Of course, running at full steam doesn't mean much if parents don't pay their toddlers' tuitions.
Even if there is a lot of natural gas there, that might not mean much.
Such talk may burnish the Fed's inflation-fighting credentials but is unlikely to mean much.
And if IBM's financial services do begin to sputter, the fallout won't mean much near-term loss.
Normally, the third presidential debate doesn't mean much because voters have already made up their minds.
So for people who aren't crossing borders for work, the rankings don't mean much.
Ocean views don't mean much if you can't enforce a contract or fire incompetent employees.
Usually that doesn't mean much and the prerogatives of the individual weapons systems carry the day.
Full trashcans were not an unusual thing at an engineering firm, and blank paper didn't mean much.
Two games, even 20 games don't mean much either, not in the context of a 162-game season.
Another vote is scheduled for late Friday, but I am not optimistic that it will mean much.
But for others, it may mean much more: Getting help with those activities we once took for granted.
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But that doesn't mean much if only festivalgoers get to see the movies.
Of course, getting a good deal on your home doesn't mean much if you can't get a good interest rate.
The fact that his bill got 54 votes in this past session, almost all of them Democratic, doesn't mean much.
Of course, you'd be taken care of, but all the money in the world won't mean much if you're dead.
You know, stuff really, really doesn't mean much - it's the few things that count that you really want to have with you.
The Hindenburg Omen, which takes into account a bunch of market triggers, may not mean much in the broader scheme.
These names may not mean much today outside Vermont, but each served Vermont as a Republican senator in the 20th century.
And just because California voters are more tuned in than most doesn't mean much when most voters aren't tuned in at all.
"You can bring fast broadband to everyone in the country, but without the education to use it, it won't mean much, " he says.
One can see why, for it is essentially a versified history of modern Polish poetry, which is unlikely to mean much to foreign readers.
The admirals claim that bigger need not necessarily mean much more expensive: these days the electronics in a ship cost more than its metal.
An attorney who represents four drivers who sued Toyota in state courts over sudden acceleration said the NHTSA finding doesn't mean much for his litigation.
The Abenomics message may not mean much but the medium matters.
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Other than national pride in league tables, that 1.9 percent average economic growth does not mean much for the experience of the median household in the United States.
The resulting striped cross shape you can see may not mean much to the casual observer, but to a small group of scientists it proved to be a revelation.
The numbers used to quantify pollen levels vary between collecting stations, and don't mean much to the average consumer, so levels are usually described simply as low, moderate or high.
But there are two large-scale tent poles dropping this year that frankly mean much more to their respective studios than merely whether or not money is made or franchises continue.
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Having said that, this will likely not mean much for Fed policy as they will need to see more than one month of strong numbers and if it is sustained.
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