18 example sentences using alleviated.
Alleviated used in a sentence
Alleviated in a sentence as an adjective
This kind of suffering can be alleviated. But seek help, you need it.
This is a real problem and is not alleviated just because you still use a PC to write software.
PG indicated that he might add show pending/dead comment buttons so maybe that concern will be alleviated.
> Padded lifting gloves with wrist support helped keep my wrists in a stable, safe position and alleviated wrist pain. IMO using outside assistance like this promotes bad form and bad habits.
The disadvantages are alleviated by comprehensive functional or black box testing. Skip the unit tests.
I think that this can be alleviated without being anti-immigrant though. For example, make it easier for H1Bs to move between jobs and/or start their own businesses so that they don't have to feel so tied to the employer that they don't want to risk 'rocking the boat' too much.
Maybe you've never worked in an office environment with someone who has the same issues, but they're by no means alleviated merely by having their *** in a particular chair. > Or are you just so special that you deserve all that extra effort?
> Diablo 3 has no real reward loop there is only a frustration loop, which can be temporarily alleviated by using the Auction House. This is completely wrong, there is a very powerful reward loop.
> How about those of us born into a life of privilege work harder until suffering is alleviated, until pain is removed, until equality is reached. Work, for the vast majority of people, has no such aim, and no such outcome.
Some of that could be alleviated by increasing competition through public/private fiber installation projects.
How about those of us born into a life of privilege work harder until suffering is alleviated, until pain is removed, until equality is reached.
A lot of this can also be alleviated by being smart about using a web app's login screen to preload resources that will be needed on subsequent screens, as well. It's relatively simple to include a bit of JavaScript on the login page to fetch webfonts for the rest of the app before they are needed.
The issue is also getting more prominent in part because the startling cost of living in many cities and inner-ring suburbs is causing intellectually curious people to ask both why this is happening and how it can be alleviated. Both questions go back to politics.
I wonder if, in practice, so many of these frustrations would have been alleviated if we, as an industry, had adopted the "impractical" view of insisting on using only free software.
"How about those of us born into a life of privilege work harder until suffering is alleviated, until pain is removed, until equality is reached." Chances are, you ain't alleviating suffering around the world by putting in overtime at your shitty startup job.
The shortage of steel was alleviated, and plenty of aircraft carriers constructed of conventional steel, before this idea was implemented. In actual use, such a ship would have had to have been continuously refrigerated, perhaps a greater drain on scarce materials than building a ship out of steel.
The entire field of programming language development is about finding tools that are better than the old ones, even if the old ones work OK. >The disadvantages are alleviated by comprehensive functional or black box testing. If you think "more testing" alleviates all the problems of weakly typed languages, you have no idea what you're missing.
I tend to find that those without a college degree tend to have less experience attempting to solve tough intellectual problems as a member of a group -- this is usually alleviated by more professional experience. One other quirk that seems to come up more often[1] is the "Smartest Person in the Room" syndrome, the constant need to prove one's superior intelligence.