The luxury end will be buoyant for the foreseeable future for men's suitings. |
|
He's continuing to call for caution in allowing commercial whaling in the foreseeable future. |
|
Our concern is that this is all a wheeze not to pay rent for the foreseeable future to the detriment of the pension fund. |
|
For the foreseeable future the world's economy has to be primarily agrarian. |
|
But if it doesn't happen in the reasonably foreseeable future, there may come a time when it can no longer happen at all. |
|
My personal ambition is to make enough money from all of these ventures to exit within a foreseeable timescale and become a business angel. |
|
He said it was not foreseeable that leaving junk mail half in and half out of a letter box could cause this damage. |
|
It is likely that arbitrators and independent experts will remain busy for the foreseeable future. |
|
If he throws in his lot with the militants, we will be plunged into a welter of violence for the foreseeable future. |
|
I predict that particle physics and its links with astrophysics and cosmology will continue to be exciting in the foreseeable future. |
|
His published scholarship in the fields of Hebrew grammar and Masoretic studies will continue to influence them in the foreseeable future. |
|
Carrying sufficient spatial resolution and bit depth in the digital master to meet foreseeable uses comes at some cost. |
|
It was also held that this damage caused by independent third parties was reasonably foreseeable. |
|
But for the foreseeable future, expansion of baseload power generation for most countries comes down to a choice between coal and nuclear energy. |
|
Certainly nothing in this suggests sterling is riding for a fall if the government decides not to enter the Euro-zone for the foreseeable future. |
|
So it looks as if, for the foreseeable future, unfurnished properties will comprise a tiny minority of the private rented market. |
|
As the strongest military power for the foreseeable future, they must play an active role in fighting tyranny, totalitarianism, and terror. |
|
The serious failings of Univan led to a ship and a crew unfitted for the foreseeable eventualities of the voyage. |
|
But they do take a lot of satisfaction from being their own boss, and for the foreseeable future the vast majority expect to stay in farming. |
|
The former Blues netminder loses out on a chance to win the Stanley Cup in the foreseeable future, however. |
|
|
Such advertisements are expected to remain at bus stops and on utility poles for the foreseeable future. |
|
The defendant was in control insofar as he had created a foreseeable danger, which could have been sparked off by an innocent event. |
|
With the withdrawal of the poster foreseeable, it's an example of built-in obsolescence. |
|
The commission found that viruses and worms are foreseeable events, as evidenced by the regular security bulletins issued by software companies. |
|
I suppose this is what I have to look forward to in the foreseeable future, as Zoe is now otherwise engaged and I have nowt better to do. |
|
There's no guarantee that the brilliant number cruncher can do that now or any time in the foreseeable future. |
|
What do you view as the future of policy initiatives in this area in the foreseeable future? |
|
I imagine this will be the standard work on the subject for the foreseeable future. |
|
Record low yields are being set this year, and yields will harden further for the foreseeable future. |
|
Some jobs are inherently dangerous, some very dangerous and employers cannot reasonably protect their servants from all foreseeable danger. |
|
Whatever the pessimists might say, there is plenty of oil to last for the foreseeable future. |
|
We will be able to continue to manage without Ken's irrepressible scaremongering for the foreseeable future. |
|
A natural cause at present unrecognised may emerge in the foreseeable future. |
|
If you breach that duty of care, it is reasonably foreseeable that you're going to injure somebody. |
|
Naturally in the foreseeable future we'd like to get married and this is another tax on our love. |
|
Nor does it appear that this information will become available in the foreseeable future. |
|
It sells a basic product that people want to buy and that people will want to buy for the foreseeable future. |
|
If this form continues, and why shouldn't it, then the England shirt is his for the foreseeable future. |
|
Not only is this a crisis now, but it also will remain one for the foreseeable future. |
|
But they failed, unleashing a tragedy and a horror that was to some unimaginable, but in fact was foreseeable. |
|
|
Unfortunately the glow is so faint that no readily foreseeable telescope will be able to capture it. |
|
The number of Member States is expected to double in the foreseeable future. |
|
He said it was not reasonably foreseeable that, by placing a leaflet in the door, a dog could jump up and injure itself. |
|
It is important to establish such a norm if you expect to rule the world by force for the foreseeable future. |
|
We must draw a line now, or we will have normalized barbarism for the foreseeable future. |
|
The United States has won its fight to retain control over the internet, at least for the foreseeable future. |
|
The general duty to take reasonable care to avoid foreseeable harm applies to landowners. |
|
In the foreseeable future, brush cutting might find an ally in high technology. |
|
Proportionality must be maintained and the realistically-achievable goals must outweigh the reasonably foreseeable harm. |
|
I think it's going to be a very dicey situation for the foreseeable future. |
|
In the foreseeable future, the disproportion between the United States and any other state will widen. |
|
A happy combination of luck and enterprise has put a South Lakeland village on the brink of prosperity for the foreseeable future. |
|
In other words, we are doomed to have 50 percent novice users for the foreseeable future. |
|
The duty is owed not to the world at large, but only to an individual within the scope of the risk created, that is, to a foreseeable victim. |
|
We find that the terminal market is the best foreseeable point to pre-package most vegetables. |
|
The reality is that the Palestinian-Israeli conflict is likely going to be with us for the foreseeable future. |
|
And with employment down and the economy projected to remain in the doldrums for the foreseeable future, it's no good betting that rising ridership will save the system. |
|
So I guess the conjecture can continue through the foreseeable future. |
|
Does this term connote the subjective and self-serving claims of the mission planners, or the foreseeable objective consequences of a particular mission? |
|
In an up-period, there is an embarrassment of riches, too much to absorb and consume, a feeling of plenitude that seems to extend into any foreseeable future. |
|
|
Chaos and failed states, not democracy, are what the foreseeable future holds for Arabia. |
|
But that was not to be, and Kansas will continue as a Republican bastion for the foreseeable future. |
|
That, I suspect, is a bridge too far for the foreseeable future. |
|
It is a known and foreseeable hazard and has high probability. |
|
It will not last forever but it may exist for the foreseeable future. |
|
Rome is already in the doghouse for breaching the deficit limits three of the past five years and is unlikely to mend its spending habits in the foreseeable future. |
|
With the collapse in world equity markets and the fall in house prices, capital gains and inheritance tax receipts will continue to fall for the foreseeable future. |
|
As a capital intensive business, the group has considered its options regarding flotation but intends to remain private for the foreseeable future. |
|
After a few weeks, with the weather outlook not calling for any snow for the foreseeable future, I went ahead and swapped back to the summer tires. |
|
What were the foreseeable consequences of the alleged breaches of duty? |
|
In all likelihood this last option is what we will get for the foreseeable future. |
|
Advances in directed evolution and membrane biophysics make the synthesis of simple living cells, if not yet foreseeable reality, an imaginable goal. |
|
It is not in other words, a foreseeable consequence of the infringement. |
|
I expected to see some of the latter attained in the foreseeable future. |
|
The international use of English seems assured for the foreseeable future. |
|
In short, defendants failed to change the design to one that would have ameliorated the product's harmful aspects if misused in a foreseeable manner. |
|
It will be stuck with below par growth for the foreseeable future as it is forced to come to terms with the slump in the high technology sector, he said. |
|
The fact that there is no foreseeable or realistic prospect of deportation doesn't mean that the statutory purpose of detention pending such deportation isn't still operative. |
|
Cisco will get a lift from expanding into new markets, particularly telecom, but it's unlikely that top-line growth will pass the low double digits for the foreseeable future. |
|
The overwhelming majority of taxable sales are local, however, and will be for the foreseeable future. |
|
|
It represents a fundamental attack upon the principle of tortious liability for negligent conduct which has caused foreseeable personal injury to others. |
|
Intentional torts are any intentional acts that are reasonably foreseeable to cause harm to an individual, and that do so. |
|
Since it was foreseeable that a dog could injure a person, the citizen could sue for damages, Sherwood wrote. |
|
It's not clear whether, on Hursthouse's view, the truth about morality will ever be discussable within the foreseeable future. |
|
Audi has set itself the target of making rear fog lamps obsolescent in the foreseeable future. |
|
He ruled out membership for the foreseeable future, saying that the decision not to join had been right for the UK and for Europe. |
|
Thus, Canada's oil sands are not expected to provide more than a few million barrels per day in the foreseeable future. |
|
Since 1967 there was observed a trend indicating an ageing population, and is expected to continue in the foreseeable future. |
|
The report concluded that there was no net carbon benefit in the foreseeable future taking only the route to Manchester. |
|
The three women could not have sued the driver directly because they were not foreseeable and so no duty of care was owed to them. |
|
He suffers an injury which is an entirely foreseeable consequence of mountaineering but has nothing to do with his knee. |
|
Even though the injury might be reasonably foreseeable, the doctor is not liable. |
|
Whether the acts of a third party break the chain of causation depends on whether the intervention was foreseeable. |
|
The court held that the deceased's death was not caused by injuries that were a foreseeable result of the affray. |
|
Damages are likely to be limited to those reasonably foreseeable by the defendant. |
|
To recover damages, a claimant must show that the breach of contract caused foreseeable loss. |
|
For projects that are just ramping up, a reasonable estimate should be made for the foreseeable future. |
|
There are many factors which continue to determine the nature, for the foreseeable future, of water supply and sanitation in Zimbabwe. |
|
In the foreseeable economic and industry climate, we would rather err on the side of conservatism in our long-term capital spending commitments. |
|
It constitutes a provision of security against imparity and the possibility of foreseeable downturns in their futures. |
|
|
Yep, boyfriends and husbands, prepare to be shushed and shoo'ed away from the television every Saturday night for the foreseeable future. |
|
The basing of US F-35s at RAF Lakenheath confirms the American military presence in the UK for the foreseeable future. |
|
Oshay Davis is on prep and plans to be on it for the foreseeable future. |
|
With Europe in the doldrums, these dwellings are likely to remain empty, and getting crumblier and uglier by the day, for the foreseeable future. |
|
We expect no change in the foreseeable future so that the EU will be able to fully concentrate on other challenges. |
|
The plaintiff need not allege or prove proximate cause, which would indicate that the result of the defendant's actions was reasonably foreseeable. |
|
Inflation expectations, inflationary expectations, or expected inflation is the rate of inflation that is anticipated for some period of time in the foreseeable future. |
|
A MENTAL patient who stabbed his social worker more than 100 times will be held in a secure hospital for the foreseeable future, a court was told yesterday. |
|
If no possibility for getting a job at all in the foreseeable future exists, many younger people decide to migrate or emigrate to a place where they can find work. |
|
In short, any contingency that is foreseeable will maintain the chain. |
|
When such risks arise out of foreseeable events, the state in question must notify the European Commission in advance and consult with other Schengen states. |
|
The committee judges that on balance the risk of inflation becoming undesirably low remains the predominant concern for the foreseeable future,' the Fed said. |
|
I'M sorry to be a Job's comforter, but the present position and foreseeable outlook for jobs and the standards of living for the majority is grim. |
|
Stringent regulations, lower reparability and rising raw material prices are slated to further hamper the market growth in the foreseeable future. |
|
At the end of the song the fatal road is indicated by a series of rising minor thirds, a sequential progression that has no foreseeable, functional conclusion. |
|
For the foreseeable future, the dollar will be the world's largest reserve currency holding and the most important currency for financial security. |
|
A strain of mildew has affected the plants, which is resistant to fungicides, so as a result the annual Impatiens will not be available for the foreseeable future. |
|
This project will not be finished in the foreseeable future. |
|
Rather, the most important factor in the boundary would be the nature of the thing sold and the foreseeable uses that downstream purchasers would make of the thing. |
|