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The phrase "at limited" is not a grammatically correct part of a sentence.
It lacks a main verb and does not make sense on its own. It may be used in a sentence as part of a larger phrase, such as "at a limited pace" or "at limited capacity." For example, "Due to budget cuts, the company is operating at a limited capacity."
Exact(59)
'No Manifesto' is at limited UK cinemas.
At Limited, same-store sales dropped 4percentt.
Rooms start at limited introductory rates from 309 euros, about $393 at $1.30 to the euro.
Those cases, the government lawyers figured, could be dispatched at limited cost.
September same-store sales fell 10percentt at Limited and 13percentt at Intimate Brands, the companies said.
He argued that Boko Haram was born of frustration at limited opportunities that were ultimately blamed on government corruption.
A number of families, squeezed together into a single flat, grab at limited rations, kilowatts, and working plumbing.
But a software hack meant the cars could detect when they were being inspected so they would run at limited capacity.
But administration officials say the move will greatly improve cargo security at limited cost to the government and the shipping industry.
Company executives at Limited, a major specialty chain, raised their own projections for sales growth last week, to the mid-single digits from the low single digits.
Similar(1)
The range at limited-service places is not nearly as wide.
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