Sentence examples for benefit terms from inspiring English sources

Exact(4)

Your Sept. 19 news article about Hartford's rising costs associated with its coverage of laser eye surgery as an employee benefit terms the procedure as cosmetic and not usually medically necessary.

However, the model does not describe the data quantitatively for lower IPTG concentrations up to 5 μM (Additional file 1): this regime shows only a marginal rise in expression levels, and hence only a marginal increase of cost and benefit terms is predicted by the model, which contrasts with the measured cost and benefit that show significant increases.

The first of the benefit terms, B 1-m)(F st - F 3 R ), is frequency-independent (does not contain p) and measures the B 1-micial eFfect aristng from events where the infected male and female are related, i.e. are both infected due to recent coalescence.

Although not necessarily re-defining the tasks required of home users, there was some uncertainty about 'the point' - in health benefit terms - of collecting the kind of information that was demanded by these telecare systems: "It is so basic, it's stuff that actually is already known to your practice, they know if you smoke, they know what you do, you know it is fairly pointless.

Similar(56)

The second benefit term, pB 1- g(N, m)), measures the benefit of CI that is independent of recent coalescence.

As a single person without dependents, a $25,000 Level Benefit Term Life policy is all you need.

The fourth is that the retailers expect their investments in energy efficiency to achieve a reasonable return on investment, with the vast majority of the actions that have been taken to reduce energy consumption being justified in cost-benefit terms.

His book addresses the argument in cost-benefit terms, and concludes that spending 1-2% of global output to avoid a significant temperature rise is a bargain worth taking a similar conclusion to that in his original 2006 study.

Whether governments can really do very much to answer those complaints is an open question – it's one of the things the No 10 "nudge unit" spends its time trying to answer – but they would be crazy, failing in their duty, not to try, even in conventional cost-benefit terms.

But even though expressions of loyalty are not maximizing (in cost-benefit terms), the decision to commit oneself loyally may be rational, for one need not (indeed, ought not to) enter into associations blindly, or even when they are unavoidable (as with familial or national ones)—accept their demands unthinkingly.

So in cost-benefit terms, every gourde spent on this initiative would generate benefits worth just one gourde.

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