Thousands of applications do not meet Department of Defense security guidelines, and bringing them up to snuff would cost a fortune.
Thousands of applications do not meet the security guidelines for the Department of Defense, and bringing them up to snuff would cost a fortune.
On top of that, they have a strong incentive to shop around because MBAs cost a fortune.
These cost a small fortune to create, are a veritable annuity to attorneys and accountants in administration fees, and tend to keep the bequeathed funds from the charitable beneficiaries.
IR You repeat the standard claim that Babbage's ill-fated attempt to build a computer cost a fortune and was eventually abandoned.
She is faced with the terrible choice of knowing that if she carries her pregnancy to term, it will cost her a fortune in money, time, and effort to care for her new child.
These services would cost a fortune to reproduce mechanically should we destroy them.
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Homegrown players usually earn less the hometown discount also applies in soccer and they don't cost a fortune to buy in the first place.
Adequately protecting convoys add a fortune to the cost of fuel.
Modern computerisation projects, in contrast, tend to have far more in common with Babbage's ill-fated attempt to build a mechanical computer, which cost a fortune and was eventually abandoned.
The few CDs I do find have been imported to the U.S., and cost a small fortune because of it.
He retired a wealthy man in 1940, but 10 years later poor investments had cost him his fortune, forcing him to make a comeback.
Instead, Magic leadership spent millions on players that added little or nothing t0 the team but whose contracts will cost the program a fortune for years to come.
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"It cost us a fortune and a tremendous amount of time to fight this, " says Suzette Josif.
Between 1998 and 2000, a senseless war with neighbouring Eritrea cost a fortune and prised many of the strongest hands off hoes and on to rifles. (In Eritrea, the aftermath has been even bleaker: 2.3m people now need food aid, out of a population of only 3m.) Ethiopian peasants are also burdened with taxes on the land they lease from the state, and levies for clinics, schools and roads.
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Splitting Manhattan geographically would alienate half the borough and cost Nynex a fortune: when British Telecom split London's codes in 1990 it had to distribute 75m explanatory leaflets.
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