Sentence examples similar to accommodate benefits from inspiring English sources

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What is new are the cosmetic changes -- paint and carpeting -- that 30 interior designers made to accommodate this benefit, which also includes appraisals and design consultations.

This utopian planning concept was wrong minded in the 1960's, and it would be compounded 40 years later if the opportunity was missed to disperse our rich wealth of performance arts to areas in greater need and more able to accommodate and benefit from their presence.

A conceptual cyber physical architecture, which can accommodate and benefit from the proposed methodology, is further presented.

The OCT scan step size (12 µm) was chosen to be smaller than the PAT step size (typically >100 µm) to accommodate the benefit of the higher sampling rate of the OCT system.

A scale of 0 10 was chosen as it was hoped this would allow enough scope for scorers to discriminate between programmes without spurious precision, and 5 chosen to represent 'current performance' to accommodate programmes benefiting some criteria, but at the expense of performance elsewhere (for example, improvement in access and equity at the expense of some effectiveness).

This paper develops a model of an optimal regulatory program for greenhouse gases (GHGs) emissions that accommodates the benefits due to reductions of co-pollutants including: sulfur dioxide (SO2), nitrogen oxides (NOx), volatile organic compounds (VOC), and fine particulate matter (PM2.5).

Since current distribution grids are not designed to accommodate these loads, potential benefits of such policies might be compromised.

The image is reconstructed on a logarithmic scale to accommodate the dynamic range benefits of AIM in a single output channel.

"Many believe that the very nature of the institutions where science gets done in the United States and around the world must change--not only to accommodate women but to benefit all science and engineering workers and ensure that their discoveries benefit the planet's population in an optimal and equitable way" (Thom, 2001, p. 6).

"It's to an employer's benefit to accommodate employees' religious needs," said the Rev. Diana Dale, the executive director of the National Institute of Business and Industrial Chaplains, in Houston.

It has drastically reduced the fiscal resources that most countries have to accommodate rising old-age benefit costs, and at the same time it has left many elderly people more vulnerable.

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