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Discover LudwigThe phrase "access spend" is correct and usable in written English.
It can be used in contexts related to budgeting, finance, or resource allocation, particularly when discussing expenditures that are necessary for accessing services or resources.
Example: "To optimize our budget, we need to analyze our access spend on various software subscriptions."
Alternatives: "access expenses" or "access costs".
Exact(4)
— Internet access spend (both mobile and fixed) will go up to $493 billion in 2016 from $317 billion in 2011.
Mobile internet access continues to take wallet share: it accounted for 40percentt of all Internet access spend, and will go up to 46percentt by 2016.
"Prepaid cards provide a broad array of customers... with revolutionary ways to access, spend, and manage their money," they wrote.
Some authors argued that women in the lowest SES have the highest level of unmet needs and are least likely to access, spend on and use modern contraceptives [ 24].
Similar(56)
Cows with restricted temporal access spent less time feeding (190.9 vs. 207.9 ± 6.1 min).
Americans with Internet access spent less than 30 minutes a month surfing the web.
Mice with restricted female access spent significantly more time with their noses in the food bin four hours after female access (ZT 10-14) then the control mice on days 14 and 21 (Mann-Whitney Test, p<0.01).
There was no difference between the time the mice with restricted female access spent with their noses in the food bin during the four hours after (ZT 10-14) femaccesscess and the amount of time the control mice spent with their noses in the food bin during the same time period (Figure 3B).
In experiment 1, mice with restricted female access spent a similar amount of time as control mice with their noses in the food bin from ZT 5-9 except at day 28, where female-access males had a significant increase in food bin entry (Mann-Whitney Test, p<0.01) (Figure 3A).
In Experiment 2, there was no statistically significant difference in the time mice with restricted female access spent with their noses in the food bin relative to control mice during the four hours prior to female access (ZT 5-9) (Mann-Whitney Test, p<0.01) (Figure 3H).
In terms of total food bin entry time, there were no differences in eating behavior except at one time point, day 7, where mice with restricted female access spent significantly less time in the food bin than controls (Mann-Whitney Test, p<0.01) (Figure 3J).
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