Pools
in sentence
144 examples of Pools in a sentence
There were fish caught in rock
pools
left behind by the receding water.
Some children jumped down and ran to the rock
pools
with bags.
Geyserite is a rock type that only forms in and around the edges of hot spring
pools.
Mosquitoes breed in small
pools
of water.
And I know because when you look at the rainfall, these particular insects, these Globe Skimmers breed in temporary rain water
pools.
That's very important because the humidity and precipitation tell you whether you've got standing
pools
of water for the mosquitoes to breed.
So, to find strong evidence of liquid,
pools
of liquid, beneath the surface of a moon 750 million miles away from the Earth is really quite astounding.
And all the way along the glacier we saw these big
pools
of melting ice.
Back to the vacant pools, the backyard halfpipes and the road trips to Cherry Hill NJ.
Much of the film - when not showing
pools
of blood left behind from what we imagine must have been the beast dining - is spent following the bumbling antic of two guys named Arnie and Mitch who run a boat rental place.
Most of the attacks occur off-screen with bleeding throat cuts(..or pools)representing the only real display of violence.
Think of the huge
pools
and three-story tall fountains for "By A Waterfall," for instance.
The truth is, there seems to be few shots set in New Orleans; the rest of the film takes place in unidentifiable swampland (and various swimming pools).
Being that this is not a proper world they will most likely buy a lot of coke and backpat each other around swimming
pools.
Doing so implies establishing a genuine common energy policy that
pools
risks, reserves, and infrastructure.
With established
pools
of aid being stretched to address immediate needs – medical assistance, shelter, and food – education is being neglected.
Large
pools
of savings in sovereign wealth funds, pension funds, and insurance companies could be used, for example, to meet emerging economies’ huge financing needs for infrastructure and urbanization.
There are still huge
pools
of private wealth sitting on the sidelines that can be rapidly mobilized to support productive infrastructure.
But the banks that benefited from public money are now bigger than ever; opaque financial instruments are once again de rigueur; and bankers’ bonus
pools
are overflowing.
On its face, this shift to digital globalization would seem to work against developing countries that have large
pools
of low-cost labor but inadequate infrastructure and education systems.
Moreover, with more central banks creating liquidity, and international financial centers offering
pools
of it, such a system would entail a lower risk of cash crunches.
With banking assets amounting to roughly 300% of EU-wide GDP, compared to some 70% in the United States, large
pools
of savings are being left unused.
The effectiveness of such measures can be undermined if global banks operate in emerging countries in branch form, providing domestic credit financed by global funding
pools.
Similarly, private-sector skills-matching initiatives, such as LinkedIn for Good’s “Welcome Talent” program in Sweden and Talent Beyond Boundaries in Jordan and Lebanon, allow employers to tap into migrant talent
pools
that fit their hiring needs.
The spent fuel in
pools
adjacent to each reactor, containing more radioactivity than the reactors themselves, has also been severely damaged, has leaked radioactivity, and is still without needed stable cooling.
These
pools
contain vast amounts of long-lived radioactivity, typically in a simple building, without multiple engineered layers of containment.
But most companies are simply unable to take good ideas to market, because they lack access to
pools
of capital earmarked for innovation.
Savers gained the ability to diversify, while the largest borrowers could tap global
pools
of capital.
As we now know, much of the growth in financial assets prior to the crisis reflected leverage of the financial sector itself, and some of the growth in cross-border flows reflected governments tapping global capital
pools
to fund chronic budget deficits.
Even though the
pools
of workers may be somewhat segmented, there is enough overlap that it forces service-intensive industries to pay higher wages, at least in the long run.
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