Driving a Zodiac around in 30 foot surf is a lot trickier than getting on a Wave Runner. |
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Onscreen wizards guide you through the trickier tasks and hint boxes appear each time you try something new. |
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As you get to the later levels, the words and phrases become much trickier, complete with hyphens and other special characters. |
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A display of Beuys's work is trickier still because the artists's installations were fluid, accretive and subject to change. |
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The brains trust surrounding the leader is a closed shop, trickier to join than the Bullingdon. |
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The poet now faces the trickier task of penning a celebratory ode for the prince's second wedding. |
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According to Baker, too much sodium can make your skinny skirts trickier to zip up, especially in the week prior to menstruation. |
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Alas, they failed to heed me, and as a result the traditional New Year predictions column is a mite trickier than it used to be. |
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And if the lepidopteran Scott has proved a difficult biographee to net, the even more fluttery Zelda is yet trickier to cabin and pin down. |
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The question, if one tries to balance all the available evidence, is a lot trickier than it may seem. |
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The other allegation is a lot trickier and potentially a lot more damaging. |
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The dihedral, a corner inset in the rock face, is going to be even trickier to down-climb, and if it starts to rain, we could be in trouble. |
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To get them into a computer, you have to re-record the music in a digital format, a much trickier and slower process. |
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Later, he tries another, trickier approach, via an overhanging shelf of rock and ice. |
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The fact that its occupation of a treasure house keeps the public out is a trickier subject. |
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Giving up alcohol might prove a trickier long-term proposition, although he has, for the first time in his life, admitted that he has been seeing an alcohol counsellor. |
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So talking turkey to Turkey is trickier than simply shouting at Merkel and Sarkozy or telling the Turks they have nothing to do themselves. |
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So he is hunting for part-time work that won't overtax him, and will let him keep his benefits. His dilemma is about to get even trickier. |
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The trickier the problem, the more he gets going and will not give up until it is solved to perfection. |
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The dollar was slightly more volatile over the past week than usual, and the explanations for this have been getting trickier by the day. |
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It will open a new office, a bigger office, an office that is bound to face a greater number of even trickier problems. |
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The trickier part will be getting a fresh, clean matboard to make a piece fit just right. |
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But if the White House keeps the tariffs and the EU retaliates, the politics will get trickier still. |
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If you've been solving The New York Times crossword puzzle for a while, you've seen some of the trickier clues in puzzledom. |
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We know that factual accuracy and veracity are trickier than they seem. |
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In the America of 2013, rejecting students on the basis of their not happening to be brown is ever trickier to defend. |
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The bill now goes to its second reading and will make its way to the upper house as it is, where things might get a bit trickier. |
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Certainly it was trickier than a dinner party with Paul Daniels and the Great Soprendo during the women's race on Saturday. |
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So maybe the company is approaching the point at which further advances are trickier to achieve. |
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It is trickier to apply the standards the first time, because that is when we detect the greatest number of problems. |
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For the time being, the lack of moon is making this vigilance even trickier at night. |
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This is a much trickier vaccine to produce on a seasonal basis than any other. |
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It becomes even trickier when results data of this sort are used to change programs or expenditures on a year-to-year basis. |
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However, defining the concept of quality of justice is much trickier and few attempts are made. |
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Horizontal resolution is a trickier concept, because the horizontal resolution varies according to the source. |
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Converting the powdered orange juice into a commercial product proved to be trickier than planned. |
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When the objectives and policy orientations are more vague, such as 'improving the quality of teaching', the work is trickier. |
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These problems are rendered all the trickier to deal with as they overlap with other problems, such as population ageing and organised crime. |
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Cut all the pieces to the right size and finish assembling the handrail with the staircase section, which is a bit trickier. |
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As for pricing environmental degradations, things turn out to be even trickier. |
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Throughout the course, golfers will come across a few small lakes which make the game slightly trickier and more interesting. |
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It is even possible to debug the kernel, though that is a little trickier than the user applications we will be discussing in this section. |
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With other emerging allies the calculus is trickier and leaves less margin for error. |
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When you're creating a painting to be seen from inside the house things get a bit trickier than they do when you are painting with watercolor, crayons or oils. |
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It was trickier to convincingly recreate Mark's imprint as a platonic pal downstairs. |
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Federalism is a trickier concept in the European context because the Member States are not political subdivisions of the Union, but rather sovereign and autonomous entities. |
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It's safest to de-gay fresh anecdotes you've actually experienced, but it's a lot trickier than swapping out pronouns. |
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But comets, thanks to their eccentric and frequently long orbits, are trickier to study up close. |
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It may be a trickier dance in a primary in which the most partisan Democrats are often the only ones who show up at the polls. |
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Here, the suspension of disbelief is somewhat trickier, because a great deal of Smiley's data on these beasts comes from telepathy, numerology or astrology. |
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And this gets to be even trickier after a period of business restructuring, rapid technological change, and strong business investment in plant and equipment. |
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However, with too few volunteers and the buildings proving to be trickier than expected, the build is becoming the toughest yet. |
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It was undoubtedly a trickier subject for discussion from a French or British perspective, since it involved giving up the ambition to control the whole spectrum of modern military assets. |
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There were potentially trickier ties than Young Boys, and having the second leg at Goodison Park is a major positive. |
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Son-preference damages maternal health, makes marriage trickier for women, increases polygamy and alters the institution of child-fostering, which is widespread in west Africa. In this section When and how will it end? |
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Even a routine task like scheduling a visit from a crop-dusting plane became trickier. |
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And Bengt Nordstrom of Northstream, a consulting firm, worries that it will take cost-cutting to achieve these, and that this will make cohabitation trickier. This is no merger of equals. |
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But the precise location of Jesus' dying moments is trickier to pinpoint, and as Serafino Paternoster searched for it this afternoon, he tried to spot signs of the cross. |
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The introduction of Level 5 Treasure Maps means that players have even trickier puzzles to solve in order to get rare and valuable objects and treasures. |
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The nerdiest Harvard students have their own complaints: when lots of students are squashed together at the top, they say, separating out the top scholars is trickier. |
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Some tall and powerful, some smaller and trickier, all deadly in front of goal, the Azzurri frontline has scored no fewer than 10 times in their last two friendlies. |
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Minds were distracted from trickier subjects by a hyper-inclusive march against poverty. But the apparent lull in the storms buffeting Anglicanism looks temporary. |
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This time proving the doomsters wrong may prove trickier. Related items Development and the environment: A bit richMar 19th 1998Catch as catch canTake them in turns, starting with fish. |
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The team then enlisted the help of yeast cells to link the cassettes in the correct order to produce the finished genomes. At this point it was necessary to prepare the cadavers, which proved rather trickier. |
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The equation becomes even trickier when you factor in the pressure that public companies face to deliver shareholder value, meaning profit comes above all else. |
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Climate change is making development issues trickier. |
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Environmental factors have been trickier to pin down because there is no way to evaluate them comprehensively. |
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The method of writing Farsi is logical, although reading can be trickier, as one has to guess at the unwritten consonants of unfamiliar words. |
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That said, a lot of womenswear is now dry-clean only or trickier to iron. |
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The problems still to be resolved are trickier than had been assumed. |
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Much trickier problems arise in the case of hypotheses whereby a treaty provides that the parties may choose between treaty provisions, by means of unilateral statements. |
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In downhill, they must train on the run they will eventually ski in competition, but in the super G, which is nearly as fast and arguably trickier, they merely get to sideslip the run once, before the race. |
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Micro-organisms and animal life will be no more affected than before. Although these answers may go some way to placating the public, they fail to address some trickier questions. |
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The technology's torturous economics are, if anything, even trickier. |
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Summing up what happened next, though, has so far proved trickier. |
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Finding a place for the axe to lodge is trickier than it looks and as for the feet, let's just say I spend more time hanging powerlessly from the rope than climbing. |
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The 5-0 rout of San Marino, although entirely expected, will have lifted spirits ahead of today's clash in Tallinn, which promises to be a little trickier. |
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Mr Watson got favourite backers off to the perfect start when never seeing another rival under Tony McCoy in the opener, but after that things became a lot trickier. |
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However, his latest assignment proves to be even trickier, as instead of stealing thoughts he's going to have to plant one in someone else's mind. |
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The tight street circuit, consisting of several narrow stretches and hairpin bends, could make passing the backmarkers trickier than it has been so far this season. |
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