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unwieldy and nature
Haul bags are often affectionately known as " pigs " due to their unwieldy nature.
Adventure Gamers praised the voice acting, graphics, humour and story, calling it " a wonderful game ", but noted that " it stops short of being a classic simply due to its sheer difficulty and the unwieldy nature of the game ".
Ion Cannon Frigates, for instance, are very vulnerable to fighters due to the unwieldy ( albeit powerful ) nature of their single weapon.
In the early days there were no production facilities, due in part to the unwieldy and expensive nature of the technology then available.

unwieldy and with
The afternoon edition was soon dropped and the unwieldy name shortened to Boston Herald American, with the Sunday edition called the Sunday Herald Advertiser.
A few smaller teams tried obsolete three-litre Formula One cars ( from Tyrrell, Williams, Minardi and RAM ), with little success — the Grand Prix and Indycar-derived entries were too unwieldy — their fuel tanks were about twice the size of those needed for F3000 races, and the weight distribution was not ideal.
Some users may find that wearing the pump all the time ( together with the infusion set tubing ) is uncomfortable or unwieldy.
Unlike the Chinese with the guan dao, the Koreans found the woldo unwieldy on horseback, and thus, it was specifically tailored to the needs of infantrymen.
In a simple genus, containing only two species, it was easy to distinguish them apart with a one-word genus and a one-word specific name ; but as more species were discovered the names necessarily became longer and unwieldy, for instance Plantago foliis ovato-lanceolatus pubescen tibus, spica cylindrica, scapo tereti ( Plantain with pubescent ovate-lanceolate leaves, a cylindric spike and a terete scape ), which we know today as Plantago media.
Hooker embarked on a reorganization of the army, doing away with Burnside's grand division system, which Hooker considered unwieldy ; he also no longer had sufficient senior officers on hand that he could trust to command multi-corps operations.
It is certainly possible to represent hardware semantics using traditional programming languages, which operate on control flow semantics as opposed to data flow, such as C ++, although to function as such, programs must be augmented with extensive and unwieldy class libraries.
He rejected the United States Constitution as " too liberal " and the British system as too unwieldy and having a parliament with too much control over the monarchy ; the French and Spanish models were rejected as tending toward despotism.
Epitomes of a kind are still produced today, when dealing with a corpus of literature, especially those classical works which are often considered dense and unwieldy, and unlikely to be read by the average person, in order to make them more accessible: some of these are more along the lines of abridgments, such as many which have been written of Gibbon's The History of the Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire, a work of eight large volumes ( some 3600 pages ), often published as one volume of about 1200 pages.
The great length of the pikes allowed a great concentration of spearheads to be presented to the enemy, with their wielders at a greater distance, but also made pikes unwieldy in close combat.
More importantly, If the pilum struck the shield of an enemy it would embed itself into the shield's fabric, and this along with the bending of the shank would cause the shield to become unwieldy, forcing the enemy to discard it or waste time trying to pull it out.
Dick Fiddy, the archivist said " It's a huge, unwieldy collection which deals with a number of areas.
Thus, contrasted with a carillon, in which a large number of bells are struck by hammers, all tied in to a central framework so that one carillonneur can control them all, a set of such bells is comparatively unwieldy — hence the emergence of permutations rather than melody as an organizing principle.
It soon became apparent that it was too unwieldy to deal with the nation's day to day business.
The resulting company was an unwieldy construction, with numerous interests other than railway operations.
Donovan was the nominal director of this unwieldy system, but was plagued over the course of the next year with jurisdictional battles.
In 1994, Ray Silverman, a Swedenborgian minister and literary scholar, thoroughly revised and edited My Religion, organizing the eight unwieldy sections of the first edition into twelve distinct chapters with subheadings to clarify their contents.
In 1611, Johannes Kepler described how a telescope could be made with a convex objective lens and a convex eyepiece lens and by 1655 astronomers such as Christiaan Huygens were building powerful but unwieldy Keplerian telescopes with compound eyepieces.
As the size of ships and the height of the freeboards increased, quarter-rudders became unwieldy and were replaced by the more sturdy stern-mounted rudders with pintle and gudgeon attachment.
Although a Gantt chart is useful and valuable for small projects that fit on a single sheet or screen, they can become quite unwieldy for projects with more than about 30 activities.
If ever it appears, you, who have taste for style and expression, will, I am sure, agree with me that, as a portrait painter, Greville is not a literary Vandyke or Reynolds ; a more verbose, indefinite, unwieldy affair, without a happy expression, never issued from the pen of a fagged subordinate of the daily press.
However, the larger sizes were unwieldy and impractical, making them somewhat rare ; the great bass, for example, could only be played with the performer standing on a small platform.

unwieldy and its
It was unwieldy due to its enormous size: were it still considered a single constellation, it would be the largest of all.
This can create an unwieldy name, as in the case of PricewaterhouseCoopers, which has since changed its brand name to " PwC ".
However, this has the effect of making the domain model unwieldy if culture is to be considered a domain in its own right ( see below ).
Another problem was that the image was captured in a roughly rectangular area of the disk, covering only a small portion of its face ; making a larger display required increasingly unwieldy disks.
Too few subunits makes an army unwieldy ; too many subunits makes the ‘ power of the superior will ’ weak ; and in addition every step by which an order has to pass weakens its effect by loss of force and Longer time of transmission.
The studio's efforts to do so were hampered by an unwieldy distribution system inherited from Filmways, as well as its less-than-successful advertising campaigns.
In early 2003 Federated closed the majority of its historic Davison's franchise in Atlanta ( operating as Macy's since 1985 ), rebranding its other Atlanta division Rich's with the unwieldy name, Rich's – Macy's.
Traill developed one of the bumps that adult native! Xóõ speakers have on his larynx after speaking the language, with its unwieldy phonemes, for a long time.
In October 2005 the institution adopted the operating name Engineers Ireland in an attempt to reduce any confusion over what the abbreviation IEI means, and as a substitute for its current legal name which is often considered unwieldy ; the legal name is, however, unchanged.
Formerly, its official name was Kaupþing Búnaðarbanki hf., but the name was changed as the former name was considered too unwieldy for most people.
This proved to be an unwieldy way of organising and financing the project, and as some of the backers withdrew, disappointed with the team's slow progress and early results, it fell to one of the partners in the trust, Alfred Owen of the Rubery Owen group of companies, which primarily manufactured car parts, to take over the team in its entirety.
By the mid-1980s the bureaucratic structure of the Trust was seen as unwieldy, and reforms were implemented to bring a more businesslike approach to its operations, devolving of day-to-day operations to appointed managers and representing society interests through a membership council.
The first category are those who object to using an IRAC because of its strict and unwieldy format.
Despite its length of nearly seven minutes, which made the song unwieldy for AM radio airplay, " Taxi " was released uncut as a 45 RPM single, and charted at # 24 on the Billboard Hot 100.
The practice grew extensively under the Qing, with the result that, by the end of the 19th century, the penal code had lost something of its internal coherence and become an unwieldy instrument.
" Ultimately, the Reform Bill as originally conceived proved unwieldy, and the boundary reform, with its mass of detail and numerous schedules was divided off into a second bill.
Evince began as a rewrite of GPdf, which its support programmers had started to find unwieldy to maintain.
As Warts and All reached completion, Zappa found the project to be " unwieldy " due to its length.
Since a larger unit can be unwieldy in a single formation, it is normally divided into its constituents ( such as companies for a battalion run, and in some cases, the companies further organize themselves by platoons ).
The third edition was commenced in 1893, and its four volumes became unwieldy.
Its name is derived from the word " sickle ", falcarius in Latin being a sickle cutter, which scientists have used to describe its unwieldy clawed hands.
APE, in its turn, became part of Northern Engineering Industries ( NEI ) in 1981, and the company name became the unwieldy NEI-Allen Limited – Crossley Engines.

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