The CX-9 is a big vehicle, and we must expect one of the trade-offs to be fuel economy. |
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You need trade-offs in society, and we're not in a situation to say better rich and healthy than sick and poor. |
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Security is a trade-off, and the trade-offs in the Patriot Act were extreme. |
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This article does not discuss these oscillators at length but highlights some of the feature trade-offs. |
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Through their activity, animals can adaptively balance trade-offs between food and safety. |
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The author writes a good deal about the limitations of security protocols, and the trade-offs between good security and other desirable things. |
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Less transport demand does not necessarily mean that we have to make economic trade-offs. |
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The right formula is unique to each country and might be the result of multiple trade-offs. |
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The solution consists in finding the trade-offs that are most effective in approaching this expectation. |
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Coercion and trade-offs are replaced with creative alternatives, and compromise with synthesis. |
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We need to understand well the trade-offs and liabilities that are happening. |
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Politicians make compromises and trade-offs to secure what is in their view the best for their constituents. |
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Whether it be less partying, less shopping or cheaper groceries, trade-offs are needed to survive as a couple. |
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In both cases, the ultimate goal is to understand how suites of traits and trade-offs between competing functions respond to natural selection. |
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This also would strengthen relations between providers and their customers, facilitating trade-offs between quality of services and costs. |
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What kinds of unusual economic trade-offs will future suborbital and orbital spacecraft create? |
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Because of the effectiveness of sprinkler systems, codes often allow trade-offs or trade-ups on other elements of the fire protection system. |
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There are trade-offs between equality and economic growth, and each society must strike its own balance. |
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As a result, governments accept harsh trade-offs as inevitable and acceptable costs of doing business. |
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It would distract attention from the unfinished development business and increase the risk that developing countries will end up accepting disadvantageous trade-offs. |
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The ghastly sight of mutilated corpses disinterred from mass graves is psychologically incompatible with calculations about scarce resources, opportunity costs and trade-offs. |
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The combined choice models were utilized to present commuters' trade-offs among commute time, monetary cost and schedule delay. |
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In terms of mobilization and allocation of resources, reviewal of trade-offs is specific to each country. |
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Such trade-offs did not materialize on issues of vital interest to countries, especially when they were not mature for harvesting. |
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There is a frequent misperception that trade-offs between universal coverage and timely access to specialised services are inevitable. |
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There is no question that, in a general way, these trade-offs are recognized and rationalized. |
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Nevertheless, the need to retrench has engaged us in some hard analysis in the past months, and we have made some difficult trade-offs. |
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It says neither was achievable without stringent trade-offs to welfare and growth. |
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In some cases, the trade-offs between consumption and survival can exacerbate gender bias in nutrition. |
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The choice of the filtering technique is the result of various trade-offs which are not finalized at this stage. |
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This process involves identifying and understanding some of the trade-offs this decision will imply. |
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Biomolecular force fields are intentionally parametrized as multipurpose, with delicate trade-offs in parametrization. |
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He barely acknowledges any trade-offs or costs to his redistributionist agenda. |
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In contrast, compensatory trade-offs that might favour productivity in the gazetted areas will not be allowed. |
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The fundamental challenge for the provision of these services is to maintain their quality and scope in the context of increasing pressure on public finances, which sometimes requires difficult trade-offs to be made. |
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We recognise that different priorities exist and that it will be necessary to explore the trade-offs and synergies between these different values. |
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Having an arrangement with the IMF often means limiting fiscal deficits and government borrowing, which also involves trade-offs in terms of long-term investment and planning. |
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Each debate confronts different points of view on a given topic to point out options and trade-offs and highlight the political stakes present in each necessary compromise. |
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Along with the profound political differences, these beliefs provide disincentives to negotiate and make the serious trade-offs required to end the civil war. |
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Essentially he is arguing that there are functional trade-offs in developmental biology. |
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It shows an inability to recognise that the real world consists of trade-offs of competing priorities rather than painless solutions derived from one all-embracing value. |
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There are a lot of trade-offs in determining the ride and handling. |
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Consider trade-offs between rapid supply responses and quality control. |
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Each group identified trades that achieved improved balance across its programs and then prioritized trade-ups and trade-offs for the group as a whole. |
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As such, he calls for liberals to be magnanimous, recognize trade-offs, and say that this trade-off was worth it. |
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The survey revealed some interesting trade-offs for more than 80 percent of those that admitted to being regular snoozers. |
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When I left the government, I found that the mental agility that comes from making trade-offs as an executive in the federal public service was a huge asset in the private sector. |
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For years, companies have debated the trade-offs between all-in-one communications solutions and best-of-breed or point solutions. |
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It seems incontestable that there might have to be individual trade-offs between particular national security practices and measures to protect human rights. |
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They could thrash out the trade-offs between them. |
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What trade-offs would they be willing to make to gain resolution of their most important issues? |
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Furthermore, the differences in spine loads appear to be a result of kinematic trade-offs and muscle coactivity differences in combination with unequal body masses between genders. |
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Although philosophically attractive and desirable, this goal may not be pragmatically attainable due to the difficulty of reconciling all the trade-offs associated with the positive and negative aspects of fire. |
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Water is often a major constraint and definer of trade-offs between different human activities, as well as a means through which to find joint solutions to some of the toughest global challenges. |
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They often have the character of detailed legal code, embodying trade-offs between regulatory autonomy and trade liberalization explicitly negotiated ex ante. |
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Blate, Geoffrey Michael 2005 Assessing trade-offs in multiple-objective forest management. |
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Success in fighting counterfeits requires targeted actions involving all stakeholders on both the supply and the demand sides of the market as well as a clear-sighted evaluation of respective costs, benefits and trade-offs. |
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Arne Tostensen noted that, while recognizing the coherence of the human rights regime, it should not be overlooked that in real life situations difficult trade-offs have to be made. |
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That could help ensure that discussions in that context gave attention to essentials that underpinned long-term development and any trade-offs between different economic and social goals and the policies to achieve them. |
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The dynamics of the Council had produced a complex and dynamic system of trade-offs within which the E-10 could exercise influence in creative and meaningful ways. |
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A delightful skewed, story of the conflicts, trade-offs, and joys of sharing one's life one day at a time. |
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Technology organizations are therefore facing a myriad of organizational trade-offs that are impacting their organizational structures and approaches being used. |
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Trade-offs exist when two physiological demands are limited by the same resource. |
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Trade-offs in fitness on different host plants has been a central hypothesis in explaining the evolutionary specialization of herbivores. |
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Trade-offs in activity time and physiological performance for thermoregulating desert lizards, Sceloporus merriami. |
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