Additional examples are adjusted to the entries in an automated way - we cannot guarantee that they are correct.
And those gains have come from people suggesting we should relook at areas that, perhaps in my experience, were considered almost dead issues.
Detectives, he said, "go back, rethink, relook, nothing more complex than that."
The concept was to relook at how spaces could unfold and prevent compartmentalisation of the spaces.
As such, companies in the 21st century may find it necessary to relook their brand in terms of its relevancy to consumers and the changing marketplace.
Persuading the Europeans to relook at the role of the PRTs would also be extremely difficult.
Pressed by members of both parties about what steps the administration would take if Iraq continued to balk, he added, "We would clearly have to relook at the strategy."
At the police station, Frank tells Chan that he is Kwong's younger brother, which convinces Chan to relook into the case.
But of course, once again next year we will have to evaluate the asset - or if some other major change in the environment causes us to relook at that sooner than once a year.
"Really, all I can say is that it's logical you'd take advantage of the acquisition," he said, "to relook at Interpublic to see what changes could make us more powerful or more effective going forward."
A spokesman for Dow Corning said it was "continuing to relook at the situation" and would report on its analysis in a filing with the Securities and Exchange Commission on Feb. 2.
The Atlantic Fleet lasted until 1912 when rising tensions with Germany forced the Royal Navy to relook at fleet formations and the Atlantic Fleet became the 3rd Battle Squadron.
By the middle of 2009, YTL again revived talk on the project and expressed hope that the Malaysian government would relook at the proposal, claiming that delays in the project has caused development costs to rise over the years.
I think he should resign as Labour leader so they can move on from the Brown/ Blair era, Labour need to relook at past policies and why they were so decisively voted out of government which they were whichever way you look at it.
In an interview on Friday, Ms. Ness's fellow commissioner, Rachelle B. Chong, offered another compromise: adoption of the "Grand Alliance" standard as it was proposed by the F.C.C. in May and then setting a time "in the future to relook at the standard - a technological reality checkpoint."