That reduces the cancellation rates even if prices fall or buyers get cold feet.
But Greece's official creditors have their own reasons to get cold feet about another rescue package.
It can get cold standing around parking lots at 4AM at the end of November.
You may have heard it can get cold in Minnesota in January, or for that matter in April.
But Gerald has an intricate system to ensure he doesn't get cold feet.
The only challenge is the weather, which can get cold in some places.
Even at my age, I don't get cold that easy, but I keep a supply, like sweaters and sweatsuits and stuff, around home.
He prefers individual cups so each guest can choose his own tea, as opposed to making a big pot of it, which can get cold.
If the Russians refuse to accept the phraseology NATO offers them before July 8, when the alliance is to gather in Madrid to issue invitations, some Europeans could get cold feet.
This is no time to get cold feet.
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"The governments get cold feet for one reason, Desertec needs too much support in tax money - all the public budgets are over borrowed - and tax money is not easily available, " Mr Fell said.
"Your muscles get cold and are instantly paralyzed by the hyperventilation, and you can become very weak, " says Dr. Thomas Traill, a cardiologist and professor of medicine at Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine.
You can either pull it up high and cover your upper half, in which case your feet will get cold, or you can leave it low, have toasty feet, but find yourself freezing further up.
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We are wasting millions, contributing more to global warming than industry, letting pensioners get cold despite free central heating systems they can't afford to switch on, and letting kids get asthma in damp cold bedrooms and overheated classrooms.
"An increase in land plant abundance may have occurred at the time just before the period known as the Cambrian Explosion, when the next Snowball Earth period failed to occur because temperatures did not get cold enough, " he added.
Still, fearing that Rempel's editors might get cold feet, Jackson had arranged for an ideologically sympathetic "backup" -- in this case the conservative American Spectator's resident "hit man" David Brock -- to be given the same stories on an embargoed basis.
For instance, when I go into hospital for surgery or if I get a cold or chest infection.
Even so, it seems acquisitive companies are less likely to get the cold shoulder when their deals are announced.
There was nothing unusual about a snowstorm in the Northeast this late in the season, when it can still get plenty cold.
Based on our quick demonstration, your face would get pretty cold after a few hours of running around maps in Quake 4.
Unwelcome as it was, there's nothing unusual about a snowstorm in the Northeast this late in the season, when it can still get plenty cold enough.
People who have experienced the loss of a loved one or are coming off a break-up are more likely to get a cold, flu and pneumonia.
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But something happens when you get a cold, or worse, and are plunged into the black hole of co-payments, insurance claims, preset doctor lists, HMOs, PPOs--and utter dysfunction.
Mraz shared tales of his avocado farm, as well as what it's like to get the cold shoulder from Simon Cowell, when he sat down with CNN recently.
Nardini says they both slept better and had more energy, and she didn't get a cold or the flu all month as she usually does in the winter.
And the fact that the lack of effort involved means you have to wrap up warm - or get very cold - serves as a reminder as to how much less exercise riding an electric bike involves.
Many of the 2, 500 runners who completed the race between Dallas and Fort Worth at the annual Texas Stampede for Children's Medical Center Dallas last November were surprised to get a cold beer at the finish line.
"People who slept less than seven hours were about three times more likely to get a cold than people who slept eight hours or more a night, " said Sheldon Cohen, psychology professor at Carnegie Mellon University, in a podcast.
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