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Discover LudwigThe phrase "amounts of future" is not correct and does not convey a clear meaning in written English.
It is unclear what is intended by this phrase, as "amounts" typically refers to quantities of something tangible, while "future" is an abstract concept.
Example: "We need to consider the amounts of future investments required for the project."
Alternatives: "quantities of future" or "levels of future".
Exact(2)
There will be enormous amounts of money spent and enormous amounts of future fortune to be made by the winners.
I felt as though the agencies were robbing them of huge amounts of future earnings.
Similar(57)
Mr. Caldwell confirmed that large amounts of futures contracts were sold for his portfolios on the day of the flash crash, but he said that similar trades had been made on several other occasions without incident.
We are committed to a certain amount of future climate change even if we curtail our emissions quickly.
But with the departure of blue-chip clients like Delta Air Lines and Merck, the amount of future cash available for such payments has declined.
Where travel agents selling package tours compete with the internet, the luxury, bespoke market has a certain amount of future proofing.
Households, in deciding how to divide their income between consumption and saving, will consider the amount of future consumption that can be gained by abstaining from consumption now (i.e., by saving).
Put another way, the amount of future spending cuts or tax increases necessary to stabilize government finances will always have to be larger when spending increases or tax cuts are deficit-financed.
The bank, which did not name the individuals implicated in the lawsuits, said it could not estimate the amount of future potential fines or when any announcement connected to the Libor investigations would be made.
Valuing intellectual property an exercise based on forecasting the timing and amount of future cashflows is more art than science.So far, says Mr Eisbruck, these bonds have generally matched investors' hopes.
Claire Jakobsson, at EEF, the manufacturers' organisation, said CCS could save the UK £32bn a year by 2050 and abandoning the competition was a false economy: "In choosing to save a relatively small sum of taxpayer money in 2015, the government is unnecessarily committing vast amount of future energy consumers' money".
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com