I can make a case for the draw in all of them and backing them in a trixie, three doubles and a treble, could pay big rewards. |
|
The products or services that have wide, sustainable moats around them are the ones that deliver rewards to investors. |
|
He's proud that the young player stuck with it and is now reaping the rewards of his hard work and perseverance. |
|
The trumpet vine rewards us with magnificent orange-red flowers, seems almost impervious to storms and can be planted directly into the sand. |
|
Initially, the mahout guides the elephant's trunk over the canvas and offers rewards for good performance. |
|
It is right that that should be so, because status within an organisation carries with it commensurate rewards. |
|
The rewards are so great these days, and guys are under pressure to turn pro earlier rather than later. |
|
The carrot and the stick, rewards and punishments, are the most effective ways of training animals and humans. |
|
If the athletes have to take the blame for when they lose, shouldn't they get the rewards when they win? |
|
Now is the time to scrap the Trust and get back to clean wards, happy contented staff, striving for high standards and just rewards. |
|
In doing so, they are depriving themselves of the numerous blessings and rewards of fasting. |
|
His hold on power is even more reliant on personal loyalties and their reinforcement by material rewards and mortal penalties. |
|
If you can, then I expect you to get cracking on an Internet decision soon so you can reap the rewards! |
|
We successfully used biofeedback devices together with a rewards programme. |
|
Other DVD extras include a Find Jiminy Cricket game, which rewards success with a short and two singalong songs. |
|
Nevertheless, An Irish Working Class does offer some rewards to the efforts of non-specialist readers. |
|
It's a big river where you need a good strong wading staff, a buoyancy aid and chest high waders to reap the river's rich rewards. |
|
For example, external rewards frequently are used to motivate children extrinsically. |
|
Although imaginary in itself, the Blue Riband offered immense tangible rewards. |
|
The boarders, though, are weaving a fine line between staying true to their surfy, freewheeling roots and the rewards of success. |
|
|
These rewards include pseudopollen, wax or a viscid, resinous material secreted by the labellum and floral nectar. |
|
Many people may not find the rewards commensurate with the time and effort required. |
|
Those who approach it like this will discover that there are rewards to be unearthed. |
|
Burt is unfazed by the payment of such sums, pointing to America where rewards are commensurate with profits earned. |
|
It forces heroes and heroines to act out of character and rewards vice with virtue. |
|
In these large, cartoonlike abstractions, there is an entire primer on the gambles and rewards of painting. |
|
Sometimes I like to rewards myself with presents, to let me know how much I mean to me. |
|
Most likely, as long as the economy was booming and the economic rewards were big enough, her employees would have endured her management style. |
|
Signatories to the convention agree to institute the necessary legislation to prevent abusers of power from reaping the rewards of corruption. |
|
There are management jobs available, while nannying, or running your own nursery or childminding business can reap financial rewards. |
|
Most Australians have grown up with an expectation that a hard day's work will reap its rewards. |
|
Random Dungeon rewards will be placed in each player's inventory automatically upon completion of the dungeon. |
|
Furthermore, the goals and system of rewards in academe often appear conflicted. |
|
Some of the rewards of this novel lie in trying to unravel the puzzles Murakami sets the reader. |
|
But have the awards, accolades and huge financial rewards diminished his drive and determination in any way? |
|
Although he was one of the best players in Europe, financial rewards at the time were almost non-existent. |
|
They do it for the sheer joy it brings to others and with no thought of rewards or praise for their own unstinting efforts. |
|
Enigmatic and difficult on a first pass, Hiroshima Mon Amour is a film that rewards multiple viewings. |
|
What's more, officials have handed out around 2,000 yuan in rewards to people snitching on illegal sites. |
|
This is all aided and abetted by the amazing assertion that hard work of necessity brings rewards. |
|
|
Privileges such as television viewing should be rewards for chores completed. |
|
These repeating cycles of contemplation-action-closure offer the player one of the rewards of the puzzle solution. |
|
This was, at best, a bridge loan because the risks and rewards of ownership did not pass to the company. |
|
Fortunately, with Happiness in Magazines, his by-the-numbers approach to songcraft has finally yielded its most copious rewards. |
|
Removing both penalties against nonconformity and rewards for conformity contributed greatly to the purity of religion. |
|
I've had my sorrows and my heartaches, but I've had my joys, you know, and my rewards. |
|
Or the collapse could all be part of a republican game plan to sow confusion among Unionists and reap the electoral rewards. |
|
Despite those rewards, it is unlikely that single camera comedy will overtake traditional comedy as the genre's leading format. |
|
Casting to type and then some, Ozon puts each of his vedettes through her paces, then rewards her with a song. |
|
Minimum rewards were doled out at totally random intervals, yet many of the subjects developed curious repetitive actions. |
|
Recognition, acknowledgment, praise, and rewards are ever so important and are a demonstration of the fact that you care. |
|
When Donatella Versace finishes one of her glitzy fashion collections she rewards herself for her hard work with a coloured diamond or two. |
|
With no rewards in the writing, the cinematography, and dismal acting, that's asking way too much. |
|
Based on the TV series farm jobs, tasks, rewards, and unseen pieces from the programme were explored. |
|
It rewards workers for their efforts with tokens which are exchangeable for commodities and services. |
|
In times gone by, appointments were also perceived as rewards for people retiring from well-paid jobs. |
|
You get the rewards now of all the efforts you have been putting in to your business. |
|
This is where you can reap the rewards of your forward planning, or curse your impetuousness as appropriate. |
|
We were, quite literally, reaping the rewards of ignoring the judicious practice of crop rotation. |
|
The second is an ability to look for excellence in whatever one does, regardless of external criteria of rewards and recognition. |
|
|
They also exclude the belief in immortality of the soul and the punishment and rewards of the afterworld. |
|
Sadly we are just reaping the rewards of the wholescale sell-off of the UK utilities industry to overseas investors. |
|
Are there real rewards for excellence in academic areas other than research, for instance? |
|
Their first eponymous album was raw and of its time, but still rewards the listener today. |
|
The positive reaction associated with spin-offs and divestment can be viewed as evidence that the market rewards transparency. |
|
Some of the more advanced moves take longer to master, but this was a wise design decision since it rewards more experienced players. |
|
Bribery refers to the illicit use of rewards, gifts, or favors to pervert judgment or corrupt the conduct of someone. |
|
Also, some people are better set up to pursue longer term goals and others need more immediate rewards to get off their duffs and do anything. |
|
It has presented challenges and rewards that have enriched my life immeasurably. |
|
For the rest, entering the entertainment world means having a colourful lifestyle, fat monetary rewards and an enviable social status. |
|
But the resilient design helps to disincentivize terrorism, by reducing its rewards. |
|
But picking the olives is hard physical work, and the rewards are far from certain. |
|
They thrive on risk, happy in the knowledge that the greater the risks taken then the greater the potential rewards. |
|
To tax the rewards of such success would be to create a disincentive effect that would lead to little or no innovation. |
|
Outside appointments confer prestige and status, as well as financial rewards and perquisites. |
|
As reasons for misunderstanding or discord diminish, both cultures will realize greater rewards. |
|
Leveraging this effort should reap rewards for managers, professionals, and patients alike. |
|
By contrast, casting or drawing lots to assure fairness in allocating duties or rewards has been acceptable for millennia. |
|
The awards scheme recognises the value of green spaces and rewards excellent standards of park management. |
|
Thus, banks became greedy, taking on huge risks in hopes of even bigger rewards. |
|
|
Insects such as ants, wasps and flies from the vicinity are attracted to these rewards and defend the plants facultatively against herbivores. |
|
There is also a belief that worker performance is based on either rewards offered by management or the threat of coercion. |
|
At the same time, those who render meritorious service should be given due recognition with fitting rewards. |
|
Alaska has a fund through which the state distributes the economic rewards of its ownership of land and mineral resources. |
|
With his own lips he proclaimed the rewards to be lavished upon the restorers of the dynasty. |
|
These gratuities are voluntary rewards given from spectators who genuinely enjoyed the battle in the ring. |
|
The game richly rewards you with feelings of accomplishment and pwnage then just as quickly yanks it all away leaving you mad and ready to quit. |
|
Three and four-day walks respectively, each provide rich rewards for efforts spent. |
|
He knows that financial rewards such as those brought in by ecotourism are of great benefit. |
|
External control refers to rewards that reinforce conformity and punishments that discourage deviance. |
|
Councillor Sultan Ali said other authorities were reaping the rewards of using counselling services with children. |
|
The system even provides students with computer games as rewards for effort and achievement. |
|
Solomon Linda's descendants are still waiting for rewards and recognition for his talents. |
|
Commentators talk about deserving a result, precisely because there's such a wide gap between deserts and rewards. |
|
Good leaders create opportunities to provide rewards, recognition and thanks to staff members. |
|
Even midwives are being given rewards, such as cellular phones with free air time, for promoting certain brands of prophylactics. |
|
The moderately steep walk rewards you with wonderful views of the glacier and the mountains. |
|
Efforts to reconfigure services will see as yet unspecified financial rewards for services that deliver. |
|
Failure to reap the rewards of what he considered his great talent led to increasingly expressionistic and exhibitionist art. |
|
That challenge is however starting to reap rewards, with markets opening up for eco-friendly wool. |
|
|
They will soon learn that to give and take in the workplace and indeed, any relationship, reaps its own rewards. |
|
The scheme, managed by Crimestoppers, will offer the cash rewards for information leading to charges for criminal damage. |
|
Several handsome rewards were offered for information leading to the arrest of the Monkey Man. |
|
While Russia has offered rewards before for information on the rebels' whereabouts, the reward offered yesterday was by far the biggest yet. |
|
Police are offering rewards for any information about the vigilante, the hostage, or the robber. |
|
Lady DuBay offered fabulous rewards for any information regarding traitors. |
|
All subjects had participated in an earlier experiment in which they pecked at black and white symbols to procure food rewards. |
|
Defenders is offering rewards for information leading to the conviction of the persons responsible for all of these acts. |
|
Texas cattle feeder Michael Bezner chuckles when he hears that Excel rewards quality beef with better prices. |
|
The presidential decretal law no.33 of 1992 regarded salaries and rewards for armed forces and security. |
|
Saturn governs all Librans, and it usually entails trials and then rewards. |
|
For those willing to risk trying out a new technology, the rewards can be rich. |
|
Have you dedicated the last ten years to getting ahead in your career and the rewards that come with that? |
|
Investors who think they can have their guarantee and reap rich rewards, too, may be setting themselves up for disappointment. |
|
The chance to reap rich rewards is attracting new entrants into the business. |
|
Today we are reaping the rewards of our rich heritage through the tourism trade. |
|
Golf can bring a man rich rewards, but it also possesses a distinctive cruelty. |
|
They've learned that in the stealthy world of computer hacking, staying on your toes and a step ahead of hackers can pay rich rewards. |
|
The cabinet system at local level brings rich rewards for councillors in Bexley's cabinet. |
|
There are very rich rewards to be reaped from off-court promotions as well as on-court victories. |
|
|
Without doubt, our likeliness to share personal stories and anecdotes makes for close relationships which have their own rewards. |
|
She steers clear of simple cynicism, having recognized for herself the aesthetic rewards of Wordsworth's calculated risk-taking. |
|
The competition rewards the country's top dairy farmers who produce milk with the highest protein content and with a firm eye to cost efficiency. |
|
The cumulative rewards can be lucrative, and the experience can change lives. |
|
The intervention therefore sharpened factional conflict by increasing the rewards anticipated from controlling the state. |
|
It's a long, long listen that delivers very few rewards for anyone except the most ardent techno enthusiast. |
|
For food rewards, try chicken, liver, cheese, sardines, and other smelly, yummy, soft treats. |
|
The odds are long, the rewards are high, but there is no assurance of winning. |
|
People who use energy efficient methods for long-distance travel obtain rewards. |
|
You must also cultivate attitude, nutrition and rest to EARN your just rewards. |
|
During the Empire professional delators were many because of the monetary rewards that awaited a winner. |
|
The low road can sometimes bring short-term financial rewards, but it always leads to a dead end. |
|
Combine your cashback card with a supermarket loyalty card to earn even greater rewards. |
|
Loyalty programmes work on the basis of providing rewards to customers in return for their continuing patronage. |
|
Thus they began to reap the rewards of a year of desperate, frenzied activity. |
|
Why is the government so timid about embryo research given the potential rewards? |
|
McCarthy's film is really a portrait of the risks and rewards of letting others see your vulnerable side. |
|
The book outlines simple steps that can be taken to maximise money and help reap the rewards in retirement. |
|
The Foss Basin is always a safe bet at this time of year and pike anglers have been reaping the rewards of a patient approach. |
|
Leaders of such societies were accountable to their people, and vice versa, with systems of penalties and rewards limiting autocracy. |
|
|
These are the statistics, the sweeteners and the rewards of tortuous negotiations. |
|
To entrepreneurs, IPOs offer the promise of funding for their businesses and rewards for their hard work. |
|
The stakes are high, and the rewards of successfully averting the coming catastrophe are even greater. |
|
The scale rewards honor, chivalry and courage, but also deducts for blatant foolishness and sheer idiocy. |
|
The FAI has a system in place that rewards fans who travel on a constant basis to support the team. |
|
The investiture conferred titles, responsibilities, and rewards, but it also entailed obedience. |
|
Having a satisfied customer tell others how great your business is can reap tremendous rewards. |
|
The pressure, the exposure and the rewards involved in matches like these are such that they can make or break a player's career. |
|
We live on the honorariums and rewards for the articles I get published in different magazines. |
|
The Harrogate and Knaresborough MP said the new baccalaureate should allow higher rewards for pupils taking subjects like maths. |
|
As for the rewards of playwriting, we know little of Shakespeare's personal finances. |
|
I view community service as team building that always produces rewards that exceed the investment. |
|
The scientists in their study said humans are especially unique in their ability to put off instant rewards. |
|
The game also rewards your persistence by giving you a new map after beating the diamond suits. |
|
Of course, the USDA grading system rewards heavily marbled beef over that which is less fatty. |
|
And as long as the financial rewards for success are so lucrative there will always be an incentive to cheat in order to gain any advantage. |
|
This sort of behavior is common especially in the military, an organization whose foundation is a command chain that rewards loyalty. |
|
It does suit some people but you must have your head screwed on and be fully aware of both the risks and rewards. |
|
But every rose garden has its thorns, and for me the incredible rewards of French Polynesia far outbalance the shortcomings. |
|
Finding the right formulae for structuring ownership and rewards will not be difficult once the right team is in place. |
|
|
The last extra is a trivia game, which rewards good answers with brief clips from the film. |
|
Teaching never was a profession to enter for big cash rewards but it did once share in the hierarchies it protected. |
|
Secondly, stipulating rewards for finders will improve the efficiency of protection for property. |
|
Korean Protestantism consciously and deliberately assumed the form of a magical religion, accentuating the present and this-worldly rewards. |
|
Status rewards can flow from a variety of institutions including academic, professional, sporting and artistic bodies. |
|
More often, they were prepared to play the stool pigeon not for thirty pieces of silver, but for much more mundane rewards. |
|
In return for playing a secondary role in the occupation other powers may hope to reap some of the rewards from the corporate carve-up. |
|
Children receive rewards for conformity to group behaviour and they are punished for dissension. |
|
So the club floated on the Stock Exchange and took all the financial rewards on offer. |
|
Exchanging information, ideas, feelings with other humans is not a matter of convenience, it's a search for the deepest rewards. |
|
People, departments, and organizations want power and the rewards that go with it. |
|
For their self-proclaimed heir to use visual trickery may seem a cop-out, or a challenge whose rewards do not make it worth accepting. |
|
The market economy invests heavily in and rewards individualism, not self-sacrifice and altruism, the lifeblood of the family. |
|
All of this clearly has the appearance of rewards based on political favoritism, rather than rewards based on merit. |
|
I've only met him once or twice and he just told me to keep training hard and I'll reap the rewards. |
|
Throw in the famously tolerant Dutch attitudes and you've got a place that rewards visit after visit. |
|
For years, teachers have been using behaviorism in the form of punishments and rewards to maintain order in their classrooms. |
|
Yes, there is method in her madness, a classroom run on an elaborate system of second chances, rewards and discipline. |
|
While their fiercely offbeat sounds may initially dissuade, a bit of perseverance can reap immense rewards. |
|
Liberals writing for the omnipotent liberal media can only dream of the rewards that have come the way of a whole generation of conservatives. |
|
|
Today the coal miner's daughter and descendant of Daniel Boone is reaping the rewards for her stick-to-it-iveness. |
|
The Ryder Cup trail has often been tortuous, twisting and downright tedious, but the rewards to the Scottish economy are expected to be enormous. |
|
The new tough-mindedness was enforced, above all, with executive pay packages that offered princely rewards if stock prices rose. |
|
Research requires an inquisitive and independent bent, and rewards these talents handsomely. |
|
While there are many practical problems involved in sheltering people from a different culture, we also know the rewards that would flow. |
|
Shellfish is a sustainable fishery and the trawlermen saw that, called it a day and are reaping the rewards. |
|
Life as a Grimsby trawlerman has never been easy, but the rewards were still there 100 years ago. |
|
Like a young initiate into a cult, however, I took this failure to be a sign that ever greater and more glorious rewards lay ahead. |
|
The rewards can be huge for a band of men who regard themselves as modern-day big-game hunters. |
|
She tries to make it four times a week and rewards her dedication with trendy clothes. |
|
They have suffered no losses and are entitled to no compensatory rewards as redundancy payments have now been made. |
|
They received financial and other rewards in their home town when they returned triumphally. |
|
Beaten-down big caps with the financial power to weather the inevitable downturns in business can offer investors spectacular rewards when the economy recovers. |
|
No one seems to begrudge Apple executives making millions, yet those rewards at the top are just as disproportionate. |
|
The bottom line is that TV can reap tremendous rewards for your small business, but you have to be willing to be patient and have the war chest to back up that patience. |
|
Without the gigantic financial rewards for progressing beyond the group stages, managers will often treat Europa League games like a jazzed-up pre-season friendly. |
|
But if you can handle the pace, the rewards are well worth it. |
|
The fact that there is so little at stake in terms of financial rewards, book royalties and readerships means that innovative writers can afford a little self-indulgence. |
|
But the real downside of media-sponsored rewards is that people seeking to cash in will pass information that sends investigating officers off on wild goose chases. |
|
We enjoyed every bit of their piggy-ness and now we are reaping the rewards with a freezer full of the very best ham, bacon, sausage, and kielbasa in the world! |
|
|
Who can begrudge the rewards for three epic movies that were seven years in the making, and combined Tolkien's wizardly storytelling with the cutting edge of new technology? |
|
Always keep your word with children, in punishments as well as in rewards. |
|
The job is exhausting but the rewards are out of this world. |
|
They are only here to reap the rewards of the American safety net and thereby raise your taxes. |
|
Operational tempo seemed particularly laggard after major victories, when maintaining the momentum of victory would seem to have promised the greatest rewards. |
|
Kent has more dogs stolen for rewards, breeding, coursing and lamping, illegal night hunting with high powered torches, than anywhere else in the country. |
|
Students' relative strengths on these indicators suggest that these behaviors can be used as rewards antecedent to displays of disruptive behavior. |
|
The policy involves students getting rewards for good behaviour, culminating in a school trip to a theme park for all those who get the required number of credits. |
|
Boyden remembers hearing that when Pegahmagabow returned to Canada, he was made a conquering hero before the promises of rewards for hard service evaporated. |
|
Although the only prize on offer at Olympia was an olive wreath, it is known that victors commonly received other more lucrative rewards when returning to their home city. |
|
Labour leader Councillor Stuart King argued for a competitive scheme in which estates would fight to recycle the most in return for financial rewards. |
|
But I am now reaping the rewards of this effort in this trip. |
|
Despite the hard work, government service has its own rewards, says Yorac. |
|
I know that working towards a PhD means sacrifices, and in my current position it feels that I have definitely sacrificed too much without getting the rewards in return. |
|
Prior to passage of the law, a grey area existed where law enforcement officials offered rewards to members of crime organizations in exchange for tips on criminal activities. |
|
On top of that, the government rewards the years of income that a graduate has sacrificed to study by making HECS debt the first call on a graduate's income. |
|
But for the intrepid, there are rich, lasting rewards to be reaped. |
|
In effect they act as regulatory arbitrageurs, reaping the rewards of fast-moving financial markets without the burden of the regulatory controls that banks face. |
|
For more straightforward cash rewards, consumers will have to read the small print of product literature to ensure they have the card that best suits their spending needs. |
|
While some farming cooperatives such as Nueva Vida are managing their lands wisely, others are tempted by the financial rewards of large-scale logging. |
|
|
Jill can attest to the rewards of having the courage to move on. |
|
While this year might dig some challenging trenches in your notorious Sagittarian optimism, sensitivity towards and concern for others is going to bring you big rewards. |
|
I turn to one of the boys in wheelchairs, who rewards me with a giant, hammy smile. |
|
It's fashionable to turn a blind eye to the exponential growth of executive rewards beyond the dreams of avarice that bear no relationship to economic worth. |
|
Sean McGovern of Hertfordshire, England, struggled with Janopause, but reaped unexpected rewards. |
|
Indeed, some of the rewards have topped hundreds of thousands when the crime involves a homicide. |
|
And most importantly, Du Bois stressed the ways in which religious institutions can be recognized as social, communal centers which provide this-worldly rewards and comforts. |
|
The volume as a whole is thought-provoking and rewards careful study. |
|
I teach media studies at Stirling University, which has its rewards. |
|
The programme includes medical check-ups and yearly bonuses as rewards. |
|
But Shintoism's kamikaze pilots were not motivated by afterlife rewards. |
|
It is a game that rewards perseverance but tries your patience. |
|
Some schemes work like a frequent flier program, where financial advisers receive bigger and better rewards, the more money they channel into specific investment funds. |
|
Despite the impressive performance by the shares, those willing to sit tight should enjoy further rewards as the company remains remarkably good value. |
|
But they admit that the rewards for success are so great that athletes continue to pump up their already muscle-bound bodies to lift even heavier weights. |
|
An oligarch opposed to Russia offers rewards for the capture of commandos occupying government buildings. |
|
Every family had their own name for the plastic wedges you get as rewards. |
|
Most children were revulsed by the practice because of the unpalatability of the fishy tasting oil, and doubtless extracted a variety of rewards for compliance. |
|
Content providers eager to leave the narrowband world for the new high-speed Internet often find themselves in uncharted waters, with as many dangers as there are rewards. |
|
The writerly urge to kiss and tell may have wrecked the occasional romance, but readers reaped the rewards. |
|
|
In the realm of politics, however, plutocracy can buy itself more substantial rewards. |
|
Why count the possible buffets and ignore the rewards of fortune? |
|
History rewards reverent earnestness, while the jokes and pratfalls and wit are often lost in translation. |
|
Just as the novel rewards villainous behavior, so it promotes guilty identification that allows the reader to enjoy moral transgression by association. |
|
Patience is a virtue and one that is supposed to bear rewards. |
|
Expect some tangible proof of this fact in the form of a bonus check or other ritzy rewards. |
|
Jerry Brown, chief operating officer, sat down with them to discuss the risks and rewards of manufacturing sub-assemblies for a major overseas company. |
|
Our honor system routinely rewards cheaters and punishes honesty. |
|
But you should bear in mind that money can be swallowed up, and that staff rewards organised in this way could prove more memorable and effective. |
|
Those people already working as partners in Irish accounting firms confirm that if you have what it takes to make it to the top, you will reap the rewards. |
|
Each novel rewards the reader's patience, but in unexpected ways. |
|
Your sacrifices and fortitude are honored and your rewards are the gratitude of those saved at sea, a cleaner coastland, a more educated public and a safer America. |
|
The money to give people rewards comes from some of the existing taxes on fuel, registrations, tolls and other taxes and imposts imposed on transport. |
|
These negative forces were unleashed on us at a most inopportune time, when the country started reaping nature's rewards in the form of an abundance of oil dollars. |
|
He also spoke about the rewards of being a politician, highlighting the need for people to choose to make a difference in the world, rather than simply filling a space. |
|
The first past the post system always unfairly rewards the largest parties, but the results become particularly arbitrary when their share of the vote is relatively small. |
|
The worker invests work effort in the job in expectation of rewards. |
|
The sight of a colony of fly orchid was amongst the rewards. |
|
Businesses who dabbled in e-commerce during the boom are now reaping the rewards with more than half now making a 20 per cent return on their initial investment. |
|
The children say they have enjoyed the rewards of their efforts, having used the profits to buy games for the classroom and finance a trip to New Lanark. |
|
|
Maynard says the sacrifices are a small price to pay for the rewards. |
|
The rewards for being a family physician are often without price. |
|
Like the characters in this tale, people are often torn between impulsively choosing immediate rewards or more deliberatively planning for the future. |
|
This often includes lazy or incompetent peers, ineffective management, or a seniority system that rewards obsolete employees and punishes newer, more aggressive go-getters. |
|
Nearly 500 schools are signed up to the company's reward scheme, which is intended to replace old-style rewards such as gold stars and house points. |
|
These are viewed as fair outcomes, as just deserts or rewards for differences in ability, skill or effort, within the framework of a competitive market. |
|
Henceforth virtue and good works would be their own rewards. |
|
Bearing most of the costs and almost none of the rewards for their work, the vast majority of recording artists complete their contracts under a punishing cloud of debt. |
|
There is no acceptance of the place of performance assessment within career structures for teachers and in the accepted processes for the determination of rewards. |
|
Given the gustative rewards that result from understanding the science of cooking, and its importance to the food industry, this keen interest is not surprising. |
|
It is up to us to enact the regulation, oversight, and judgment necessary to insure that the correct rewards and punishments are doled out to the correct people. |
|
Participating in this tribunal rewards players while cutting down on negativity. |
|
At the end of the sheepherding demonstration, Kennard rewards his dogs by playing Frisbee and interacting with the audience. |
|
Whatever the case, the rewards for the reader, though not negligible, are hardly commensurate with the Stakhanovite efforts of the author-editor. |
|
The MMP Portfolio Licensing Program rewards first movers in their industry sectors with substantial discounts. |
|
As transformative as are the medical benefits of three-parent children, the social rewards should not be overlooked. |
|
After his death, his heirs sued the Crown for a part of the profits from trade with America, as well as other rewards. |
|
In the later 1690s Rewse became a successful thief-taker, reaping large rewards for the capture of Jacobite conspirators, clippers, and coiners. |
|
That occurred in the 12th minute when flanker George Smith, seagulling out wide, enjoyed the rewards of a two-man overlap to score. |
|
Napoleon offered liberal monetary rewards to soldiers and laborers who could perform difficult portages in a timely fashion. |
|
|
Despite enormous rewards being offered, he was neither captured nor betrayed. |
|
In an attempt to gain the rewards of such a reputation, the forger often engages in two distinct activities. |
|
Inactive, doing nothing, he awaits their proposals, compares the project with the results, and rewards or punishes. |
|
Because the cotton gin had not brought Whitney the rewards he believed he would get, he accepted the contract. |
|
The British offered rewards for the capture of westerners serving with Chinese pirates. |
|
Those rulers who submitted received political protection and material rewards. |
|
In gratitude to his British allies, Macsen rewards them with a portion of Gaul that becomes known as Brittany. |
|
On 29 October 1407, the Yongle Emperor ordered rewards for the personnel who had fought at Palembang. |
|
The Yongle Emperor was still in Beijing at the time, but he ordered the Ministry of Rites to give monetary rewards to the fleet's personnel. |
|
Roger II had not only acquired large wealth through his royal patrimony but also through his military campaigns and their financial rewards. |
|
These ideas were adopted and adapted in western Europe to the high risks and rewards associated with colonial ventures. |
|
This is an approach that verifies values and rewards the benefits of ecosystem services provided by green agricultural practices. |
|
Naturalist Sam Talbot is preparing to reap the rewards of her efforts to help the scarce harvest mouse. |
|
Despite conventional wisdom, there are no rewards just for participating. |
|
Success led to significant financial rewards, but also the challenges of celebrity status. |
|
From their origin in the 1980s to today, payment card rewards programs in the United States have become more and more widespread. |
|
They communicate with their ant protectors by vibrations as well as chemical means and typically provide food rewards. |
|
The Edison Award is a source of great pride for CBTec Oy and rewards its constant dedication to democratizing education with technology. |
|
Peter Dalton as its new CEO to lead the Company into 2015 by developing new games and building its online pachinko business and rewards program. |
|
These are not the usual rewards for prolongation of economic distress. |
|