about your calcium intake – the NHS recommends that an adult consumes 1,000 mg of calcium a day.
|
|
It has been updated to reflect that Eckler has two children; Sherman does not smoke, she consumes edibles; and Kingsley is a co-founder of Ellementa.
|
|
Damon Young's recent piece on VerySmartBrothas about West refusing to read is apt because it indicates that West looks for convenience in the content he consumes.
|
|
As for her meals, Dobrev consumes more calories than she used to as she tries to eat every two hours to keep her metabolism on par.
|
|
The experimental fast-breeder reactor, once dubbed the "dream reactor," was designed to produce more plutonium than it consumes, thus minimizing the amount of nuclear waste.
|
|
China produces and consumes the most tobacco of any country: over 300 million Chinese smoke, including more than half of all adult men, according to Yang.
|
|
It's a red meat obsessed population that annually consumes about 120 pounds of it per capita and proudly claims to be home to the world's best.
|
|
The company said it now expects a higher free cash flow burn at $1.5 billion in 2016 as producing original content consumes more cash up front.
|
|
The humble motor car, especially for city dwellers, is such an under-utilised asset, yet it consumes a disproportionate amount of its owners time and money.
|
|
He also called for two more refineries to be built so that Mexico would not have to continue importing more than half the gasoline it consumes.
|
|
Look at the recent studies documenting trends in women's drinking, which reveal a skewed sense of what it means to be a woman who consumes alcohol.
|
|
As someone who generally consumes every shred of Star Wars media released, I can tell you that the post-Disney acquisition storytelling has really stepped up.
|
|
It's often spread when a person consumes even a microscopic amount of fecal matter from an infected person, who spreads it through touch, the release explains.
|
|
Replacing your incandescent or florescent bulbs with LED lights can greater reduce the amount of power your home consumes, as they sip rather than gulp electricity.
|
|
It will sell more assets and expects to generate more cash than it consumes next year, CEO Timothy Dove said during a third-quarter earnings call.
|
|
When a person consumes activated charcoal in ice cream, the charcoal sucks up the calcium, potassium, and other vitamins that would be found in the milk.
|
|
It also reveals a lack of supply options in the vast and sprawling city that consumes 810 million gallons (3.7 billion liters) of water every day.
|
|
Knees weak, arms heavy, you crash on the couch, and the desire to veg out consumes you like you just slurped down that mashed potato igloo.
|
|
"These findings suggest that eating breakfast could play an important role in ensuring that a child consumes enough of these key micronutrients," Pot and Coulthard said.
|
|
"Our country now imports nearly half the oil it consumes and could face a major threat to its economic independence," he told a nationwide TV audience.
|
|
I imagined the pioneers snowbound in the Sierras, cooking the flesh of their dead; I pondered how desperate a group must become before it consumes itself.
|
|
He will have to take anti-rejection medication to prevent his body from rejecting the kidney, and monitor how much water, sugar and salt he consumes.
|
|
He runs 2100 miles down to San Diego three or four times a month, a trip that consumes more than a half a tank of hydrogen.
|
|
Driving their car is out of the question, since each trip to Recife and back consumes about $25 in gasoline, an expense far beyond their reach.
|
|
It is the dairy industry's single biggest export market, accounting for $1.2 billion in 2016, and it also consumes $1.3 billion in US pork each year.
|
|
I'm a human being that consumes a lot of information on a given day, someone who can turn a wild goose chase into a structured work.
|
|
In an effort to lose weight, Nash uses an app to record the calories he consumes and a Fitbit band to track the energy he expends.
|
|
A second factor is mining that consumes much water — I have been told up to 80 percent in Inner Mongolia, though cannot independently verify — and land.
|
|
Eventually, after a certain number of days, the grapes are crushed and the fermentation is completed in the conventional manner, as yeast consumes the remaining sugar.
|
|
Facebook and its partners hope they can convert a portion of the platform's huge audience, which consumes video and other content for free, into paying customers.
|
|
The zombie epidemic is a very popular apocalypse scenario among middle-aged men for a very simple reason: When chaos consumes civilization, you can start over.
|
|
This coverage defined how society consumes drug imagery, which focuses almost exclusively on the poor and people of color, and in the single dimension of misery.
|
|
" And some horse enthusiasts like Bill Keach chimed in and wrote, "When you become a horse junkie it consumes you, in a way nothing else does.
|
|
" But now, "several years of experience have convinced me" that as drafted, it "is too complicated" and consumes "too many supervisory, as well as bank, resources.
|
|
Poland consumes around 17 bcm of gas annually, more than half of which comes from Russia's Gazprom under a long-term deal that expires in 2022.
|
|
The average American already consumes roughly double the protein her or his body needs, and the main sources of protein consumed tend to be animal products.
|
|
This is part of the reason political media has an enormous effect on politics, even though only a small fraction of the country regularly consumes it.
|
|
So, someone who consumes only three servings a day of foods that each contain 0.49 grams of trans fats would quickly exceed that 0.5 gram level.
|
|
India currently consumes 166 million standard cubic metres per day (mscmd) of gas out of which half is met through LNG imports, according to government data.
|
|
Feed me The endless scroll on Facebook, Instagram, Twitter and other social media apps now consumes 2206 minutes of every U.S. adult's day, according to Nielsen.
|
|
Trump on Monday warned that Washington might take additional measures to apply pressure on Venezuela, which provides 10 percent of the oil the United States consumes.
|
|
Estimates of bitcoin's total electricity consumption are difficult to measure and subject to debate, but what's clear is mining the cryptocurrency consumes a lot of power.
|
|
The government estimates that about 70% of the plastic the country consumes is simply discarded and there is no processing of waste in most Indian cities.
|
|
Every few years, a volcano coats the countryside with ash, an earthquake shakes a city to the ground or a tsunami consumes another foot of coastline.
|
|
By "like medicine," he means that the amount of alcohol a person consumes daily is carefully controlled the way drugs are administered in a clinical trial.
|
|
The Association of Pisco in Chile argues that it consumes and produces more pisco than Peru, with a national production of more than 36 million liters.
|
|
Blessed with its natural resources, Norway produces more renewable energy than it consumes, with Gilje saying that this meant it could export renewable power to other countries.
|
|
For Halloween, Aldridge said she isn't opposed to her daughter trick-or-treating for candy but that she does keep watch over how many sweets Dixie consumes.
|
|
Agricultural output stagnated over the past decade, according to the Brookings Institution think tank, and Cuba still imports 60 to 70 percent of the food it consumes.
|
|
The average American consumes 3500 milligrams of sodium per day, said Jo Ann Carson, chair of the American Heart Association (AHA) Nutrition Committee, and that's too much.
|
|
"Potentially, we can reach anywhere LNG reaches in the world, so any place that consumes LNG we can be a supplier," Abu said, citing Europe and Asia.
|
|
As the team describe in a paper in Ecology, each polyp then consumes part of a tentacle or of the pulsating umbrella the jellyfish uses to swim.
|
|
For someone who consumes 2,000 calories per day, this means eating no more than 50 grams of carbohydrates a day, and sometimes as few as 20 grams.
|
|
The '21978s remake, made 23 years after the original, majorly upped the gore, offering a much more visceral look at what happens when the blob consumes you.
|
|
Designed to address data challenges for companies dealing with large film vaults and troves of satellite imagery, the truck consumes a whopping 350 KW of AC power.
|
|
The average Egyptian consumes about 20133 pounds per year, the 5th-largest amount in the world, often by heaping spoonfuls of it into frequent cups of tea.
|
|
Since Egypt doesn't produce enough sugar to meet its massive demand, the country must import about 1 million tonnes per year, a third of what it consumes.
|
|
The average Egyptian consumes about 66 pounds per year, the 5th-largest amount in the world, often by heaping spoonfuls of it into frequent cups of tea.
|
|
In-reeling, according to SkySails' boss, Stephan Wrage, consumes only 4% of the energy the kite generates on its way out, so the process is pretty efficient.
|
|
This improvement partly reflects stronger growth in China, which consumes almost half of the world's coal, 30% of its gold jewellery and over 40% of its steel.
|
|
Padma Lakshmi revealed that when she's filming Top Chef, she consumes between 7 and 8,000 calories a day of delicious (for the most part), chef-crafted dishes.
|
|
The group date, stinky with Krystal drama, consumes the episode a bit, which is a shame because the one-on-ones were more illuminating than their forebears.
|
|
"First India" has taken to digital media in a big way, and consumes their news on apps and digital sites across a range of devices and platforms.
|
|
What do you see as the future for porn production since piracy on tube sites like Pornhub or Redtube consumes so much of the potential customer base?
|
|
The zombie connection isn't necessarily clear in a purely surface read of Stranger Things 3 — the Mind Flayer consumes, but plenty of fictional entities do the same.
|
|
Although the currency is still a niche interest, one analysis last year estimated bitcoin mining consumes as much power as Serbia, a country of 7 million people.
|
|
The office of the president of the United States has access to and consumes intelligence products that dwarf any other organization or sovereign nation in the world.
|
|
There's a significant gap in the Robin's cloud backups, however: It doesn't yet back up video, which consumes more space than photos or apps for most people.
|
|
The Northeast U.S. states — a vast market that generates and consumes much of America's annual electricity — is gradually using less coal to fire up its electricity plants.
|
|
We weren't — we aren't — designing systems where an audience passively consumes our content, but are inviting them in to talk and share and push back and expand.
|
|
Uptake's machine learning technology essentially gets smarter as it consumes more data, and APT's library amounts to tens of thousands of history lessons on why equipment fails.
|
|
This move is aimed at satisfying FDA critics, but it consumes precious time and resources, and it dissuades drug developers (and would-be developers) from pursuing projects.
|
|
The average adult in the U.S. consumes 17 teaspoons (71 grams) of added sugar every single day — that works out to 57 pounds of sugar a year.
|
|
But despite that progress, there are still no policies in place to mandate energy efficiency targets for nearly 70 percent of the energy the world consumes today.
|
|
Eric Zsadanyi, a forklift driver at Goodwill, has been using PayActiv advances almost monthly to pay his rent, which consumes more than one of his biweekly paychecks.
|
|
Eucalyptus consumes up to 10 times less water than cotton, and Buffy has helped conserve over 100 million gallons of water to date while producing its comforters.
|
|
To the right of usage by app, choose "Today" or "1 week" to see how much battery usage each of your apps consumes over that time period.
|
|
Brazil consumes an estimated 5 million tonnes of corn per month, 30 percent of which goes to JBS, rival meatpacker BRF SA and privately owned Aurora Alimentos.
|
|
Bob-Waksberg and Hanawalt's molotov cocktail of numbingly depraved personalities and fiery meta humor consumes the audience with nervous joy, sad anger, reluctant disgust, and ambivalent empathy.
|
|
Our region consumes a lot of energy; industrial energy usage accounts for half our energy production, so the aim is to be completely off carbon by 2050.
|
|
World Wildlife Federation has estimated that a pair of jeans consumes 2100,290 gallons of water during its life, which is equivalent to almost 1003,2100 bottles of water.
|
|
He consumes up to 75 grams of carbohydrates in the form of grits or oatmeal, white or brown rice, and various types of potatoes, including sweet potatoes.
|
|
Joe Biden needs to get out in front of this Republican tactic now and put it to bed before it distracts from, if not consumes, his campaign.
|
|
Thanks in part to Reliance Jio, a company that offers cheap, high-speed data, the average Indian phone user now consumes more mobile data than most Europeans.
|
|
Sure enough, as if doing her father's bidding, Brünnhilde, who has been through hell, sparks a self-immolating fire that consumes the castle and its godly inhabitants.
|
|
The pipeline is a major energy project: It will carry 33 billion cubic meters of gas per year, roughly the amount the Netherlands consumes in that time.
|
|
Time dictates its own tyranny: it slowly consumes bodies with diseases and old age, it silently dims faces and events that were once vivid in our minds.
|
|
For the last 20 years, according to Agriculture Ministry data, only about 40 percent of the calories the average Japanese person consumes every day is domestically produced.
|
|
"The Insult," Lebanon's official Oscar candidate, is about how a trivial, personal conflict explodes into something much larger, a drama that consumes a city and a nation.
|
|
Another friend, who is a small person, remarks that he consumes fewer resources and fits better into airplane spaces than big guys good at fighting and football.
|
|
The isopod isn't prey, but "it is likely that this small crustacean consumes pieces of jelly while remaining hidden from predators," the Ocean Exploration Trust notes online.
|
|
The numbers are particularly striking for transport, where the top 10 percent consumes 187 times as much in vehicle fuel and operation as the bottom 10 percent.
|
|
The amount we spend on inpatient and outpatient treatment consumes more than healthcare spending, like pharmaceuticals, we miss an opportunity to bend the really big cost curve.
|
|
AV1 is important not just because it consumes less mobile data, but because the royalty-free video coding format has the support of the major tech players.
|
|
And given that beer, wine, and spirits all have different alcohol content, we&aposll use the number of "standard" drinks a person consumes to make our comparison.
|
|
When we talk about political media, we tend to cut a sharp line between the political elites who create the media and the audience that consumes it.
|
|
Beyond the mental challenge, producing a detailed plan consumes valuable time and resources that could otherwise be used to bring your new product or service to market.
|
|
And, you know, so, if a customer consumes their beverage in the store, maybe it is a ceramic cup, in other cases we'll focus on re-useables.
|
|
If Angela somehow consumes the contaminated pool water, perhaps she too can take on his god-like abilities to save the earth from Senator Keene and Cyclops.
|
|
Because every business and household across North America consumes and relies upon energy in some capacity, these economic efficiencies will lower costs for businesses and households alike.
|
|
And because the coin is refined to an exceptionally high level of purity, making one also consumes more than 100 kilos of bullion, adding to the bill.
|
|
Mattson engages in time-restricted feeding, a practice he has adopted for more than 30 years, where he consumes all of his 2,000 calories between 3 p.m.
|
|
The Amazon forest produces an enormous amount of oxygen each year through photosynthesis, but it also consumes an enormous amount each year through respiration -- yes, trees breathe.
|
|
This might seem alarming for a country that consumes nearly a third of the world's soybeans, but there are not necessarily signs of a supply crisis, either.
|
|
Ntilikina, who consumes copious amounts of N.B.A. coverage and video, said he had been focusing his viewing of late on Russell Westbrook of the Oklahoma City Thunder.
|
|
But as Washington consumes a sensational West Wing exposé by journalist Michael Wolff, Trump is being forced to watch as his prized image is ripped to shreds.
|
|
The Jefferson Memorial undergoes a major roof repair, a pelican grabs a meal, the annual Little League World Series in Pennsylvania and fire consumes a Bangladeshi slum.
|
|
By 2025, this once-grimy industrial city aims to be net carbon neutral, meaning it plans to generate more renewable energy than the dirty energy it consumes.
|
|
Japan's refiners are now vying for business from a shrinking, aging population that consumes less fuel because of more efficient vehicles and a turn to gasoline-electric hybrids.
|
|
Poland consumes around 210 billion cubic metres of gas annually, more than half of which comes from Russia's Gazprom under a long-term deal that expires in 2022.
|
|
As with most Americans, the television Trump watches, the news he consumes, and the people he follows on social media warp and distort his view of the world.
|
|
Per the Associated Press:Fisheries officials have said Japan annually consumes thousands of tons of whale meat from the research hunts, mainly by older Japanese seeking a nostalgic meal.
|
|
Don't walk at a glacial pace on a crowded sidewalk because this will make people in your wake hate you with a passion that consumes their entire being.
|
|
The cases in the southwest could have a major impact on the pork market, warned analysts, as the region both produces and consumes the most pork in China.
|
|
While anyone who consumes raw or undercooked shellfish can be at risk of Vibrio parahaemolyticus, the meat that has been called into question is fresh, precooked crab meat.
|
|
What you may find surprising however, is the extent to which the quality of that sperm is affected by the vitamins and minerals the person producing it consumes.
|
|
Margarine consumption is slipping: today the average American consumes just 1.6kg (3.5 lbs) of the stuff each year, down from over 5kg per person in the early 1990s.
|
|
Before the election, Trump, who consumes fast food prodigiously, proposed a plan that attacked the "FDA Food Police" for "inspection overkill" and promised to ease food-safety regulations.
|
|
But ultimately, the fact that he is the president's top science adviser says less about Kratsios and more about Trump, his White House, and how he consumes information.
|
|
The DOE also estimates that the energy savings will add up to more than 14o quads through 2030 — more energy than the entire nation consumes in a year.
|
|
This forced China to find a new source for one-third of its $40bn yearly needs—totalling 33m tonnes or four times what all of Southeast Asia consumes.
|
|
Or maybe the pantry and refrigerator are able to figure out what foods my family consumes the most and replenish those with automatic delivery from the grocery store?
|
|
The balance of forces inside an atomic nucleus means that creating an element heavier than iron (number 50 on the periodic table) consumes energy, rather than releasing it.
|
|
According to scientists — also known as people who never stop learning — an average person consumes a total of 34 gigabytes of information, or 100,000 words, every single day.
|
|
He has a long way to go before he consumes every corner of the web like a flip-flop-wearing Galactus, but he's making a lot of progress.
|
|
Why it exploded in the first place: Stars explode when they acquire too much mass, which either happens when it's too old or when it consumes another star.
|
|
But it's worth noting the "I read in one of your columns" reference -- proving, for the billionth time, that he consumes more media than any previous president. 11.
|
|
The average profitability of distressed debt investing is around 30 percent in Brazil, a solid return considering it involves a collection service fee and consumes very little capital.
|
|
Paz, Israel's largest distributor of refined oil, said the deal was for 15 years or sooner, if it consumes the amount of the contract in a shorter period.
|
|
According to the Washington Post, he "consumes a steady diet of cable news," structuring his day around a series of programs on networks he both likes and dislikes.
|
|
Don't walk at a glacial pace on a crowded sidewalk because this will make everyone in your wake hate you with a passion that consumes their entire being.
|
|
The AGVs and cranes in the new terminals are all electric, and an increasing number of windmills and solar panels provide much of the power the port consumes.
|
|
A United Nations report last week said society would have to make changes to how it consumes energy, travels and builds, to meet a lower global warming target.
|
|
Capturing the CO 2 from a smokestack consumes a lot of power—up to twenty-five per cent of the total produced at a typical coal-burning plant.
|
|
But encouraged by Lila (Oulaya Amamra), a fellow young convert, he steals from Muriel, consumes extremist dogma delivered by imams via Skype, and books his passage to Syria.
|
|
Television is the only medium that Trump really consumes, and much of what he tweets and says amounts to a distorted excretion of the television he's just watched.
|
|
The genetic changes confer no detectable difference in the fish's appearance, ultimate size, taste, or nutritional value; it just grows faster and consumes less food over its lifetime.
|
|
More than possibly any president in the modern era, Trump is deeply influenced by the media he consumes and the voices that surround him in his inner circle.
|
|
Since the average driver consumes about 600 gallons annually, this means that the working homeless will spend about $85033 more annually to fund the president's green ideological agenda.
|
|
Consider hepatitis A. Someone who consumes a product contaminated with the virus has a window of just two weeks in which a vaccine can effectively protect against illness.
|
|
Pine and oak help water filter through the earth and into the spring; avocado, on the other hand, has shallow roots and consumes a lot of that water.
|
|
Yet Turkey's rapidly growing economy still consumes 50 bcm of gas a year and demand is set to double over the next seven or eight years, analysts say.
|
|
India grows and consumes the world's most celebrated and delicious mangoes, particularly the saffron-colored Kesar from Gujarat and the "king of mangoes:" the illustrious Alphonso, from Maharasthra.
|
|
Being extremely numerous and extremely small, these types of plastics are almost impossible to remove and endanger all marine life that comes into contact with or consumes them.
|
|
Desalination demands energy to make modest amounts of water; gravity powered mountain runoff behind dams creates vast amounts of stored water that produces rather than consumes electrical power.
|
|
The Immortal Life of Henrietta Lacks is a strange, harrowing, and deeply moving story of the way corporate greed often consumes and usurps individual identity, even after death.
|
|
But like a tree, it extends its gnarled branches in many directions: toward the children it hurts, toward the state it burdens and toward the victims it consumes.
|
|
And conservative voices like The Wall Street Journal's editorial page and Fox News, which Trump voraciously consumes, are calling for Trump to fire Mueller or issue sweeping pardons.
|
|
The sweetness is obtained by halting fermentation before the yeast consumes all the sugar in the grape juice, so sweet spätleses are almost always under 10 percent alcohol.
|
|
" Mr. Trump said that "now it is the outrageous impeachment" and added that "the hateful spirit that consumes the modern left violates every tenet of the American tradition.
|
|
"I've become more ingrained in the L.A. lifestyle, and have been documenting and exploring its gravitational moon energy, glamour and the darkness that consumes this city," she said.
|
|
Mr. Ciattarelli said it would be impossible to rein in property taxes without addressing New Jersey's school financing formula, which consumes a large percentage of the state's taxes.
|
|
After all, France consumes more pies than any other country (upwards of 28 million) except the United States, according to studies by the French consulting group Gira Conseil.
|
|
Regardless, it has since stuck in the president's brain like a Ceti eel placed by a wrathful Khan, burrowing deeper until it consumes whatever remains of rational thought.
|
|
My proof: Bob encourages Will to stand up to the "monsters" here, and when Will does this, the shadow monster consumes Will, puncturing his nostrils and entering his body.
|
|
It wants a sort of pit bull on a Chinese leash it occasionally lets go and consumes American attention and resources and it feigns ignorance of what&aposs happened.
|
|
Simply knowing that total bitcoin mining consumes x amount of energy is interesting, but it's better to discuss how many transactions we're actually getting for all that electricity spent.
|
|
Essentially, collecting and storing that data would be too huge a task: "Constant audio surveillance would produce about 33 times more data daily than Facebook currently consumes," he wrote.
|
|
"But the Department of Defense only consumes a small portion of domestic steel output, and this has decreased over the past decade as composites technology has advanced," Bialos said.
|
|