With growth in grape production outpacing wine sales, farmers now face a glut of grapes, particularly red varieties, according to analysts. |
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Artificial intelligence and other expert systems offer only a faint hope that a solution to this glut is forthcoming. |
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I think the main problem was the glut of musicals that had sprung up at the box office. |
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He home-cures pancetta and bresaola and knows exactly what to do with a glut of damsons. |
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The country faces an increasing auto glut that is worrying economic planners. |
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The companies face increasingly cutthroat competition and a growing glut in productive capacity both in Japan and globally. |
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A glut of injuries, all at the one time, robbed us of most of our key players. |
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I consider that it is important to achieve a sale quickly, as prices will probably be affected by the glut of sales. |
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The government's main aim, however, was to rein in the country's huge coal output, which threatens to glut markets and undermine profits. |
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The graduate glut is one more sign of how difficult it is for China to manage a smooth transition to a market economy. |
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There's a glut of organic beauty products on the market, but where are the ones for our heads? |
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Do college basketball officials view the glut of timeouts at the end of games as a problem? |
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But his pipes do attain clear unmistakability, which is no mean feat considering the ridiculous glut of young garage-dwellers out there. |
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That could result in a glut of companies on the market, driving down valuations and giving new leverage to buyers. |
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At the initial stage, there is bound to be a glut of representation resulting in a cacophony of rhetoric. |
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Are you worried about the future glut of obituaries in national newspapers? |
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A glut of sob stories, short memories and disenchantment over aid funds will create a backlash that hardens people's hearts toward tragedy. |
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Shane showed us inside of the big barn, a glut of huge machines, cases, and containers. |
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However he sounded a note of caution, warning that the glut of orders could provoke a disturbing crisis in manufacturing capacity locally. |
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Amid a glut in high-end offices and apartments, it has cut prices and begun using outside sales agents. |
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What impact has this glut of information had on the practice of the two disciplines of meteorology and climatology? |
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She's glad to be working, especially since there's a glut of fashion photographers out there. |
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A grape glut caused by overplanting in headier times is raising inventories and igniting price wars. |
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People talk about a frictionless commerce, but the information glut has made human inattention the friction in commerce. |
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In a glut of greed, some owners were literally pricing themselves out of the market. |
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By the 1920s a state-subsidized system of grain elevators, silos, and storage at railheads helped to ease the cycle of glut and scarcity. |
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Industry experts estimate there is a glut of over 1.5 million square feet of data centre space at the 23 centres operating in Ireland. |
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But with deregulation, more than 30 regional airlines emerged, leading to a glut of jets in the sky and more and more empty seats. |
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Hence if China, Europe, or any other country is having a glut of money this cannot do much for the prices of American assets. |
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But this bear market is likely to turn off a lot of first-time investors who already have a glut of mutual funds to choose from. |
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On the one hand, ballooning Credit and a glut of liquidity creation were a boon inspiring astonishing asset and earnings growth. |
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Consequently, a large amount of secondhand homes are coming onto the market and there's a glut of supply. |
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In a bizarre spin-off, the Zambian textile industry has seen a glut of imported second-hand clothes which UK charities cannot sell. |
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Canning originated from the glut at the end of each season, as asparagus is a very seasonal vegetable. |
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Tallinn feels palpably Scandinavian with its polished old-town brick, seaside positioning and glut of cool cafes. |
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There's little danger that legalization will result in a glut of wingsuit pilots and parachutists, according to Giraud. |
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A growing number of tourists began visiting the Alps in the late 19th century, inspired by the sudden glut of British mountaineers. |
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Potato producers from across North America are looking at forming a partnership to address overproduction and an overall glut in the market. |
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So many new plants will be coming on line this year that commodities investors and analysts are beginning to worry about an oversupply or glut of power. |
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It must be pursued also when the boot is on our foot, when there is a glut and a buyer's market. |
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They had replanted their land with vines after the phylloxera disaster, until a glut of cheap wine flooded the market, and they could no longer sell their only product. |
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She had added this information to her notebook, together with directions for making invisible ink and a cordial water that would use up the glut of strawberries in the garden. |
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In its much-hyped broadband business, for instance, a capacity glut and financial meltdown made it hard to find creditworthy counterparties for trading. |
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Germany's saving glut allowed others to spend freely and to run up large debts. |
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This glut has deterred new investment, and high gas prices have encouraged companies to mothball costly gas-fired power plants. |
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A glut in the 1990s pushed prices down and forced even more producers in Brazil, India and Russia to mothball their facilities. |
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However, those gains were quickly eroded as a glut of poor economic data from the U. S. helped to drive the pair back to its opening price level. |
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Moreover, a glut of ideas can overwhelm, causing good ideas to become lost in a sea of bad ones. |
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They bask in four or five weeks of pleasure, and then return home to a void and a glut of time. |
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In the glut of Anglophile writing, there are a few that make the grade. |
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And given the current glut in fossil fuels, it might even be a better economic bet to wait a few years. |
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Energy prices are likely to edge up slightly compared to 2009, though the supply glut overshadowing the market will keep prices in check. |
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Rather than gloating at their one-sided goal glut, these were the supportive words of Egypt's general coach. |
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But those deliveries will only add to a glut of planes the depressed industry doesn't need now, making it even more likely future deliveries will slow sharply. |
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Comics crashed in 1993, with a glut of titles and excessive print runs. |
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But it needs to be remembered that, historically, vodka was mostly a plebian and proletarian inebriant, made in a matter of hours from any glut of vegetables. |
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And it's true that a glut of trucks and SUVs, as well as the growing popularity of smoother-riding crossover SUVs, are also taking a toll on sales. |
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But if Democrats are faced with the reality of a glut of qualified candidates, Republicans are assembling more of a fantasy team. |
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But, however much a book is heralded as a brilliant work by an acclaimed author, there is not much joy in reading it when the main character is a glut of negative emotions. |
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But should you lack the energy to sift through the glut of options yourself, we can at least helpfully endorse this one. |
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On the other hand, there is, in fact, a glut of perfectly healthy and well-behaved dogs and cats that need homes. |
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And the geostationary-satellite market already had a glut of capacity. |
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There is virtually a glut in the market with vendors pushing their carts around and turning every little space by the roadside into makeshift vending points. |
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Plus, as with any business venture, an early success story sparks a glut of wide-eyed hopefuls hoping to imitate that victory. |
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He said that over-building coupled with chronic overpricing and a downturn in certain western European economies, such as Germany, would prompt a glut of apartments for sale. |
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The entire process creates a glut of shares on the market, and has the obvious effect of placing downward pressure on the share price. |
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Fortunately China is helping to mop up the glut. |
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Trigger-happy combat is substituted for stealth but there is the glut of PS4 enhancements to further stoke your fire. |
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His glut of goals, including one scored after just 39 seconds of play, as well as his numerous assists, have made the rampaging hitman one of the most feared forwards in the Bundesliga. |
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The pace of home sales picked up in the fourth quarter and, combined with the low level of new housing starts, reduced the glut of homes for sale on U. S. markets. |
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During December 1999, regions in several Member States were hit by violent storms that caused serious damage to woodland, resulting in a glut of timber which is threatening the market. |
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He stated there has been a glut of plasma lately and referred to the competition entering the U. S. market, noting that CBS should consider this for its own decision-making. |
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While the glut of unsold homes on the market has eased a bit, there remains an abundance of homes to be sold, either due to overbuilding or a build-up of foreclosed properties. |
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Conceivably, product glut occurs in only a small percentage of agricultural products over any five year period, but in a higher percentage over a decade or two decades. |
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The original global savings glut was perhaps overhyped. |
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Today there is a glut of styles that bore, fatigue, and turn our stomachs because they are the fruit of a creative recipe, the work of an unsocial and poorly brought up people. |
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Note that rapid increases in educational attainment could help attenuate this effect, by slowing the growth in the glut of workers competing for low-skill work. |
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With the cost of traditional media advertising skyrocketing and a glut of ads fighting for consumers' attention, marketers are aggressively seeking out new advertising vehicles. |
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I was unnerved but not deterred, and before long I began bumping up against the practical difficulties the Lincoln glut creates for authors who are foolish enough to try to add to it. |
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Only a handful of teams still had anything left to play for on the final weekend, and the absence of pressure led to a glut of goals – 42 across the 10 games. |
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Within the glut of pro-Bayern statistics, one stands out. |
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The realms of nature and of art were ransacked to glut the wonder, lust, and ferocity of a degraded populace. |
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In truth, Spurs were streakier than a rasher of bacon after Sheriff 's posse of Brazilian imports missed a glut of yawning chances. |
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We just have no processing in play that will handle that type of a glut. |
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The Industrial Age has resulted in a glut of manufactured products that find their way onto our store shelves, mail order catalogs, and into our homes. |
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With all the new curbside recycling programs coming on stream, will there be a glut of recycled plastic instead? |
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The new materials present an attractive option both for industrialized countries, to replace plastics, and developing countries, to overcome the glut of plastic waste dumped openly. |
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Meanwhile, the overall oilseed market is gradually adjusting to a record-sized glut of world soybeans, particularly as the window for potential South American yield adversity is closing with the approach of harvest. |
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Funny, I have gone as low as 16 land and my deck still had huge problems with mana glut. |
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There has been a glut of new anthologies of the Galician-Portuguese lyric, in testimony to its abiding importance in Hispanic literature. |
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Prices increase in times of shortage and fall when there is a glut. |
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This resulted in a glut of ships when demand dropped due to a weakened global economy and dramatically reduced demand in the United States. |
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From an Internetter of 15 years, reflections on cyberspace as an illusory nonplace and on the addictive glut of unnecessary online information. |
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A glut of European data releases will be driving trading into the weekend. |
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We always, it seems, are provided with a glut of material on the next big thing and not enough on how to make the last big thing actually work. |
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The implicit guarantee by the US federal government created a moral hazard and contributed to a glut of risky lending. |
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And with Red Star inexorably turning the championship into a one-horse race this time around, one unfortunate by-product was a glut of largely meaningless encounters, often played out in sparsely-filled stadia. |
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This encouragement, along with government subsidies, has led to a glut in the tobacco market. |
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Others would interject, with cause, that I should have discussed global imbalances and the great savings glut, or the role of soaring commodity prices in precipitating a downturn, or any number of other factors. |
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Major beef supplier ABP has moved to reassure its suppliers in the wake of reports it was sitting on a glut of South American beef and was cutting domestic production. |
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The trial became what many saw as a grotesque form of entertainment, with the media stalking witnesses, the glut of pop books, and the glamourization of commentators. |
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Taking full advantage of the glut, the flower-like polyps of xenia soft corals pulsated as they fed on the zooplankton delivered by the currents. |
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These developments contributed to the 1980s oil glut, which affected the Soviet Union, as oil was the main source of Soviet export revenues. |
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The debate developed over the economic concept of a general glut, and the possibility of failure of Say's Law. |
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This small paperback book is a veritable tardis of tips on how to preserve the harvest glut. It covers 51 types of fruit and vegetables, including herbs. |
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