Once I'd come to terms with my environment, I'd come around.
"Intel has had to come to terms with the reality that the RDRAM technology has not come online fast enough, " says Kevin Krewell, an analyst at MicroDesign Resources, a chip industry research firm in Sebastopol, Calif.
We only had a few short weeks to deal with a lot of complicated issues, including repealing "don't ask, don't tell, " dealing with a START treaty to reduce nuclear weapons, and come to terms with a budget.
Despite all this upheaval, the two parties will need quickly to decide their stances on at least two important issues during the lame-duck session, quite apart from grappling with the longer-term challenges involved in trying to come to terms with America's huge deficit (see article).
In 2010, with the resort still stalled, she says she tried to come to terms with Mr. Costner again, but ended up taking him to court.
WSJ: Forget 'Wolves'��Kevin Costner Grapples With Bison These Days
Within a few years Euronext Liffe would merge with the New York Stock Exchange, and the Merc would come to terms with a historic rival, the Chicago Board of Trade.
Arsenal were on the ropes, and it took a superb double save from Alumnia to deny Tevez after a slick exchange with O'Shea as United swarmed all over a Gunners side struggling to come to terms with the pace of the game.
Ms Tymoshenko said Russia could not come to terms with the fact that a new President, Viktor Yushchenko, and a new government had come to power in Ukraine.
For Democrats that would mean a deal with targeted spending cuts to Social Security and Medicare, while Republicans would have to come to terms with targeted increases in tax rates.
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He took ten years to come to terms with a very obdurate and highly original painter.
I'm struggling to come to terms with this pessimism and find it very frustrating.
My heart aches for her family as they come to terms with this tragedy.
America has yet to come to terms with a woman's right to an abortion.
Mrs Bennett said she was unable to come to terms with her son's death.
It helped them come to terms with the problem long before the birth of the baby.
The sooner you come to terms with that, the better off you will be.
Though he hasn't had much luck on Broadway, Brown has come to terms with it.
"The force will need time to come to terms with this, " Mr Stafford said.
However, they also argued for giving her more time to come to terms with having lost.
Bridget (Blake Lively), a lanky star athlete, has never come to terms with her mother's suicide.
We have to now come to terms with the phenomenon, but not try to stop the phenomenon.
The verdicts marked the culmination of South Korea's efforts to come to terms with its traumatic past.
And I still really don't think the American people have come to terms with what's involved here.
Clooney says he's come to terms with the film's poor performance and refuses to be beaten by it.
Even so, it is an approach that the business world has found hard to come to terms with.
Mr Stoneman believes broadcasters need to come to terms with second screen devices, and how they're being used.
But are the conservatives anywhere near ready to come to terms with the demands of the new generation?
Colombian society, one of old-fashioned machismo, may have to come to terms with an increasing trend toward matriarchy.
It helped her mother come to terms with her daughter's decision to leave.
However UFJ has been perhaps the slowest to come to terms with this.
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