Just as legal and other systems had to contend with stock, they're being forced to contend with cryptocurrency and assess whether policies and processes put in place in a different era still apply.
|
|
Searchers had to contend with difficult terrain and thick forest.
|
|
But there's another reality to contend with: The American public,
|
|
And then there's market leader Ola to contend with too.
|
|
Women have a lot to contend with in the workplace.
|
|
That is not something I've had to contend with. Sen.
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|
Now he's got to contend with Jimmy Kimmel as well.
|
|
But she now had an eating disorder to contend with.
|
|
There could be industry workarounds for Warren to contend with.
|
|
The world may soon have to contend with individualized warfare.
|
|
There's almost no baggage for an actor to contend with.
|
|
But they would have other new taxes to contend with.
|
|
Semenya has had to contend with controversy throughout her career.
|
|
Our state not only has to contend with increased wildfires.
|
|
Pompeo also has to contend with tough opponents at home.
|
|
Intimacy issues pop up today for you to contend with.
|
|
Now, they have to contend with federal fights as well.
|
|
They still had to contend with their America problem, though.
|
|
All the things that women have had to contend with.
|
|
Of course, there is still Serena Joy to contend with.
|
|
The companies may still have to contend with other states.
|
|
Mr. Navalny has also had to contend with unidentified assailants.
|
|
And we do have some wind chills to contend with.
|
|
However, it is also starting to contend with slowing growth.
|
|
Humanity doesn't really need another common virus to contend with.
|
|
However, difficult emotions come up for you to contend with.
|
|
The Canadian also had to contend with a damaged tyre.
|
|
There are nasties to contend with, too, the Silent Ones.
|
|
Even with a steady supply of cat fur to contend with.
|
|
Living in Jamaica, Xenothrix did not have to contend with predators.
|
|
Whites, in particular, were asked to contend with an ebbing majority.
|
|
How can one street have so much drama to contend with?
|
|
On this episode, both men had new antagonists to contend with.
|
|
Challenges in China There are other headwinds to contend with, though.
|
|
Bisexual men have their own set of stigma to contend with.
|
|
Not to mention, the kit has to contend with family tradition.
|
|
Banks have had to contend with a rising number of scams.
|
|
Venezuelans are forced to contend with completely arbitrary daily withdrawal allowances.
|
|
And they don't have harsh winters, like Montreal's, to contend with.
|
|
In the meantime, we may still have to contend with pizzagates.
|
|
The new prime minister will have to contend with such gripes.
|
|
The region already had to contend with Hurricane Harvey in August.
|
|
The company also has to contend with its crucial pro market.
|
|
And there's still the scariness of the moment to contend with.
|
|
And companies ultimately have to contend with their customers as well.
|
|
Baby boomers, however, also have to contend with their growing obsolescence.
|
|
China's global ambitions will also have to contend with local politics.
|
|
They also have to contend with internal divisions over immigration policy.
|
|
That's not to downplay the misogyny Clinton had to contend with.
|
|
Facebook has more than just new user habits to contend with.
|
|
Samsung also has Apple's traditional September iPhone reveal to contend with.
|
|
Jurors may also have to contend with gruesome crime scene photos.
|
|
That same fear is what the Dreamers have to contend with.
|
|
She also has to contend with a power-trippy science teacher.
|
|
These aren't the only issues for investors to contend with, either.
|
|
Now though, there is no Clinton for Biden to contend with.
|
|
But it will soon have another new rival to contend with.
|
|
It's another to contend with a human actor play the part.
|
|
There are also wild cards like monkey malaria to contend with.
|
|
Whether they stay or go, they'll have damage to contend with.
|
|
There is, of course, the issue of money to contend with.
|
|
Congressional candidates don't have to contend with a sexist media environment.
|
|
There's lots of drama for you to contend with this July, Libra.
|
|
You'll need to contend with responsibilities concerning your money and love life.
|
|
And, Curtice said, Labour has to contend with Jeremy Corbyn's striking unpopularity.
|
|
Amazon will also have to contend with a more active regulatory environment.
|
|
There are foes to contend with, and a particular goal to accomplish.
|
|
Then there's ongoing litigation between Toshiba and Western Digital to contend with.
|
|
Plenty have never been worn, no sweat or creases to contend with.
|
|
Luckily for them, they now won't have to contend with that future.
|
|
At the same time, Salke had to contend with brewing cultural tensions.
|
|
The justices have a third case of this sort to contend with.
|
|
These two potentially unifying figures will have to contend with factional candidates.
|
|
At best Mr Putin will have to contend with an incomplete triumph.
|
|
Miners, including Cameco, have been forced to contend with lackluster bottom lines.
|
|
In the short term, there are more pressing issues to contend with.
|
|
These aren't the only disadvantages the opposition has had to contend with.
|
|
For travelers, this means fewer long lines or crowds to contend with.
|
|
But European banks will still have to contend with American regulatory requirements.
|
|
Currencies will also have Friday's U.S. non-farm payrolls to contend with.
|
|
Everyone has real-life issues to contend with away from the field.
|
|
But any solution will have to contend with the country's property problems.
|
|
Counting our own children, we might have to contend with four generations.
|
|
But the broken city is still struggling to contend with its past.
|
|
You have to contend with cumbersome stairs, crowded sidewalks and narrow stores.
|
|
And then there is also this person's — Maureen's — sign to contend with.
|
|
Governments are struggling to contend with what increasingly looks like a pandemic.
|
|
Sanders, Warren and Klobuchar also have another wild card to contend with.
|
|
A little early to have to contend with a new overstuffed turkey.
|
|
And Heller still has to contend with Republican primary challenger Danny Tarkanian.
|
|
And under Trump, migrants have also had to contend with Mexican authorities.
|
|
How to Start a Revolution also attempts to contend with Duca's virality.
|
|
You're still left to contend with issues of fairness, real and perceived.
|
|
But Pouille hasn't had to contend with that kind of sexist negativity.
|
|
And some parts of the country have to contend with inclement weather.
|
|
President Jimmy Carter had to contend with a serious challenge from Edward M. Kennedy for much of 1980, and lost re-election, as did President George Bush in 1992 after he was forced to contend with Patrick J. Buchanan.
|
|
She's watched retailers fail to contend with the shift to selling products online.
|
|
Poachers in Africa will now have to contend with a new foe: science.
|
|
In gaming, Microsoft has to contend with both Sony (SNE) and Nintendo (NTDOF).
|
|
Apart from journalists, authorities also have to contend with Kim and Trump impersonators.
|
|
The mood is confident—but you'll also need to contend with huge egos.
|
|
Some food outlets have to contend with raccoons or foxes raiding the bins.
|
|
It'll have to contend with a slew of other well-armed competitors, though.
|
|
The large U.S. banks have some serious issues to contend with, Mayo said.
|
|
At that point, they have another challenge to contend with: longer life spans.
|
|
A fresher approach ... and new enemies for Zuckerberg and Co. to contend with.
|
|
And drones in general have a fair bit of regulation to contend with.
|
|
Also, Felix will have to contend with a newly formidable opponent: The DEA.
|
|
There's the blast itself, and then all the radioactive fallout to contend with.
|
|
You may have to contend with some big egos, but generosity flows, too.
|
|
Yet voters, and their representatives, also have to contend with the ruling clergy.
|
|
How were you able to contend with this dynamic in scenes with King?
|
|
In addition to competitors, Uber also needs to contend with regulators and policymakers.
|
|
Democrats will also have to contend with the perceived successes of the GOP.
|
|
The puzzles never get too tough, staying pleasant and breezy to contend with.
|
|
And, of course, millions of Americans have to contend with state taxes, too.
|
|
The Vietnamese government has also had to contend with public pressure at home.
|
|
Unexpected secrets will pop up for you to contend with during this transit.
|
|
They usually have a lot of buried feelings of disatisfaction to contend with.
|
|
But Hopkins will probably have to contend with the top cornerback Patrick Peterson.
|
|
Europe barricaded itself against this flow, leaving Turkey to contend with a crisis.
|
|
Yes, he added, there is a wider variety of tourists to contend with.
|
|
During Ramadan, we are asked to contend with these feelings and let go.
|
|
More recently, the academy has been struggling to contend with the #MeToo movement.
|
|
Sanders, meanwhile, has had to contend with worrying cracks in his campaign's strategy.
|
|
But the team also has the Toyota Le Mans curse to contend with.
|
|
In short, you've got two problematic employees to contend with, not just one.
|
|
There are the serial humiliations of Hitler Youth day camp to contend with.
|
|
Unfortunately, those late-blooming geniuses have to contend with powerful biases against them.
|
|
Residents and businesses have had to contend with mandatory water rationing since 953.
|
|
He had to contend with veteran cornerback Vontae Davis quitting on the team.
|
|
And more often before exceeding a high, you have to contend with it.
|
|
China also has to contend with outbreaks of swine fever in other countries.
|
|
He has to contend with the complications of the primary map and calendar.
|
|
There is an inherent challenge of transporting the world to a theme park: The movie's Na'vi inhabitants had to contend with viperwolves in the forest, while visitors to Pandora: The World of Avatar mostly have to contend with crowds and lines.
|
|
Production was reportedly difficult, having to contend with Garland's addictions, weight fluctuations, and illnesses.
|
|
That's been taken away, and you still have rate hike possibilities to contend with.
|
|
But both he and Hamilton also have to contend with a resurgent Red Bull.
|
|
But the Resistance has to contend with something the Tea Party doesn't: the map.
|
|
So there are a lot of bonded microfibers to contend with teeth and claws.
|
|
Unfortunately, the EOS R has to contend with two big misses on Canon's part.
|
|
And that growing population has to contend with disturbing episodes of hostility and violence.
|
|
On top of all of this, today's farmers have to contend with intellectual property.
|
|
But U.S. soybean suppliers will have to contend with an expected bumper Brazilian harvest.
|
|
Breitbart will have to contend with strict laws governing hate speech and anti-Semitism.
|
|
The biggest obstacle that InSight's engineers had to contend with is the planet's atmosphere.
|
|
Standard Chartered has also had to contend with increasing nervousness about the banking sector.
|
|
That calculus becomes even more complicated when people have multiple cards to contend with.
|
|
On Prince William's wedding day, police had to contend with 18 protests in London.
|
|
It'll be just like Y2K but there will be another digit to contend with.
|
|
But before you get too excited, there are some hard realities to contend with.
|
|
One other thing that Netflix will have to contend with is rising content costs.
|
|
Soon, however, the fishermen may have to contend with a different sort of catch.
|
|
President Santos will also have to contend with dogged opposition from his foe Uribe.
|
|
Egypt has had to contend with Islamist sympathizers in the armed forces for years.
|
|
With Black Friday been and gone, there are now Christmas deals to contend with.
|
|
In other words, CurrentC had a host of issues to contend with, before today.
|
|
Each planet's visual uniqueness translates into different hazards that you need to contend with.
|
|
Man is unable to contend with this violence: bodies lie strewn across the frame.
|
|
He also has to contend with another data breach bug discovered yesterday in Google+.
|
|
Conservatives may soon have more than the odd gay wedding cake to contend with.
|
|
Greater antitrust scrutiny is needed to contend with the high level of industry consolidation.
|
|
A competitor would still have to contend with the possibility of unresolved future costs.
|
|
And a growing family in Michigan has a serious grocery bill to contend with.
|
|
But he had to contend with the same prejudices that affected other British Muslims.
|
|
The last time investors had to contend with an inversion like this was 2005.
|
|
Refiners also have to contend with other damaged infrastructure that are disrupting supply chains.
|
|
Regardless of who is in office, is this what we have to contend with?
|
|
There are daily resort fees to contend with, not to mention meals and incidentals.
|
|
If Democrats win the Senate, they'll have Trump's conservative judicial overhaul to contend with.
|
|
But unfortunately, commuters in the great plains had to contend with Quacky last week.
|
|
And that's not all he'll have to contend with among the Democratic primary electorate.
|
|
" Sharing ventilators, she said, would present "myriad issues you would have to contend with.
|
|
He also had to contend with mainstream conservatives and even his colleagues at Breitbart.
|
|
"That's just more supply that OPEC and non-OPEC producers have to contend with."
|
|
Right now, no one has the bandwidth to contend with a frustrating user interface.
|
|
He's a new sort of beast that we have to contend with as artists.
|
|
Boosted interoperability would help hospitals struggling to contend with the pandemic better coordinate care.
|
|
In addition to suffering intermittent pandemics, Europeans had to contend with numerous endemic diseases.
|
|
If he chooses to run, Biden will also have to contend with his age.
|
|
Yet, Republicans also have another worry to contend with: primary challenges from the right.
|
|
The threat the authorities now have to contend with is the exodus from Syria.
|
|
Exxon still has another 15 climate lawsuits to contend with, so far, noted Parenteau.
|
|
" Gerard Farrell: "Dumbest I ever had to contend with was twice-a-week neckties.
|
|
And some of Microsoft's initial attempts to contend with Google's rise in schools stumbled.
|
|
That's not to say cities don't have to contend with pollution captured by rainwater.
|
|
Nor did they have to contend with fabricated studies, or fake news, or Twitter.
|
|
Ramos, on the other hand, will have to contend with twice as many candidates.
|
|
On the streets of Addis, however, I had to contend with the obvious facts.
|
|
"Filters do have to contend with each other in some way, too," he said.
|
|
But they will have to contend with weaker secondary markets which could hurt deals.
|
|
Newt Gingrich has called for a revival of HUAC to contend with ISIS sympathizers.
|
|
Pichai will also have to contend with being under more regulatory scrutiny than ever.
|
|
However, Buttigieg still has to contend with the fundraising power of his fellow candidates.
|
|
Hike will also need to contend with these payment specialists, and that's no easy task.
|
|
In addition to Amazon, Cloudera has to contend with emerging companies like Databricks and Snowflake.
|
|
But she's already had to contend with far more than her fair share of shit.
|
|
And to sit there and take the heat, publicly, is to contend with those criticisms.
|
|
Any spending plans would have to contend with rising budget pressures and an economic slowdown.
|
|
You won't have to contend with ice cubes watering down your cup of hot coffee.
|
|
After all, by some estimates, there are as many as 50,000 cities to contend with.
|
|
Europe's biggest low-cost airline has had to contend with the rising price of oil.
|
|
The Asian bidders may need to contend with an outbreak of economic nationalism in Tokyo.
|
|
And it might not be the last special election that Republicans have to contend with.
|
|
To preserve the festive atmosphere, the Russian authorities will have to contend with several difficulties.
|
|
And now there's Zika to contend with, a disease that's been linked to birth defects.
|
|
The company will have to contend with trendy diets, which unlike WW, are often free.
|
|
After the sign-up bonus, you still have to contend with the hefty annual fee.
|
|
An outdoor concert has to contend with weather, while an indoor performance has space constraints.
|
|
Detroit will have to contend with a top Panthers line that seems to be clicking.
|
|
We also need to contend with the exaggerated illusions that keep people supporting these leaders.
|
|
No matter how you slice it, stocks have a serious earnings problem to contend with.
|
|
Garvie believes these systems have to contend with too many variables to be effective today.
|
|
The company has also had to contend with recession in Brazil, once a growth area.
|
|
And to further complicate already tough decisions, states sometime have to contend with timing issues.
|
|
For the first time in Gary's adult life, he has to contend with self-doubt.
|
|
But regardless of what she had to contend with, Hudgens was also flat-out excellent.
|
|
Beyond that, there is a league of psychological troubles and social stigma to contend with.
|
|
Thursday was the second time this month Lyondell had to contend with an unplanned interruption.
|
|
The auto industry has had to contend with a slowdown in business in recent years.
|
|
He'll also need to contend with managing his own boss and with winning legislative victories.
|
|
We are just catching our breath after Ebola, and have now to contend with Zika.
|
|
But taller towers were another matter, requiring additional steel reinforcement to contend with severe winds.
|
|
Each of us has his or her own obsessive thoughts and fears to contend with.
|
|
There also appears to be a new part of the world to contend with: tornadoes.
|
|
There are recently revamped models from Hyundai, Kia, and Chevrolet to contend with as well.
|
|
When it comes to labor issues, the world of retail has plenty to contend with.
|
|
His films ask viewers to contend with ambiguity, which is part of their sly subversiveness.
|
|
But you still have to contend with TV, radio, podcasts, newspapers, friends, and opinionated strangers.
|
|
Competing under full kickboxing rules, Hug would have to contend with punches to the head.
|
|
That is obviously hard for startups — except for rocket ships like Uber — to contend with.
|
|
But you also have to contend with the Scylla and Charybdis of isolation and distraction.
|
|
But that's what you're going to have to ... You still have to contend with them.
|
|
For years, it struggled to contend with widespread piracy of its Windows and Office software.
|
|
When the Eagles have the ball, they will have to contend with Arizona's opportunistic secondary.
|
|
The human left Yellowstone unscathed, but he still had the park's staff to contend with.
|
|
But grumpy customers will have to contend with the structural imperatives of the insurance business.
|
|
It was before the twin towers fell and Muslims had to contend with terrorist stereotypes.
|
|
The original Miles is still around, and has to contend with his seemingly superior clone.
|
|
That helped fuel a fundraising bonanza that made Buttigieg a formidable candidate to contend with.
|
|
Now viewers will have to contend with Jesse's reality that he's still a wanted man.
|
|
He sources much of his steel locally, and has had to contend with rising costs.
|
|
Some makeup artists have also lowered their rates to contend with the change in demand.
|
|
Domestic industry also would have to contend with China's manipulation of the global supply chain.
|
|
Unlike older farmers, young farmers often have to contend with student loan debt, Ackoff said.
|
|
Robin Li said that Google would need to contend with the strength of Chinese companies.
|
|
Studios have to contend with a lot of fan backlash, often for the wrong reasons.
|
|
But the smug style sees no true ideology there, no moral threat to contend with.
|
|
Buck may also have to contend with the plans of the charitable trust that controls Hershey.
|
|
This hasn't existed yet, and anything after Midsommar is going to have to contend with it.
|
|
After the Golden Globes ceremony, the movie's stars were forced to contend with the film's reputation.
|
|
Of course, the internet isn't going away, and retailers still, really, have to contend with Amazon.
|
|
As we count down to the holiday weekend, we'll have a cosmic curveball to contend with.
|
|
Little Spoon will also have to contend with Plum Organics and the age-old Gerber brand.
|
|
Oklahomans also had to contend with heavy rains and flooding, prompting water rescues by first responders.
|
|
And with the introduction to the Cradle, we have another evil technological system to contend with.
|
|
To contend with a phenomenon as astounding as the internet, the director starts at the beginning.
|
|
Did you have to contend with that, or have you been seeing that kind of reaction?
|
|
The two also had to contend with a fan who seemed to photobomb their stylish exit.
|
|
The 61st Annual Grammy Awards have to contend with some of music's most impressive new talents.
|
|
However, there are still other space weather hazards that satellite operators will have to contend with.
|
|
And even if the judges are cowed, Mr Kenyatta will have to contend with continuing protests.
|
|
There's also a bunch of TV show canon to contend with, like Legion and The Gifted.
|
|
Be aware that even if you're properly insured, you may have to contend with high deductibles.
|
|
Yet the longer the generals hang around, the more problems they will have to contend with.
|
|
In Houston, survivors of Hurricane Harvey had to contend with raw sewage and fire ant flotillas.
|
|
Sans lights, cameras, and action, Grimaldi will have to contend with the ending of Gates' relationship.
|
|
Uber is spending a lot of money on marketing to contend with its smaller, pluckier rival.
|
|
In that time, the market also has next Thursday's European Central Bank meeting to contend with.
|
|
They are not locked into a 1950s sensibility of manhood, which I had to contend with.
|
|
He started on pole, with Raikkonen alongside, and had to contend with a skewed steering wheel.
|
|
Apple has had to contend with a lot of leaks of details of the next iPhone.
|
|
Eventually you'll have to contend with a spiky, underwater creature that means instant death if touched.
|
|
I guess we'd have to contend with them, but that could wait until after the election.
|
|
And because its Newark farm is indoors, there are no bugs or rodents to contend with.
|
|
China also has to contend with tighter supplies from Argentina, the world's third-biggest soybean exporter.
|
|
A lunar elevator would not have to contend with the Earth's gravitational force or space debris.
|
|
But lawmakers seeking to regulate AI will have to contend with a number of competing pressures.
|
|
While the Uffizi has to contend with crowd control, other Italian museums have the opposite problem.
|
|
But in making this attempt, Mamie and women like her had to contend with severe laws.
|
|
But then she had to contend with a knee injury that required two operations in 2009.
|
|
Though each character has a personal struggle to contend with, nothing ever feels truly at risk.
|
|
Leaders there are hoping they don't have to contend with anything like that again this year.
|
|
Singers in China have long had to contend with official restrictions, despite a thriving music scene.
|
|
When the heavyweights are on the field, the Rams will have to contend with Drew Brees.
|
|
Ms. Aldaya also has to contend with scenes in which she is chased by menacing men.
|
|
Gay-rights activists in South Korea often have to contend with insults and threats of violence.
|
|
In terms of the push, the foragers were having to contend with challenging ice age conditions.
|
|
MUMBAI, India — So far, India has had to contend with very few known cases of coronavirus.
|
|
MUMBAI, India — So far, India has had to contend with very few known cases of coronavirus.
|
|
On a recent fall afternoon, however, Rocks has a different sort of problem to contend with.
|
|
As their numbers grew, ranchers have had to contend with wolves' appetite for cattle and sheep.
|
|
But most will have to contend with a severe shortage of workers and disrupted supply chains.
|
|
At the same time, automakers have had to contend with a new political agenda in Washington.
|
|
Beyond closing its borders, North Korea has taken other steps to contend with the viral outbreak.
|
|
Drivers of these vehicles also have to contend with the loss of income following the ban.
|
|
For much of the last decade, households around the world have had to contend with it.
|
|
Pax Americana is now faced with a dilemma that European empires had to contend with before.
|
|
Future generations will be forced to contend with the crushing deficits that Trump is racking up.
|
|
Now, the Americans and Israelis will have to contend with the serious breach of espionage etiquette.
|
|
The only way to contend with this misperception is to examine your company stock holdings dispassionately.
|
|
But that doesn't mean Biden hasn't had to contend with the issue on the campaign trail.
|
|
That made it clear to Ukrainians that Giuliani was a force to "contend" with, Holmes said.
|
|
Yet even Walmart is having to contend with a sea change in the way people shop.
|
|
Democrats also have to contend with the Trump White House effort to undermine the Congressional investigations.
|
|
Banks also have to contend with rising technology costs, which can make scale look more appealing.
|
|
The Islanders also have to contend with rumors surrounding their future home — wherever it may be.
|
|
He wanted to say he might have to contend with retiring in a couple of years.
|
|
But they also have to contend with sponsored posts, where the platforms don't see a dime.
|
|
In recent years, the office has had to contend with a historic backlog of pending cases.
|
|
Uber also has to contend with competition from Didi, Ola, Grab and Careem in international markets.
|
|
Coaches aren't the only ones responsible for the mess that female athletes have to contend with.
|
|
Australia now needs to contend with the fact that the gunman was one of their own.
|
|
And then there's that Hydra problem to contend with—shut one down and another will appear.
|
|
Lil Wayne set out the blueprint that every other rapper since has had to contend with.
|
|
Global investors might soon also have to contend with high numbers of defaults in China's corporate sector.
|
|
The next Democratic challenger will have to contend with fake news, as will subsequent Republicans and independents.
|
|
Meanwhile, enterprise startups have to contend with long sales cycles and stricter requirements from their prospective customers.
|
|
Simply by design, Periscope has to contend with the worst problems of both chatrooms and live video.
|
|
It's set in a vast wasteland, one filled with all kinds of dangerous groups to contend with.
|
|
The Republican candidates may also have to contend with Sessions, who held the seat for two decades.
|
|
One question he may have to contend with: Is his team too dominant to help his chances?
|
|
And even if they were, they'd have to contend with the message of their own party's nominee.
|
|
But it does open up a new front of opposition for the White House to contend with.
|
|
It's harder to contend with the ones whose main focus is to not seem like a monster.
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All the while, restaurant workers are left to contend with calls they describe as creepy or confusing.
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The university has also had to contend with a shrinking number of campuses, layoffs and tumbling enrollment.
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Australia take on China next, while the U.S. has Serbia to contend with Friday night Rio time.
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Providing proper credits to songs is an issue many online streaming platforms have had to contend with.
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At its most peaceful, there were still gang wars, serial killers, and Jingle Jangle to contend with.
|
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Of course, any enterprise messaging startup has to contend with the specter of Slack and Microsoft Teams.
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That kind of popularity means she has to contend with some of the internet's less supportive elements.
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It has had to contend with a slowing Chinese economy and the ongoing U.S.-China trade war.
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"Even when they don't win, they emerge as actors all politicians need to contend with," he said.
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After that, Watson will have the lucrative FedExCup playoffs to contend with before the Sept. 30-Oct.
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After all, these couples don't have to contend with the libido-wreckers that ordinary ones have to.
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Politically volatile regions also generate high demand as companies have to contend with damaged pipelines, Jones said.
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There are still plenty of moving parts to contend with here, including, perhaps most consequentially, broadband caps.
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Americans also have to contend with skyrocketing costs for the essentials of life: education, healthcare, and housing.
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As Bitcoin has grown, it's been forced to contend with a flood of traffic on the network.
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In the longer term the EU will have to contend with the imbalances created by Britain's absence.
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Even if you're able to contend with that, there's also just not a whole lot to do.
|
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Now it's going to turn into mud, which will be another hazard for them to contend with.
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But food waste is something we food media folks need to contend with and talk about more.
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Banks was singularly calm about Brexit, but he had to contend with some issues of his own.
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Elected populists will have to contend with the practicalities of government, potentially against a weaker economic backdrop.
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In 2018, Erdogan will have to contend with a corruption scandal at home and regional uncertainty abroad.
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If things could be dull or hard, at least there weren't too many miseries to contend with.
|
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On the flip side, the Tesla also has to contend with super-sedans from Mercedes and BMW.
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Without having to contend with an internal combustion engine, there was more room to play around with.
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The idea of dealing with refugees—another form of immigration—is much more difficult to contend with.
|
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The central and eastern regions of the country were also expected to contend with a cold snap.
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"Now we have the South China Sea to contend with," Mr. Bui Jones said with a chuckle.
|
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We can, at best, help them develop the tools (intellectual, emotional, psychological) to contend with these dangers.
|
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But for a young woman faced with an unplanned pregnancy, those are terrifying misperceptions to contend with.
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Of course, the company still has to contend with a shrinking smartphone market, just like everyone else.
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The N.O.C. has also had to contend with assaults on its independence as a decision-making body.
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Last year, it stopped production in China where it had to contend with competition from domestic rivals.
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A lot of people will have to contend with AI taking over some part of their jobs.
|
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Father John Misty has the digital onslaught of the 21st century, and its consequences, to contend with.
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Last year, it stopped production in China where it had to contend with competition from domestic rivals.
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But, legal weed in Canada has introduced some new problems that these companies need to contend with.
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But, Trump has also had to contend with the fact that his party remains divided on it.
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New York (CNN Business)Retailers around the world are radically reshaping their strategies to contend with Amazon.
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But now, ironically, Mattis has to contend with an even more pugnacious rival in the White House.
|
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On the other hand, Axe Cap has to contend with its own worst enemy: Axe's blustery self-confidence.
|
|
In real life, hockey culture has serious issues to contend with, including homophobia, sexual assault, racism, and misogyny.
|
|
The problems only came when he was having to contend with being beaten up on the feet too.
|
|
Even though she no longer has to contend with unpaid time off, she has anxiety around sick days.
|
|
Until now, Nearline users also had to contend with a 3 to 5 second latency when accessing data.
|
|
As Tasha pointed out, we've already got several murders to contend with, and no one to solve them.
|
|
And now Mars, in sparking a mini culture war, actually has a dramatic pop story to contend with.
|
|
Samsung will have to contend with a slew of other well-armed competitors making a similar play, though.
|
|
Now, on top of the obvious scientific hurdles, Ishee has a new challenge to contend with: the FDA.
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The winter theme also means lots of snowy areas, which include slippery surfaces for players to contend with.
|
|
It does not just have to contend with Labor: several more conservative strongholds are under threat from independents.
|
|
Of course, they'll have to contend with the real Spice Girls, who may or may not be reuniting.
|
|
That's a burden any ruler has to contend with, whether they're in Shakespearean England or zombie-strewn Virginia.
|
|
The military assembled an adaptation roadmap in 2014, chalking out how they plan to contend with climate change.
|
|
Marshall had to contend with a "very large group…opposed to practically anything outside of the United States".
|
|
Incumbents will also have to contend with Apple, despite the delay of its smartspeaker until early next year.
|
|
Those who decide to stay have to contend with a drinking water supply contaminated with cancer-causing benzene.
|
|
It also has to contend with heavy competition from Chinese players, such as BYD (BYDDF) and NIO (NIO).
|
|
There's also this question to contend with: Are you consuming the text the way the author intended it?
|
|
Broken glass—and spilled food—will be the last thing you&aposll want to contend with when unpacking.
|
|
Unfortunately, San Francisco had to contend with a far more efficient bullpen from Chicago: Just Straight Up Gas.
|
|
On the one hand, she's got a potential siege situation — as outlined earlier by Bronn — to contend with.
|
|
Every Scorpio has an enemy to contend with — and a surprising one may find you during this time.
|
|
Musk is the public face of Tesla, and any chairman would have to contend with his powerful personality.
|
|
Those without that calm now also have to contend with the exhausting demands of living a digital life.
|
|
Though McBride showcased some serious resilience, he was ultimately unable to contend with his far more experienced foe.
|
|
Here, she begins to understand the Commander's true nature, and has to contend with unexpected pettiness from Nick.
|
|
If growth stagnates for paid subscribers, Spotify will have a lot of angry royalty holders to contend with.
|
|
The action is challenging and intense, with an almost non-stop of barrage of enemies to contend with.
|
|
Looking further out, legal action and greater industry regulation are huge headwinds 'the Zuck' has to contend with.
|
|
But it may soon have to contend with heavy US and UK naval firepower already in the region.
|
|
Blunt does have to contend with the anti-establishment, anti-Washington winds that have roiled the presidential primaries.
|
|
But they've still got to contend with tough competition, evolving technology, and fickle consumer preferences like other retailers.
|
|
While Chicago was an extremely flat course, we'll have to contend with bridges and hills along the way.
|
|
But the party has had to contend with the split that showed itself during the 2016 presidential campaign.
|
|
Boeing has had to contend with several reduced orders for the 777X, including from British Airways and Lufthansa.
|
|
Imagining a President Trump having to contend with Vice President Clinton makes the current system make more sense.
|
|
Trump aide Kellyanne Conway says she may have fewer distractions to contend with than many people in government.
|
|
And Sinclair still has to contend with the possibility of $1 billion in damages from the Tribune lawsuit.
|
|
With its new VoIP product, Tizeti looks to contend with the likes of Skype, WhatsApp, and major telcos.
|
|
Just as publishers have been forced to contend with the ever-changing algorithms on Facebook, Instagram, and YouTube.
|
|
Mr Mashaba will also have to contend with a city bureaucracy that is politicised and largely pro-ANC.
|
|
Since former Speaker Newt Gingrich's (R-Ga.) time, they've had to contend with irrational obstinacy, obstruction and disingenuousness.
|
|
There are many issues to contend with, including player protests, declining TV ratings, and the debate about concussions.
|
|
Uber still has several major issues to contend with, including several major government investigations, regulatory messes and lawsuits.
|
|
Eviction became a complicated procedure, and real-estate developers have had to contend with these holdouts ever since.
|
|
And then you realize how alike we really are, that we all have our issues to contend with.
|
|
Still, it's smarter to contend with the source of that anger and desperation, rather than police the outburst.
|
|
Some humans have guns, flamethrowers, or armor, and there are motion-activated turrets to contend with as well.
|
|
But boy are we tired of having to contend with the stereotype that we are slow and unintelligent.
|
|
The agency has also had to contend with embarrassing leaks of its cyber tools by hacker group ShadowBrokers.
|
|
He'll have to contend with a cadre of lawmakers who have increasingly embraced the president's low-blow tactics.
|
|
But to achieve all these initiatives from drones and data, the charity has one hurdle to contend with.
|
|
It's even more troubling to think that nobody inside Google knows how to contend with Google's size, either.
|
|
That higher, yearly price is a better way to get your brain to contend with the actual cost.
|
|
Neither Cruise nor Waymo has any meaningful consumer friction to contend with as far as its services go.
|
|
The Mariners had hoped to contend with a rotation led by Felix Hernandez, Drew Smyly and James Paxton.
|
|
But journalists in 1999 did not have to contend with the minute-by-minute demands of digital media.
|
|
As the survivors of the tornadoes pick up the pieces, they'll have to contend with the cold, too.
|
|
And to write it so that he is both able to grieve and to contend with his guilt.
|
|
And if Moore is elected, it would give McConnell a difficult new senator to contend with in Washington.
|
|
Day had to contend with driving wind and rain over his last four holes before organizers halted play.
|
|
But billionaires in the US have been increasingly forced to contend with the prospect of a wealth tax.
|
|
In addition to Azure, there are other cloud providers for AWS to contend with, including Alphabet and Alibaba.
|
|
If the shares were sold piecemeal, Ponce would not have to contend with another "weighty shareholder," Lizana said.
|
|
Your target is the Fallen High Priest, but there's a rampaging Hive Ogre to contend with as well.
|
|
Making the cramped conditions even more unpleasant, Mr. Boudin also had to contend with the brothers' Labrador retriever.
|
|
He plays an astronaut aboard an international space station who has to contend with a HAL-like computer.
|
|
Lower ad pricing to contend with antitrust concerns, new privacy rules in Europe and increased competition from Amazon.
|
|
Big surprises are coming—and you , Aries, might be the big surprise other people have to contend with.
|
|
We were able to contend with it a little bit better, but it was a massive, dangerous collapse.
|
|
As much as you want to socialize, difficult issues will be coming up for you to contend with.
|
|
And that's not to mention the environmental and climate issues that they have to contend with as well.
|
|
Because Dr. Spock is nice and all, but it's 2018 and we have the entire internet to contend with.
|
|
Cat owners may also have to contend with their pets viewing the Mini as a toy or scratching pad.
|
|
Trump is now the third president to contend with a chaotic battlefield that includes at least 20 terrorist groups.
|
|
Because Dr. Spock is nice and all, but it's 220 and we have the entire internet to contend with.
|
|
It seems that Uber will also have to contend with what looks like a sort of union for drivers.
|
|
Kirsten Gillibrand and Kamala Harris, has had to contend with harmonizing his record with a more liberal Democratic Party.
|
|
Because Dr. Spock is nice and all, but it's 2741 and we have the entire internet to contend with.
|
|
But veterinarians in the UK and elsewhere are now being forced to contend with antivaxxers going to the dogs.
|
|
And now mission controllers and astronauts will have to contend with at least four contraband, and potentially hazardous, satellites.
|
|
Because Dr. Spock is nice and all, but it's 25 and we have the entire internet to contend with.
|
|
With all that to contend with, you might be wondering what else is happening in the Star Wars galaxy.
|
|
As well as oil prices the world will have to contend with policies proposed by president-elect Donald Trump.
|
|
Bill Clinton has his own well-publicized and often incredibly inappropriate (if not worse) sexual misdeeds to contend with.
|
|
The animals that survive the flames have to contend with feral cats, which move toward the fires to hunt.
|
|
Of course, Samsung will have to contend with a slew of other well-armed competitors making a similar play.
|
|
Now, she's returning home and has to contend with her family and their attitudes toward her much larger ambitions.
|
|
If you can get past all that, you need to contend with the voice assistant on the watch: Bixby.
|
|
We're not crazy because [Malcolm's] up there saying that thing that we're all living and having to contend with.
|
|
Blocks around your living situation and your private, personal life will come up for you to contend with today.
|
|
Because Dr. Spock is nice and all, but it's 258.99 and we have the entire internet to contend with.
|
|
Over the past year, policymakers have had to contend with a slowdown in global demand as the Sino-U.
|
|
Tillerson responded that Sessions would have to contend with the fact it was an ongoing case headed for trial.
|
|
In the meantime, California will have to contend with the potential for devastating wildfires and drastic responses like blackouts.
|
|
Both now have to contend with forces coming after the captain and her ship, including the people on it.
|
|
Ford also has to contend with its crosstown neighbor General Motors that maintains its world headquarters in downtown Detroit.
|
|
There are also a dialect and local customs to contend with, in order to offer the best possible experience.
|
|
Tesla is already punching above its weight when it comes to forcing other automakers to contend with electric cars.
|
|
Once comedy is forced to contend with the reality of living as a marginalized human being, it utterly fails.
|
|
Because Dr. Spock is nice and all, but it's 2100 and we have the entire internet to contend with.
|
|
Long term, Netflix will may also have to contend with the availability of broadband, and changing regulations, Gould wrote.
|
|
The other side: Both scooters and bikes currently have to contend with roads that were designed only for cars.
|
|
She's determined to reach her grandmother's home, but is forced to contend with dangerous governmental officials with ill intent.
|
|
Mr. Cruz has had to contend with his fair share of attack ads aimed at him here as well.
|
|
Gaza&aposs 2 million people have had to contend with blockade-linked electricity shortages, rising unemployment and growing poverty.
|
|
Without an auction to contend with, the super long JGB maturities on Monday fared better than the 10-years.
|
|
Take-Two Interactive has had to contend with with popular online games like Fortnite that are free to play.
|
|
Capheus in Kenya will certainly have to contend with the water crisis somehow — meaning he will run for office.
|
|
Because Dr. Spock is nice and all, but it's 212 and we have the entire internet to contend with.
|
|
And if you get it packaged at the store, you may have to contend with too much added sugar.
|
|
In addition to the capital glut, Decibel has to contend with some of the challenges of corporate venture capital.
|
|
In the future, predictions suggest, New York City may have to contend with Sandy-like storms every 2900 years.
|
|
Any international agreement is going to have to contend with those politics, and design mechanisms to ameliorate their effects.
|
|
Complicated emotions come up for you to contend with, but an easy flow around communication will arrive today, too.
|
|
We love to talk about love, but no one wants to contend with the other side of the game.
|
|
The last thing any business leader really wants to contend with, if they can avoid it, is actual competition.
|
|
He would also have to contend with the reputation of Los Angeles as a haven for bohemian social values.
|
|
He says the rules are ill-suited to contend with China's emergence as a major competitor in many markets.
|
|
As a spacecraft approaches the moon's surface, it suddenly has to contend with wonky gravity and a rocky terrain.
|
|
Farid believes the tech industry is overwhelmed but it's their own doing and they need to contend with it.
|
|
As in surgery, you have to contend with many moving pieces, and execute each motion smoothly and without interruption.
|
|
When using a whole chicken and a slow poach, there is very little of this stuff to contend with.
|
|
But Amazon and Spotify may have more challenges to contend with as other companies enter the music-streaming market.
|
|
Fed officials next month will have to contend with yet another political twist over a potentially heated budget fight.
|
|
OK. You've still got a glacially paced story to contend with that's overstuffed with characters and under-served plotlines.
|
|
Not only did they meet on a reality show, they have that whole long-distance thing to contend with.
|
|
Indiana, trying to reach its first regional final since 2002, struggled to contend with North Carolina's size and athleticism.
|
|
Banks will have to contend with increased choices and a world where their physical sprawl matters little to consumers.
|
|
Then there's rampant spambots and frequent glitches to contend with, which can sometimes make users' lives a living hell.
|
|
He finished with 279.7 points in difficult conditions where jumpers had to contend with driving rain and gusty winds.
|
|
Until then, he'll have to contend with Sanders unless the Vermont senator ends his campaign on his own volition.
|
|
The pope is expected to have to contend with the church's sexual abuse scandal during his visit from Jan.
|
|
One problem that marketers had to contend with is that some products, like a juicer, are one-time purchases.
|
|
He's always had his little side stories, but this year he's got an entire shopping mall to contend with.
|
|
Mr. López Obrador will have to contend with the dire crisis there and an unpredictable neighbor to the north.
|
|
Instead, Tesla vehicle owners will have to contend with whatever "Tesla Network" ridesharing option that the automaker rolls out.
|
|
"It's the speed that this is hitting us that is making it so difficult to contend with," Fitzgerald said.
|
|
But he always has to contend with the possibility that the regime's supporters will be dissatisfied with his actions.
|
|
But on top of all that size and talent, it's just one more thing for teams to contend with.
|
|
But unlike Bill, Hillary has to contend with a new generation of black voters, specifically black millennials like me.
|
|
Witnesses in the trial talked about how officers had to contend with a growing darkness in a remote area.
|
|
Within days, Greece was forced to contend with more than 220006,2202 refugees trying to cross by land and sea.
|
|
Some Democrats had worried that he was too bland, too normal — not dynamic enough to contend with Mr. Walker.
|
|
Almost everyone is now having to contend with what kinds of risks we are or aren't willing to face.
|
|
That means Blue Apron also has to contend with the likes of GrubHub (GRUB), Uber Eats (UBER) and DoorDash.
|
|
Even with politics taken out of the equation, markets have plenty of moving parts to contend with these days.
|
|
If they detected water vapor, they would have to contend with two leading theories for how it got there.
|
|
I no longer drink, so I've not had to contend with a New Year's Day hangover in a while.
|
|
Finding an apartment in New York City can be enough of a nightmare without noise pollution to contend with.
|
|
Beyond having to contend with a dominant LDP and a bolstered Abe, the CDP has significant issues to address.
|
|
Florida-based Carnival Cruise Line was re-routing its cruise ships, but there were other hurricanes to contend with.
|
|
The Point: Congress is heading back to town, and will have to contend with problems both old and new.
|
|
In 2008, prosecutors had to contend with not having an alleged victim to testify and not as much evidence.
|
|
Sales have continued to decline over the past decade, and it has a mounting debt load to contend with.
|
|
Beltranena and his team have to contend with airline travelers who might be accustomed to reclining seats on buses.
|
|
During the 2016 primaries, Republicans were forced to contend with the nicknames Trump gave them on the campaign trail.
|
|
They may not fully be able to contend with it, forcing the industry to compress to an unknown extent.
|
|
So any comprehensive strategy to deal with climate change in the United States has to contend with public lands.
|
|
Workers&apos rights activists weren&apost the only protesters Amazon had to contend with in Europe this Black Friday.
|
|
That's something it's had to contend with repeatedly as it's gone up against better-funded challengers, particularly Uber Eats.
|
|
So you've got a committed fan base to contend with in addition to all the financial incentives in place.
|
|
In the first place, they haven't had to contend with a such a close race in a long time.
|
|
But even if we accept, for the sake of argument, Aquinas' explanation, there are other problems to contend with.
|
|
But Sanders also had to contend with the state's closed primary system, which only allows Democratic voters to participate.
|
|
Even if a trade deal is reached, its exporters will have to contend with weakening demand globally, particularly in Europe.
|
|
The industry already has to contend with the used and rental book markets, which drag down sales of new books.
|
|
Moderates unhappy as well It's not just the conservative wing of the GOP that leadership has to contend with. Rep.
|
|
Of course, there are some privacy concerns to contend with, including some security issues that have arisen in recent months.
|
|
In untangling land disputes, the new government will have to contend with powerful business interests, many linked to the military.
|
|
They have to contend with their mission and relationships in the past, all before the portal to the future closes.
|
|
But since her election in 2018, she's had to contend with a legislature controlled by Republicans who are anything but.
|
|
Brick-and-mortar stores have also struggled to contend with the rise of online retailers, led by the juggernaut Amazon.
|
|
But they both have to contend with how this new kind of fantasy changes their friendship and their other relationships.
|
|
After leaving graduate school in 2014, Kayla and Ryan Anderson had a combined $336,676 in student loans to contend with.
|
|
At the same time it was fighting legal action, Papa John's also had to contend with a tarnished public image.
|
|
And when it comes to bidding rights, the company will have to contend with ESPN, the big networks and more.
|
|
Even if it does, the platform would still have to contend with the prime minister's alleged purchase of fake followers.
|
|
Sometimes this means trying to contend with the oeuvre of the Wachowskis; other times it means reading Phantom Menace fanfic.
|
|
Amid deep partisan disagreements, the worst that Facebook, Google, and Twitter have had to contend with some sharply worded questions.
|
|
But Arab countries are filled with millions of potential new Prime members — and there's little local competition to contend with.
|
|
"I didn't want to contend with how that made me feel, or it becoming part of my narrative," he says.
|
|
Faced with stalled user growth in recent years, Twitter is being forced to contend with serious questions about its future.
|
|
Humans on the Martian surface will already have to contend with radiation, and this effect will only increase the risk.
|
|
The state also has to contend with a separate federal lawsuit that several jurisdictions have filed to block the law.
|
|
"We believe we're well positioned to contend with what we think is continued disruption in the business, " Iger told CNBC.
|
|
Note: Finding Dory screens with the wordless Pixar short "Piper," about a baby sandpiper learning to contend with the ocean.
|
|
Brussels will have to contend with more threats to quit, coloring decision-making across the board for years to come.
|
|
There's a shortened enrollment period to contend with, as the Trump administration cut this window in half, to 45 days.
|
|
But secularism is far from universally accepted in Bangladesh, and has always had to contend with a conservative Islamic culture.
|
|
This series, he will have to contend with the impact of one such deal: Joe Thornton, the Sharks' playmaking center.
|
|
Some of it is data they believe is skewed because of the budget rule constraints they have to contend with.
|
|
Nations have to contend with globally relevant values for AI given the transnational nature of AI development, use, and impacts.
|
|
Both Siegel Bernard and Waldmeir cited an additional factor that baby boomers' parents didn't have to contend with: student loans.
|
|
Tisdale recommends working with the National Foundation for Credit Counseling to contend with creditors and develop a debt repayment plan.
|
|
The stepped-up pace of dealmaking is forcing Amazon to contend with integration issues and could lead to culture clashes.
|
|
It also had to contend with a tenth of a second lag between observing the screen and issuing a command.
|
|
Oil has also had to contend with OPEC, whose initial failure to agree an output cut accelerated the price slump.
|
|
As it opposes your ruling planet Saturn, you have to contend with serious emotions about commitment and responsibility within partnerships.
|
|
When von Spakovsky took the stand, he had to contend with questions that suggested he had cherry-picked his data.
|
|
The January polar vortex forced 84 million Americans in the US Midwest and East Coast to contend with subzero temperatures.
|
|
Pepsi's North American beverage business has been struggling to contend with increased competition from upstart brands and changing consumer tastes.
|
|
That counterreaction is something Italy may soon have to contend with — and other countries too, if they don't prepare now.
|
|
As they hope to move further from the wreckage of last year, the Mets will have much to contend with.
|
|
Simon has to contend with the fallout from what he considered a necessary hypocrisy and the personal betrayals it entailed.
|
|
Newspapers in Britain have also had to contend with a phone-hacking scandal that was especially damaging to the tabloids.
|
|
Injury and free agency, it turns out, are far from the only external forces for Golden State to contend with.
|
|
She created a "rapid response" unit to contend with online media; Glaad now advises Twitter and Facebook on content policies.
|
|
Developers also had to contend with fewer international buyers, who in past years were active in the new-construction sector.
|
|
The party's candidates will have to contend with President Trump's historically low approval ratings and Democrats gaining in the polls.
|
|
But the shareholders will have to contend with California's politicians, the state's utilities regulator and the representatives of wildfire victims.
|
|
The European Commission is working with Greece on an emergency plan to contend with a possible outbreak in the camps.
|
|
I despair that they have that to contend with that while they're also pursuing their dreams and doing everything else.
|
|
Other candidates sharing the stage with an LGBTQ peer are forced to contend with someone they might have normally dismissed.
|
|
As you make your way down the bicycle path, you might have to contend with feral cows and water buffaloes.
|
|
A system able to hunt for asteroids from space would not have to contend with the streaking satellites above Earth.
|
|
The House's rapid push toward impeachment forced candidates and their campaigns to strategize on how to contend with the development.
|
|
But he will have to contend with among others the so-called "frugal four" — the Netherlands, Austria, Sweden and Denmark.
|
|
But companies in the digital delivery industry have to contend with thin margins and a sometimes rocky path to profitability.
|
|
Even then, she notes he'll likely have to contend with a Clinton operation with a long, successful history in Pennsylvania.
|
|
This suggests that voters' anger remains strong in France, and the new government will have to contend with this disaffection.
|
|
"We're now seeing rates go to levels the market hasn't had to contend with in a long time," he said.
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It's something that takes it out of the abstract and propels it into something we are forced to contend with.
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And he will have to contend with China pressuring Seoul during the election campaign to back away from deploying Thaad.
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And thankfully the U.S. doesn't yet have to contend with "pink-eyed" Terminators sent from the future to destroy humanity.
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Communities of color also have to contend with systemic racism when it comes to accessing health care and other services.
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Nonetheless, when I leave the lab, I have to contend with work environments that are far less welcoming to women.
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Thankfully, that is not an issue I need to contend with now that my children control their own digital privacy.
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More difficult to contend with, though, is the legacy of slavery, tenant farming and convict lease labor in rural locales.
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There's also this fact to contend with: Negative, scary information is almost always more sticky and memorable than positive information.
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But now we can measure those smaller differences, and I think we need to contend with the findings that it's bringing.
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They are past and future members of our community, forced to contend with systemic bias that will profoundly affect their lives.
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I think the thing that Facebook and Google will both have to contend with is regulatory headwinds, specifically starting in Europe.
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But in addition to economic challenges, Apple also has to contend with issues surrounding the development of new products and services.
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They will also have to contend with the "kuroshio" (black current)—a very strong current that flows between Taiwan and Japan.
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However, it would have to contend with a tough market, which has seen several planned London listings pulled in late 2017.
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And those critics have had to contend with the unofficial first children's alumni club — a tight group that knows no politics.
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All the commercial skyscrapers, housing, cultural institutions that currently sit near the waterline will be forced to contend with routine inundation.
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You start out traversing small pits of spikes, but eventually, you'll have to contend with laser beams and door-opening switches.
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While the market always has "unknowns" to contend with, two key events in the next month could explain this neutral miasma.
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Those trying to get away from it all will have to contend with industrial action called by British Airways' cabin crews.
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However, the industry still has to contend with market volatility and asset class illiquidity, weak bank lending and tightening regulatory standards.
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In making those decisions, he and other liberals had to contend with the threats of socialism and nationalism, revolution and reaction.
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There was no rush-hour commute to contend with, and officials did not have to wrestle with whether to close schools.
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We are forced to contend with the fact that they are human—not a magic wellspring of eternal potentiality and fulfillment.
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"Suddenly we had people with thousands of acres while others had to contend with a few hundred or less," she said.
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The yen also has to contend with indirect pressures from the dollar gaining against other major currencies such as the euro.
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Analysts say that investing heavily on firewalls is no longer enough to contend with the multitude of cyber threats companies face.
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"Many businesses - particularly SMEs - are having to contend with heavy pressure on their prices and margins," said Swissmem head Peter Dietrich.
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We blindly ignore the reality that the president is not a king and has to contend with Congress on nearly everything.
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And yeah, though no new Outkast ever again feels difficult to contend with, it's definitely a decision that's easy to respect.
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However, there's a foe that Williams herself as to contend with often as a young actress: sexism within the entertainment industry.
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Health care is hard: it's siloed, it's expensive, and it has to contend with messy problems of human biology and behavior.
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They have to contend with the fact that rational arguments may fail to persuade those who are guided by their gut.
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Screenshot: OoklaAs we continue to wade through the early days of 25G, there are a lot of issues to contend with.
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Though short-term emergency needs are being met, county officials are now left to contend with the uncertainty of the future.
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Creating the world's next masterpiece is a great deal more difficult when there are such feelings of helplessness to contend with.
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Founded in 2009, it became a political force to contend with when it received more than 25% in the 2013 elections.
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It's no easy thing to contend with, but it shouldn't make Shannon feel any less good about her big lifestyle change.
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Last year, Hampton Creek also had to contend with a government investigation into a buyback scheme, which has since been dropped.
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Now the water athletes' have to contend with eye-stinging amounts of chlorine saturating the pool, according to several competitors' accounts.
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ABC News reports that the disgraced producer, already facing charges of assaulting two women, has another criminal case to contend with.
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Heat is a good thing for hitters The heat is not the only thing the pitchers will have to contend with.
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He and Bates, who was 210-for-212 shooting, were too much for the Terriers to contend with in the post.
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As the paramount sachem, he also had to contend with challenges to his leadership from a number of other Wampanoag sachems.
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When a city doesn't have a detectable rap sound, that presents a challenge, one GoldLink has undoubtedly had to contend with.
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" She added that Biden will "need to contend with the consequences" of what she called the "unforced error of a gaffe.
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Mondelez, which was spun out of Kraft Foods in 2012, has had to contend with the wishes of its own shareholders.
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The White Sox are trying again to contend, with Sale, Quintana and the slugging first baseman Jose Abreu on reasonable contracts.
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Congressional lawmakers have no such forces to contend with and, if anything, have a system and bureaucracy that protects them instead.
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ABOUT THE CELTICS (2015-16: 48-34): While hopes are high in Boston there are already some injuries to contend with.
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The takeaway: Policymakers will have to contend with the fact that automation is already a fact of life in many sectors.
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Continuing in this vein, Chipotle is now having to contend with allegations of racial discrimination and harassment at a California franchise.
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The federal tax-filing deadline has been postponed until July 15 as the nation struggles to contend with the coronavirus pandemic.
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Oftentimes we have to contend with massive time differences, reporters in, at the border of Myanmar need lots of advance notice.
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To add to this, the country also has to contend with river erosion, which annually displaces between 50,000 and 200,25 Bangladeshis.
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His successor, Gavin Newsom, will have to contend with the outcome of the case, which is before the California Supreme Court.
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It is unfair to force reporters risking their lives for stories to contend with the additional foe of their own conscience.
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Interestingly, this wasn't the first such incident that GAIKA says he had to contend with at the PUBLIC Hotel that day.
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During Susan Wojcicki's tenure as chief executive of YouTube, she has had to contend with uploads of pedophilia and mass murder.
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Through sharp characters and dialogue, he prodded us — in laughter and tears — to contend with the traits that make us human.
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But while China had to contend with a nasty, sudden surprise, governments in the West have been on notice for weeks.
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Goff adapted well in January, even in the raucous atmosphere of the Superdome, which he won't have to contend with Sunday.
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Her presence on stage was electric, according to biographers, although she had to contend with casual misogyny and politically motivated disdain.
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Zach Wichter AUTO INDUSTRY Global auto executives will gather in Shanghai this week to contend with a challenging Chinese car market.
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After choking smoke from recent bushfires and torrential rains, players at Melbourne Park on Wednesday had to contend with swirling winds.
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Now they'll have to contend with a complex mix of grief over their slain classmates and excitement over their burgeoning movement.
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Miami had to contend with injuries to starting point guard Justise Winslow (out, right thigh bruise) and Wade (right hip bruise).
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There's also the "law of small numbers" to contend with, said Carl Kaufman, a manager of the Osterweis Strategic Income fund.
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Even if there were some kind of miracle cure, you would still need to contend with the vagaries of human behaviour.
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Regardless of where Walker ends up playing the final two months, Rivera will have to contend with his damaged elbow ligament.
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Like HBO Now after Game of Thrones, Disney will have to contend with people canceling their subscriptions as big shows disappear.
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Stephen Moore will have to contend with an awkward history among Senate Republicans to be confirmed to the Federal Reserve Board.
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But DHS has recently had to contend with an increase in Mexican single adults and families arriving at the US border.
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The swan dancer represents the BTS' ego, struggling to contend with the rest of the dancers, "the shadows" holding them back.
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The industry has also had to contend with the low literacy rate that has been prevalent in the country for decades.
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Meanwhile, the Latino community has to contend with the unfortunate spectacle of infighting and discord within its oldest civil rights organization.
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You have to contend with at-times limited charging options and ranges that aren&apost fully comparable with internal-combustion vehicles.
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The Safdies have found that a useful tension is generated when professional actors are forced to contend with people playing themselves.
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Her radical study explores the ways black women have had to contend with racist and classist assumptions in the women's movement.
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Time will be a factor for the markets to contend with in the unwinding of the process of the trade war.
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More recently, the agency has been forced to contend with embarrassing leaks of its hacking tools by the "Shadow Brokers" group.
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When autonomous vehicles render many of those jobs obsolete, politicians will have a much bigger set of problems to contend with.
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In his book "Willful Blindness," McCarthy describes Khuzami as fearless, dogged and willing to contend with the thorniest knots of evidence.
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When President George W. Bush visited the UK in November 2003, he had to contend with large-scale anti-war protests.
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But despite this, pastors and religious leaders have to contend with the fact that people who have suffered still want answers.
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The biggest hurdle these robots will face, however, is probably going to be the desert conditions they'll have to contend with.
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She will have to contend with her subjects — both noble and common — attempting to overthrow her, as they did with her father.
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The president will also have to contend with a divided Congress, as Democrats are slated to take over the House in January.
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There's the whole Gendry-is-a-Baratheon thing to contend with, but the show seems to be pretty done with his storyline.
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Qualcomm, while no slouch, competes with chip heavyweight Intel (INTC), while Juniper Networks has to contend with the significantly larger Cisco (CSCO).
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Despite all the drama of the 1980 election, President Ronald Reagan still had to contend with a Democratic House throughout his presidency.
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Other makeshift sites operated by Border Patrol have continued to spring up to contend with the surge of migrants at the border.
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Taylor, in becoming the heir to Axe's throne, has had to contend with their mentor's unwillingness to cede control of his kingdom.
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Yet as Slack moves into larger companies, it will have to contend with the reality of how slow-moving, legacy industries work.
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That is, until Mr. Hawley and Republicans here were forced to contend with a lurid sex scandal involving the state's Republican governor.
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Hitherto he has had to contend with Democratic presidents, Bill Clinton and Barack Obama, who pushed him to make concessions to Palestinians.
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Russia's Danila Izotov, Andrei Grechin, Alexander Sukhorukov, and Vladimir Morozov had to contend with boos at the 4x100-meter freestyle relay final.
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Its problem is it has to contend with Trump administration priorities — which naturally don't align with privacy protection for non-US citizens.
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Google's Pixel 2 XL, which has been plagued by screen problems, has another stumbling block to contend with: poor audio recording quality.
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In Democratic-leaning states, it's likely to be a problem for Republican incumbents who will have to contend with energized Democratic voters.
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Canada's passenger-rail service, VIA Rail, has limited routes, leaving many people in remote areas to contend with extensive final-destination connections.
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Amid those major announcements, oil traders had to contend with a flurry of pronouncements from OPEC, as well as from Russian officials.
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But winning in those markets won't be easy, especially as Uber has to contend with its former foe, Didi, around the globe.
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The result is a surreal, hilarious attempt by two dudes to contend with their place in the bizarre sweep of US history.
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His account is an addition to a growing list of public gaucheries that Hill has had to contend with over the years.
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With "The Red Woman," fans of Martin's novels had to contend with a whole mess of surprises, some more contentious than others.
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In addition to the inaccessible terrain, aid groups also have to contend with being targeted by armed groups operating in South Sudan.
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They are left to contend with their own perceptions of Jim White, their own abstract notions on what exactly Jim White signifies.
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When our phones distract us, it's not some foreign invader but a piece of our shared culture we need to contend with.
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Meanwhile, Hollywood has to contend with the fact that one of its most revered actors is believed to be a sexual predator.
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Outside of China, Xiaomi seems to have performed well in India, but it has to contend with fierce competition in that market.
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But the most challenging thing the Z2240 has to contend with are the other phones on either end of its price bracket.
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Indeed, like the city dwellers of today, the inhabitants of Çatalhöyük had to contend with infectious diseases, overcrowding, violence, and environmental degradation.
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Competition in the neighborhood is surely stiff, with Output, Good Room, and a typically crammed weekend schedule of parties to contend with.
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Importantly, these substances weren't chosen arbitrarily—they're the kinds of things that mole-rats have to contend with on a regular basis.
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It's a problem that even those who have taken it upon themselves to chronicle the game's history have had to contend with.
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Trump's policies will exact a strategic price as well, leaving U.S. allies on their own to contend with China's massive economic weight.
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And to the extent that budgets have recovered anywhere, they've had to contend with ever ballooning pension costs and dwindling state support.
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Since the start of the year, the Fed has pursued a more agile approach in setting policy to contend with greater uncertainty.
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"Nobody who goes to the Wing is naive to the fact that feminists have to contend with a capitalist society," she said.
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One-way carsharing is a complex business to operate, and any new competitor will have a significant learning curve to contend with.
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There's HBO and Amazon Prime Video to contend with now, not to mention the looming disrupt of Disney+ later in the year.
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In Samsung's defense, if the promises it's making for Bixby are true, there are a lot of moving parts to contend with.
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While offices and houses had to contend with the lack of electricity, that was the least of this poor little koala's worries.
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Female lawyers say they have to contend with judges who tell them to sit down when they stand up to represent clients.
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Young people who grew up in wealthier parts of the city have had to contend with prices that eclipse their junior salaries.
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Senators could choose to skip the proceedings, but then would likely have to contend with accusations they were shirking their constitutional responsibility.
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But, it'll have to contend with payments players throughout APAC like Alipay, Grab, Paytm, and more, that are seeking the same opportunity.
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Belgium, who will have to contend with Brazil on Friday, are at 21/214 while two-time winners Uruguay are 21/13.
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Autonomous driving lends itself to highways, where trucks do not have to contend with pedestrians and the myriad distractions of city streets.
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PDVSA bondholders would also have to contend with Russian oil producer Rosneft, which has a lien on the remainder of Citgo's stock.
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Spotify has also had to contend with questions on copyright law as it faces criticism from artists over its delivery of royalties.
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"Banks still have to contend with the burden of their enormous historic investments in complex and inflexible legacy architectures," the report said.
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The next U.S. president will almost certainly need to contend with all of these issues through the lens of ongoing climate change.
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The authorities are trying to contend with attackers whose names had surfaced in terrorism investigations but who had crossed no legal boundary.
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In 2014, Russia was slapped with international sanctions after its military intervention in Ukraine and had to contend with collapsing oil prices.
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Mia and Sebastian have to contend with voluminous competition for roles for red-headed white woman and the death of jazz, respectively.
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But in order to broadly appeal to the imperfect American youth, they had to have some relatable, gritty circumstances to contend with.
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We would still have to contend with roads, traffic jams, air pollution, and run the risk of being hit by a bus.
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Maybe that's reasonable for folks like Goldie Hawn ("Glam-ma"), who have to contend with the shortage of roles for older actresses.
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Whoever takes the helm will have to contend with a set of challenges that mirror those of other democracies around the world.
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Yet even as he flourished on the field, he had to contend with a stutter that was evident at a young age.
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Sanders has had to contend with his own imperfections, some of which almost certainly impeded his efforts to reach the White House.
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In the end, the left will have to contend with the same deep longing for normalcy that has defined the Trump era.
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Italian Prime Minister Giuseppe Conte said Monday his government would use all "human and economic resources" to contend with the coronavirus outbreak.
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But it is one that country music needs to contend with, both because of what it says and how it says it.
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Buyers also have to contend with builders who snap up modest houses in cash deals, enlarging or replacing them with expensive properties.
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Haraway told Lewis that she had no choice but to "contend" with what Lewis had written: a well-argued piece of criticism.
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The medical staffs also had to contend with the anger and grief of hundreds of people searching for news about their relatives.
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Now he has to contend with a staff of 2,18703, an annual operating budget of $320 million and 17 assertive curatorial departments.
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It's also had to contend with a celebrity exodus from the platform that included stars like Rihanna, Kylie Jenner and Chrissy Teigen.
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Many of her elderly parishioners, she said, had told her that they couldn't believe what young people today had to contend with.
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Driverless cars, such as those being developed by Google and Tesla, would "have to contend with human-operated cars, bicycles and pedestrians".
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Which group or groups fill those voids of increasing ungoverned territory in Afghanistan "is something we'll have to contend with," he said.
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There's one problem, though: It has Netflix, Amazon, HBO Now, CBS All Access, and a gazillion other streaming services to contend with.
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Will doctors have to contend with a gap in medical knowledge and facilities that has been left by this decades-long denial?
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As well as the market downturn, Rio Tinto has had to contend with wrangles with the Mongolian government over taxes and power supply.
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People will be in an aggressive mood, and you'll have to contend with some control freaks: Power struggles will be in the air!
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Not only does it feel like Netflix drops 10 new shows every Friday, but there's also Hulu, Amazon, and Youtube to contend with.
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Like the National Football League and other full-contact sports, the NHL has had to contend with persisting damage to players, including concussions.
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We'll be able to see the object in exquisite detail, but until then, project scientists are having to contend with an unexpected mystery.
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This time, aides will have to contend with a candidate whose time is stretched between his duties as president and a reelection campaign.
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In addition to your own winners, you may also "win" the crown among other brackets, which gives you more matches to contend with.
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Denial of service, SQL injections, cross-site scripting, and password attacks are just a few of the threats you'll have to contend with.
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The wounds of war will scar them for ever, and you will have an even more bitter and hateful diaspora to contend with.
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In addition to dodging submerged, cars, debris, street signs, and fire hydrants, Hunter's boat also had to contend with a powerful current Friday.
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The Tears of Allah was a mercifully easy start, but I had some trickier dives to contend with in the days to come.
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In addition to the Fed, the euro also has to contend with the possibility of the European Central Bank easing policy in September.
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As is the case with any piece of beta software, there will almost certainly be bugs to contend with that range in severity.
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In addition to media scrutiny, women in politics have also had to contend with rules that affect them and not their male colleagues.
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Vaisman and Wink don't think so, but they need to contend with the fact that, in a stock market, growth naturally increases value.
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Venus's strut is seductive as hell when Pluto's influence is in the air, but there can also be obsessive vibes to contend with.
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There are other schools in other states that don't have [to contend with] a charismatic, swaggering CEO, so the dynamic is very different.
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Businesses across the continent have to contend with frequent blackouts, known as dumsor in Ghana, from the Asante words for "off and on".
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Once they're released from the clutches of the trial to the max blocks, the women have another set of woes to contend with.
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Qatar Airways has also had to contend with fallout from a boycott against Qatar by four Arab nations that cut ties in June.
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Per Mayweather, there won't be any kicks involved in the scrap ... but dude's clearly gonna have to contend with some quick hands regardless.
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Residents affected by the three fires scorching parts of California have yet another ordeal to contend with: beginning the homeowners' insurance claims process.
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Australian Day had to contend with driving wind and rain over his last four holes before organizers halted play at 1:34 p.m.
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It's healthy, psychologically, to contend with deep-seated fears, and horror is a portion of how I (and so many others) do that.
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They're busy too, and you usually have to contend with a limited range of drinks, excessive corporate sponsorship and an impersonal feel overall.
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People also have to contend with water-borne diseases like schistosomiasis, an infection caused by parasitic worms living in fresh water, he said.
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Turkey has to contend with conflicts across the border in Syria and Iraq, and Kurdish insurrection and attacks by Islamic State at home.
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In parsing histories of the Third Industrial Revolution—that's this one—future academics will have to contend with the phenomenon of venture capital.
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Nguyen might say that the only way we can truly acknowledge the past is to contend with how fallible our memories actually are.
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She and her colleagues argue that the agency has been denied the resources it needs to contend with the expanding horde of passengers.
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In addition to regrouping from a midterm drubbing, they'll have to choose a fresh leadership team to contend with the newly empowered Democrats.
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And, regardless of the topic of a book or the race of its author, almost no one wanted to contend with experimental prose.
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Slack allows users to consolidate, organize and archive the ever-growing reams of data that modern-day work teams have to contend with.
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Not to mention, the last time a monarch died — King George VI back in 1952 — there was no social media to contend with.
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Overtaxation and overregulation disproportionately hurt small businesses because they generally do not have the resources to contend with them as big businesses do.
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The Dallas police fought that war, too, helping to calm the first American city to contend with a widespread Ebola public-health emergency.
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It is a serious issue that the party will have to contend with if there is a snap general election, as widely expected.
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In the cloud computing sector, Alibaba has to contend with foreign rivals, and it faces a domestic challenge from the search engine Baidu.
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Meanwhile, the UK will reach the crisis point as the country has to contend with whatever Brexit deal is or is not reached.
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If Facebook or Snapchat are ever hoping to get into China they are going to have to contend with the ever-growing Kuaishou.
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While there haven't been major self-driving bus initiatives of this scale in the West, Japan has different social issues to contend with.
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For the GOP's part, they see a field that lacks a candidate strong enough to contend with the Democrats in the general election.
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In whatever role she carves out for herself, she will have to contend with the vitriol she has drawn throughout her public life.
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For its first 50 minutes or so, following a traumatic experience that its lead characters aren't too eager to contend with, "Dude" meanders.
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Rhoda's father is away on a business trip that lasts nearly the entire novel, leaving Christine alone to contend with her deepening fears.
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Her ability to contend with the delays, and not be overwhelmed by the emotions swirling in the stadium, was critical to her victory.
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He is also an outdoor painter, who said he prefers to contend with the elements than with the dark interior of a studio.
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Philip D. Murphy, a Democrat, and is the first Sikh to serve as a state attorney general, has had to contend with intolerance.
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Every new adaptation now carries a heavier burden than before, and has to contend with a growing network of narrative and visual associations.
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"Judy has always wished to contend with the way that art history has written women out," said Mr. Gartenfeld, the show's main curator.
|
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It is those fringe communities preying on anxieties about social change that we have to contend with now — and for years to come.
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Gretchen Whitmer will have to contend with a GOP legislature as Michigan governor, but she still broke full Republican control over the state.
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And Mr. Trump's supporters must continue to contend with questions about whether his upset for the ages was the result of foul play.
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It also has to contend with Japan's decision last month to restrict exports of chipmaking chemicals to South Korea following a diplomatic dispute.
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And in teaming up with Anne Bogart, a director of the theater group SITI Company, she has something else to contend with: words.
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The seller, who paid about $7.4 million in 2015, according to public records, apparently had to contend with a loss of 27 percent.
|
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The brand had to contend with some consumers burning its sneakers, while distancing itself from an ensuing wave of support by white supremacists.
|
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Experts previously told Business Insider that the coronavirus could become a permanent disease that we have to contend with, just like the flu.
|
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Saudi Arabia and its Persian Gulf neighbors are deeply satisfied that they no longer have to contend with the mistrust of Mr. Obama.
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Trump's transition, initially dogged by reports that it was in disarray, has more recently had to contend with loud criticism of several appointees.
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Even with funding, the administration will have to contend with private landowners whose property may be seized to build barriers along the border.
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"You will have to contend with a White House that at times seems to be running its own bilateral show," Menendez told Abizaid.
|
|
That's just for UPS; it doesn't include what the US Postal Service or shipping competitors like FedEx (FDX) may have to contend with.
|
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Sure, there were bear markets to contend with (2500 to 29.14 is one example), but they were bolstered by a more glacial pace.
|
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And as the company grew, Bezos predicted, it would have to contend with increasing scrutiny and taxation from governments at home and abroad.
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The two have to contend with their past records on issues touching on race as they look to win votes from minority communities.
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But even if the court repeals the law, Indian society still has to contend with the deep and insidious stigma of being queer.
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Is this weight something you have to contend with, or do you simply make your films and leave the rest to the critics?
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Mr. Trabucco always uses a lot of fresh entries, and we have 11 debuts and many more rarities and oddities to contend with.
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Caitlyn Breen doesn't encounter ghosts when she and her mother move to rural Vermont, but she does need to contend with a legend.
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For a former Bible-basher like me, there's a lot of confusing stuff to contend with when I leave London and go home.
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For Shaherkani, Saudi Arabia's Olympic committee had to contend with Judo's governing body against the claim that the headscarf would be a safety risk.
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This emerging type of fake content will be among the next set of problems social media companies will have to contend with, he said.
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Besides, the more bleach you ask for, the more damage you'll have to contend with, prolonging your journey to longer, luscious hair even further.
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The EU has grown up in the past decade as economic, migration and security crises have forced it to contend with major world events.
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That investigation appears to be continuing, and Trump also will still have to contend with inquiries by the New York Attorney General and Congress.
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However, when we have to contend with consistent stress in and outside of work, the break the brain needs to restore itself is eliminated.
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Or displeasure, if you're a musician and have to contend with the fact that Sumney is a wizard who wields disparate genres like spells.
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ESPN had to contend with the contentious U.S. presidential election, often cited by league officials as a key cause for lower ratings this season.
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If you're looking for the next big outlaw act to hang your hat on, well, there's some abs and truck-leaning to contend with.
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It was only after their recent reunion that they revealed how the rings became a major talking point they were forced to contend with.
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Body positivity is important, but when it's circulated as popular feminism in these media platforms, we also have to contend with that other part.
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DETROIT — As his illness lingers and fruitless at-bats mount, Yankees second baseman Tyler Wade may have something else to contend with: the calendar.
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"The roster as structured right now, (the Cavs) don't feel like they have the talent and depth to contend with the Warriors," he added.
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Besides having to contend with Al Qaeda and a continuing Taliban offensive, Nangarhar is home to the nascent Afghan affiliate of the Islamic State.
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Because this time we have a major party candidate who has two rare problems to contend with as she begins the general election campaign.
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But on the other hand you have to contend with other people who are not quite willing—Richmond is kind of on the fence.
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Not only do they have to contend with studying their prisoner, they have to keep an eye out for Russian spies and double agents.
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But their absence has forced me to contend with what I want my legacy to be, decades before I might have ordinarily considered it.
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There is also an unknown factor Taiwan may have to contend with in trying to avoid the currency manipulator label – an unpredictable U.S. president.
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Fortescue has had to contend with lower demand for its relatively lower iron content ores as key market China undergoes an environmental clean-up.
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But he will have to contend with a resurgent ultra-nationalist opposition which rejects integration with the EU and demands closer ties with Russia.
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In dense areas, truck owners also have to contend with a crisscross of parking rules, parking tickets, and scrabbling with rivals for prime spots.
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Rose sets off for Polynesian night alone to contend with Moishe's racy dad jokes and Shirley's refusal to remove her silverware laden fur coat.
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Also, Brazil is currently having to contend with two related viruses, dengue and chikungunya, so it's proving difficult for epidemiologists to isolate causal factors.
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These satellites wouldn't need to contend with the distortion caused by gases and other components of Earth's atmosphere, allowing scientists to capture clearer images.
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And, if it continues, tech startups and investors in both countries will need to contend with guardrails that were inconceivable just one year ago.
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This research is key for keeping people safe, but it's not easy: there's soot, there's smoke, and there are the flames to contend with.
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But he also had to contend with Johnson's demands to safeguard that agenda and relieve the continuing budgetary pressures imposed by the Vietnam War.
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"They've had a long time to prepare for that fight, so all of that we're going to contend with here very, very soon," Gen.
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The day began in bright sunshine before the weather suddenly turned midway through the afternoon, forcing the later starters to contend with driving rain.
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Those challenges leave people with much less flexibility to contend with education loans, but Webb cautioned against taking the wrong message from the study.
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In addition to monitoring the bike fleet, Mobike will have to contend with quality control issues that have popped up in its home market.
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The iPad has to contend with Chromebooks in the classroom These changes to iOS suggest that Apple is starting to take education more seriously.
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He will also have to contend with the fact that signing the bill as is could very well cost him his job in 2020.
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The impetus for the arrest was, after all, public drinking — not a crime that should require a throng of police officers to contend with.
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Residents also have had to contend with poisonous gases given off by the lava, which can include laze -- hydrochloric acid and volcanic glass particles.
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Keeping up with changing tastes is hard enough, but you've also got to contend with intense competition and economic dips that dampen consumer spending.
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Project CARS 2 could be a credible rival on PlayStation, which isn't something GT has had to contend with too much in the past.
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The Navajo community in Arizona has had to contend with a growing feral horse population of about 50,000 to 70,000, according to the statement.
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Both companies emphasized that Britons would still be able to watch the show without cost, but they will now have to contend with commercials.
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Cummings had to contend with several teams having more than one rider within the break, allowing them to gang up on any solo efforts.
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Companies of all sizes — from giants like Visa or Lufthansa to small startups — are starting to have to contend with such regulations, she said.
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But they also had to contend with the radioactive groundwater, since cracks in the downed reactors' foundations allowed liquid to seep in from below.
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Immediate challenges for Ghadhban and the rest of Iraq's new government will include how to contend with imminent U.S. sanctions on Iraqi neighbor Iran.
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Africa has had to contend with three volatile oceanic regions where criminality makes it impossible for countries to realise the potential of their oceans.
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Comey pretty clearly believes that Americans signed up, legitimately, for the Trump presidency and should now be made to contend with its full effects.
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Full of booze and food, and with another early morning flight to contend with, I decide it's best I don't join them this time.
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The ceremony was an example of what Williams and many other highly visible women, in sports and beyond, have to contend with every day.
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She didn't have to contend with the deadly traffic jams that were happening around the same time on the Nepalese side of the mountain.
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Others offered up support for Popeyes employees who had to contend with frustrated customers and ingredient shortages during the menu item's initial August run.
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To get there, there are also the privacy and data hurdles to contend with, which could make or break technologies like the avatar shrink.
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We're left to contend with the consequences of our own warfare, such as pesticide-resistant German cockroaches and bedbugs, and antibiotic-resistant MRSA bacteria.
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Zoom, for example, was forced to contend with the newly dubbed zoombombing — that is, the act of spamming a Zoom chat with undesired pornography.
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None of the grampers interviewed for this article had to contend with much homesickness, possibly because their grandchildren were all in the double digits.
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They have also had to contend with a growing Islamic State affiliate that has carried out a number of massive attacks in recent years.
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Game 993 of the A.L.C.S. is Saturday night in Houston, but the Yankees probably will not have to contend with Cole until Game 299.
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Federal Emergency Management Agency Administrator Brock Long tweeted that the agency was supporting Texas state authorities in their efforts to contend with the storm.
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Even with funding, the administration will also have to contend with private landowners whose property may be seized to build barriers along the border.
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Several millennials told CNN that their college debts are crushing their ability to advance -- an issue their parents largely didn't have to contend with.
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There's only one Aisling Bea in Living With Yourself, but the Irish actress and comedian is charismatic enough to contend with two Paul Rudds.
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Most recently, the immigration judge corps hit a record high, though the Justice Department still has to contend with judges leaving over policy disagreements.
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Meanwhile, the threat landscape is more complex, with each enterprise having to contend with its own challenges in ways that won't slow down business.
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The use of social media for extremists to congregate, organize, and perpetuate toxic beliefs is another issue tech companies will have to contend with.
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Show producers say survival is "virtually impossible" and list bears, snakes, poisonous berries and mushrooms as some of the natural elements to contend with.
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They also have to contend with President Trump's huge megaphone — that prolific Twitter feed — as he narrates his own version of the impeachment proceedings.
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While phones may be the more recent headline-grabbing example, they're far from the only impossible-to-repair products consumers have to contend with.
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Whoever they are, Mosul's new leaders will have to contend with the likelihood of residual militant attacks and the potential for renewed local conflict.
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On top of the daily struggle to stay safe and healthy, sexual abuse survivors also have to contend with an endlessly triggering news cycle.
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Quora does have to contend with Yahoo Answers Now, which is the veteran of the Q&A space despite the unreliable quality of its content.
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This isn't crazy thinking, but it is slightly magical, because magic is the only way to contend with the Republican Party's viselike grip on Congress.
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We already have to contend with employers and credit agencies combing through past posts to reach conclusions about hireability, loan-worthiness, even health care eligibility.
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What's more, he manages this very 21st-century career without a home Internet connection—a challenge that most Cubans musicians also have to contend with.
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And right now, with the obvious caveat that this could change down the line, Tillerson has two competitors -- and the President himself -- to contend with.
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With that growth, firefighters have had to contend with new threats to their safety—and that of the buildings and people they're charged with protecting.
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Plus, these women had to contend with a few pretty unpleasant side effects (such as dizziness and nausea), and they weren't allowed to drink alcohol.
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Local outlet DCist, whose employees are undoubtedly forced to contend with the real-life woes of getting around the city, weren't having any of it.
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Alongside Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer, Pelosi will still have to contend with a Republican-controlled Senate and a Republican president to move legislation forward.
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The home-sharing site has since expanded to Canada, Australia, and other European countries, though it has had to contend with growing anti-refugee sentiment.
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It would extend the distant-signal license for many rural households only until May 31 and then force satellite companies to contend with market negotiations.
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Semenya has dominated the event this season, with three of the fastest four times, but has had to contend with renewed controversies about her gender.
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And on the fitness front, Fitbit has to contend with companies like Garmin, which has created a profitable niche for itself in the wearables space.
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The average blockbuster has to contend with budget fights and studio meddling; a film like "The Promise" is even trickier to bring to the screen.
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It's a hard thing to contend with, because with your own children, I want to be honest, but I also know the limitations of honesty.
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All this said, of course, any political prognostication has to contend with the fact that Trump has consistently made a mockery of the conventional wisdom.
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Index fund investing was pioneered by the late legendary investor Jack Bogle as a way for individual investors to contend with the Wall Street professionals.
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When it does, the town will have to contend with a water source contaminated after the earthquake — skin infections have been spreading among the population.
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Of course, there will be those who declare that this time is different since America has never had to contend with a Donald Trump before.
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Pandora has had to contend with an increasingly commoditized music streaming business and had to find ways to differentiate itself from Apple Music and Spotify.
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In season 6, our inmates have to contend with Carol (Henny Russell) and Barbara (Mackenzie Phillips) Denning, the big, bad rulers of maximum security prison.
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But since the visa rules changed, even comparatively well-run airlines, such as Cathay Pacific, have had to contend with a sea of red ink.
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The B/Ds not only have to contend with this pressure but the high frequency traders are driving commission prices to below $0.005 per share.
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Price stepped down and was replaced in 2018 by former NBC Entertainment president Jennifer Salke, who's had to contend with turnover in the executive ranks.
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In a now-viral Facebook post, Hall wrote about her father's response, and how it exposed the pressures that modern mothers have to contend with.
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To complicate matters, doctors have to contend with their own egos, biases, or an unconscious reluctance to assess a patient's prospects for what they are.
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As if tax season wasn't already stressful enough, consumers increasingly have to contend with the possibility of fraud or identity theft involving their tax return.
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She takes a cigarette into an empty bar, asks for a seltzer and the sports section, and tries her best to contend with being alone.
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But should Gallagher move Machida towards the fence, Machida will be force to drop his hands and square his hips to contend with level changes.
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Of course, this being The Walking Dead, you also have to contend with other people who have become twisted by this new zombie-filled reality.
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That said, today's health officials have to contend with an already booming online market that makes it very easy for youth to purchase e-cigs.
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He'll have to contend with a number of other candidates that are both younger than him and have their sights set on the same voters.
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Huawei has already overtaken Apple to become the world's second-largest smartphone distributor, and now it's looking to contend with Samsung for the top spot.
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The obvious added bonus is that there'll be fewer crowds to contend with, and you'll get more of a feel for your destination's local personality.
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"I think there's a generation of people who were forcibly removed from where they lived and had to contend with surviving in America," he said.
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And then, even if they club together, they have to contend with the fact that their readerships have moved on to other forms of infotainment.
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"This is where I think you get this intersection of governance and politics and technology that we've never had to contend with before," he said.
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In addition to his challenge from Nixon, Cuomo also has to contend with the aftermath of corruption charges against a former top aide, Joseph Percoco.
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In its just-over-a-decade-long existence, Twitter has had to contend with its platform being used as a vehicle for abuse and harassment.
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Jennifer Kent, whose film, The Nightingale, won the festival's Special Jury Prize, had to contend with verbal abuse from a male journalist during a screening.
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Legal argument The idea that a President cannot obstruct justice may be a workable legal argument to contend with any future criminal action against Trump.
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Though Ms. Hahn no longer has to contend with brief nudity, no pay, "I feel like I still have a way's to go," she said.
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Not only are you responsible for educating the next generation of young minds, you also have plenty of unexpected parent-teacher mediation to contend with.
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Why should one more woman have to contend with the conventional daily diet of criticism fed to me as a woman campaigning for political office?
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Clinton still has internal Democratic Party politics to contend with, but Mr. Pence is a balm: He puts little if any added pressure on her.
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As a result, companies operating in Mexico will continue to contend with demands for bribes, the risk of becoming collateral damage, extortion and other threats.
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Yet American officials are only just beginning to contend with the implications of weapons that could someday operate independently, beyond the control of their developers.
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Candidates are frantically raising money, and party strategists are in a rolling series of meetings figuring how best to contend with the intensifying Trump effect.
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TRUMP VS. CLINTON In the final sprint, both sides realized they had to contend with two factors largely out of their control: Trump and Clinton.
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Aside from the highly anticipated meeting, markets have also had to contend with the threat of a trade war between the world's two largest economies.
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My mother had been like I turned out to be—an only child with dead parents, so there wasn't any family left to contend with.
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The Sun opposes one of your ruling planets (Saturn) this morning, finding you facing obstacles you didn't even realize you needed to contend with, Aquarius.
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But that ambivalence is at odds with teaching students to communicate about consent, and presents a paradox that she says universities need to contend with.
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If we were ranking all the different varieties of M&Ms, we'd have to contend with peanut M&Ms (good!), peanut butter M&Ms (great
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Watching its powerful mass settle on every step, I was able grasp the scale and power of the thing I was hired to contend with.
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After all, implementing such technology for Sydney's 43 million annual passengers is pretty large undertaking, even without myriad security and privacy concerns to contend with.
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The old ones are mired in bureaucracy, conservative religious ideology, and the past—unable to contend with issues like nanotechnology, artificial intelligence, and virtual reality.
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If the AHCA doesn't pass, here's what consumers will have to contend with based on the actions the Trump administration may – or may not – take.
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Just to get to his apartment in the financial district, he has to contend with hordes of commuters and selfie-snapping tourists clogging narrow sidewalks.
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The constructors offer us a set of three theme entries that seem like a disparate list, but there are those circled squares to contend with.
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They looked at individual isolates of bacteria, monocultures pampered with an assured source of glucose and freed of the need to contend with other microbes.
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Headlines about millions of Americans losing health insurance are really hard to contend with — as we saw in the Obamacare repeal fight earlier this year.
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And even when shares can be sold at a gain, executives have to contend with thorny issues concerning diversification and the reputational risks of selling.
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But what the municipality of Page is facing is far less existential than what Antelope Canyon's skyrocketing popularity has forced the Navajo to contend with.
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They are likely to contend with motions to reopen cases of those migrants who missed their hearing along with requests for a stay of removal.
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The people in my life did not know how to contend with it, other than to deny its persistence or attempt to look past it.
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They also have to contend with misleading information in several of President Donald Trump's public statements on COVID-19, including his tweets and Facebook posts.
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Republicans hope to deliver a finished plan to President Trump by Christmas, but will first have to contend with objections from Democrats and special interests.
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But free speech is only part of the equation; campuses also have to contend with events that threaten students' feelings of inclusiveness and even safety.
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Saudi citizens still need to contend with the top-down system of governing in which they all are vulnerable to royal commands, whims and punishments.
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With Mr. Cagney's abrupt departure, SoFi joins the ranks of technology start-ups that have had to contend with serious issues related to workplace culture.
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More: Scotch producers already had to contend with Brexit — and now they must figure out how to deal with new U.S. tariffs that begin tomorrow.
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Here, Pout-Pout has to contend with a crafty octopus who has nabbed the pearl and challenges him to — it's only appropriate — a shell game.
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Even more complicated is having to contend with the contradictory norms and codes of ethics of the social work profession that interfere with needing assistance.
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The service sector, in contrast to manufacturing, is just beginning to contend with automation and technological displacement — in the form of robots, apps and algorithms.
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Residents attempting to return to flooded homes may have to contend with contaminated water and air because the city's sewer systems overflowed during the floods.
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On CNN Tuesday, the acting-Homeland Security secretary Elaine Duke said her agency was sufficiently funded to contend with the dire needs on Puerto Rico.
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For those that arrive in Sicily, the reality of little to no employment and growing public opposition to migration can be hard to contend with.
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But Mr. Dudenhöffer noted that Mr. Diess will still have to contend with the extraordinary power that Volkswagen workers and local politicians exert over strategy.
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"Up until now, there's been a value trade-off that marketers have had to contend with," said Linda Yaccarino, NBCUniversal chairman of advertising and partnerships.
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Meanwhile, IDP officials also had to contend with innocent calls from members of the public who were simply trying to determine what was going on.
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Casper may have capitalized early on with its first-mover advantage, but it now has to contend with several competitors with a similar business model.
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I was 61 when I started nearly five years ago, with decades' worth of entrenched notions of who I was — and wasn't — to contend with.
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Rubenstein, who no longer has to contend with any real attempts to close the loophole, has little to gain by insisting that it be retained.
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"Trading partners will still have to contend with a likely significant drop in their exports to Turkey," said Holger Schmieding, chief economist at Berenberg Bank.
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But you've still got to contend with keyboard reliability concerns, and this issue of it turning off for no obvious reason is a bit concerning.
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Despite hitting more winners than her rival, Sharapova committed 39 unforced errors and struggled to contend with the second seed's power and aggression in Beijing.
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Democrats ducked it with their 2009 stimulus package, even though many economists warned it would not be big enough to contend with the Great Recession.
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Confidence: Medium-High Colder air finally works its way in for New Year's Day, with breezy winds from the northwest to contend with as well.
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Simply put, those hoping to fill the United States' shoes in leading the world still have their own existential threats to contend with at home.
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Meanwhile, audiences in the US no longer have to contend with Olaf's Frozen Adventure if they go to see Coco — and that's a good thing.
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European firms, meanwhile, have had to contend with a stronger euro which on a trade-weighted basis, has risen for four quarters in a row =EUR.
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Alcohol start-ups, for example, have to contend with the fine print of the post-Prohibition constitutional amendment that granted businesses the right to sell liquor.
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In a statement to CNN, Biden campaign spokesman Andrew Bates said that the former senator had done his best to contend with a harsh political reality.
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It left me suddenly in a state of shock, not knowing what to do, not knowing how to contend with the new shape of the world.
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That image is not one with which American society in general, or the African American community in particular, has been forced to contend with any frequency.
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It was another setback for the company, which has had to contend with privacy scandals and criticisms about the infiltration of its network by rogue groups.
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But are non-anonymous online commenters actually more aggressive than anonymous ones who don't have to contend with the vulnerability that comes from revealing their names?
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Democrats will also have to contend with their top donor, billionaire Tom Steyer, whose group Need to Impeach has been pushing impeachment on Democrats for months.
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The government entered the crisis with a finance minister and treasury minister whose remits intertwined, both of whom had to contend with a powerful cabinet chief.
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The iMac remains top-of-class, but it now has to contend with an ever-expanding, more aggressively updated group of Windows all-in-one PCs.
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As two of the platform's most popular creators, both sisters have been forced to contend with internet negativity and the real-life fallout it can cause.
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While Dragon Con claims to have taken steps to contend with ballot-stuffing, not allowing creators to remove themselves from consideration seems like a counterintuitive step.
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