And now that the City of Toronto is officially and financially backing a study of green roofs, Toronto may finally be able to get a leg up in the market. |
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The height of the handrail in the car made it hard for him to get a leg up. |
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Huntington Park has been where people aspiring to the middle class get a leg up. |
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We need a tax code that truly helps working Americans trying to get a leg up in the economy. |
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It's not really because they hope to get a leg up on the rest of the world, though. |
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Where's the next Ben Heppner or James Ehnes going to get a leg up? |
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Today, for manufacturers who, like you, are anxious to get a leg up on the competition, optimizing the production process is a matter of survival. |
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Even though you can't run in Greece, you can get a leg up on the 42.2-kilometre classic by signing up for a 16-week marathon clinic offered by the Running Room. |
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Environmental Services staff at the site organized training, recruited other DCC staff, and crafted a tailor-made building assessment program to help the base get a leg up on the assessments. |
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He hopes that all the extra advertising will allow him to get a leg up on the competition. |
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Oh, and then there's ulimited copies. However, there is one new feature in particular that definitely makes it seem as though Flixtime is trying to get a leg up on Animoto: voiceover capabilities. |
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It's a tough way to get a leg up on your league. |
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If a country guesses right on technology at an early stage in its evolution, it may get a leg up on competing nations in terms of infrastructure development, applications development and economic spin-off. |
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Many respondents observed that unions and guilds, to protect their membership, often make it difficult for newbies to get a leg up, but without new blood, the workforce will soon grow stale. |
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It is a month, in other words, to get a leg up. |
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