1. This is much easier to follow than text which is long-winded and frequently ambiguous or file designs or programming flowcharts which are understandable only to the computer professional. 2. And this time their acrobatic daring-do is a lot easier to follow than in the choppily edited Batman Forever . 3. But his problem has been more follow through than recognizing the error of his ways. 4. But for now, he would rather follow than lead. 5. Hirschman himself is, at least in certain precincts, only somewhat hard an act to follow than is Einstein. 6. No car can have been given a harder act to follow than the new Mercedes-Benz E-Class. 7. So what better path for his son to follow than a life devoted to the mind? 8. Some sports events, such as the World Cup, are more closely followed than the Olympics in certain nations. 9. That would make pro tennis the only predominantly white sport that blacks are more likely to follow than whites. 10. The interactive instructions are slow to load and are no easier to follow than the printed instructions. |