In auctioning off monetary gold the managers of irredeemable currency are trying, in vain, to buy time to save their tottering regime. |
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Lots of advertisers, I predict, will buy time and space from YouTube, only to have users hoot it down. |
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They will try to buy time with a vast array of market manipulations and financial gimmickry. |
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Dos Santos also repeated his accusation that Savimbi had used previous peace accords to buy time while he rearmed his troops. |
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He also realised that Britain was not well prepared for war and that he needed to buy time to improve Britain's military position. |
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Could it be that the Conservatives on the committee are trying to buy time so that they can do the same thing during the next election campaign? |
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It uses negotiations, including the most recent ones, to buy time to press ahead with its nuclear program. |
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Stations have to allow campaigns for federal office to buy time and cannot censor their ads, regardless of content. |
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The Chinese are just hoping to deflect international pressure ahead of the G-20 and buy time for their exporters. |
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The real purpose of the intervention was to buy time for Ireland, Italy, Spain, and Portugal to get their acts together. |
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That would buy time in which he might hope to shuck off the damaging legacy of Mr Prodi's final months. |
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They should take definite action and stop the manufacture and distribution of the product so as to buy time to gather more facts. |
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What happens if a party wants to buy time in a particular program, but the broadcaster says that it is already sold out in that time period? |
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What happens if a party wants to buy time from a station or network that is in excess of its entitlement above? |
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Under the slogan of peace, it only tries to mislead others in order to buy time and pave the ground to further pursue its aggressive policies. |
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Cutting costs will buy time, and slimmer operations will make it easier to implement his strategy. |
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Laggards can buy time, but they cannot necessarily wriggle out of the obligation to come clean, or at least cleaner. |
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My, experience about the Danish financial sector is that it always tries to buy time. |
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I can say, though, that Iran has used negotiations to buy time with America. |
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This phase consists in clinging to straws, trying to buy time by making promises for an impossible future. |
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One can use the NSC to buy time for two reasons. |
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The confined and controlled environment allows explosive experts to buy time to evacuate the area before safely detonating the bomb and destroying or neutralizing toxic materials. |
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They will do that as often as they want because their only goal is to buy time until the next election campaign so they do not have to be subjected to the kind of repressive measures that could result from this. |
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The existence of this introductory Declaration Form is beneficial as a way to buy time, but States seem to have different understandings of these expressions. |
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Offering employees eligible to retire alternatives to full retirement such as alternative working arrangements, could buy time to complete knowledge transfers. |
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Static defensive positions were therefore intended not only to buy time but to economise on men by defending an area with fewer and less mobile forces. |
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Watch for the agency to slap still more restraints on Comcast as a vigorish for letting it buy Time Warner Cable. |
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