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・UK /ki:p ʌp/
Teams were struggling to keep up with the Type 79,
controversial cars to ever hit an F1 track. Teams were struggling to keep up with the
As the head of the European Automobile Manufacturers Association said, "Too often, the EU puts the regulatory cart before the horse, imposing heavy compliance burdens before Europe has a fully developed EV industry in place." European car companies are already struggling to keep up with China's dominance in the EV market, which benefits from significant government subsidies.
European car companies are already struggling to keep up with China's
While Levi's has had its shares of ups and downs, the company's legacy may be rooted more in its ability to keep up with the changing tastes and social mores.
and downs, the company's legacy may be rooted more in its ability to keep up
The technology's rapid advance means that chips and the software to use them are going to have to keep up.
and the software to use them are going to have to keep up.
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To keep up with everything
But if we continuously eat sugary foods, then our saliva cannot keep up.
But if we continuously eat sugary foods, then our saliva cannot keep up, causing the bacteria to pass into the dentin and then eventually into the pulp, thus creating cavities.
The problem is that because the voucher wouldn't necessarily keep up with health care inflation,
The problem is that because the voucher wouldn't necessarily keep up with health care inflation, it was estimated that this would cost the average senior about $6,000 a year.
keep up as he's acting them out.
Regulation, however, failed to keep up with industry enthusiasm.
It is hard to keep up with what has been one of the most spectacular corporate fallouts.