Sentence examples for has been unreasonably from inspiring English sources

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Exact(3)

A long-running assumption among many in business has been that the top domestic corporate tax rate of 35% has been unreasonably high compared to the rest of the world and that doesn't include state taxes.

Supporters of fifth-grade teacher Rafe Esquith say the investigation has been unreasonably secretive and more of a fishing expedition than a focused probe.

The best I can say of Wolcott's evaluation, from just the material that he provides, is that he has been unreasonably picky.

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"In my judgment, the making of that offer, and the failure to accept it by Mr Mitchell, is ultimately determinative of the issue of whether or not it was reasonable to incur the costs of two legal teams at the trial of the preliminary issue, subject of course to the costs judge determining whether there was unreasonable duplication or that costs have been unreasonably increased".

The Alaska Supreme Court recently ruled that it had been unreasonably secretive about executive compensation.

Many of the storage-unit renters that Jon Mooallem spoke of had a common characteristic: They are, or have been, unreasonably optimistic about their economic circumstances.

For one thing, the expectations for his presidency have been unreasonably high from the moment he took office, meaning that the mundane realities of governance could only disappoint an anxious country.

WASHINGTON, May 1, (UPI) —A Government investigator said today there have been "unreasonably high costs" in training hard‐core unemployed for jobs and some employers have claimed Government money for services not per formed.

Valencia won the semi-final convincingly enough and Leeds missed out on Champions League qualification by a point, still seething that a Wes Brown own goal in a 1-1 drawithth Manchester United had been unreasonably disallowed.

In September 1997, Mr. Lasdon sued the city on Mr. Betancourt's behalf, alleging that the regulation was too broad and vague to be constitutionally valid, that the homeless people were arrested without probable cause and in violation of their "right to travel," and that they had been unreasonably strip-searched.

2007: Heather Ilott, her daughter, challenges the will under the Inheritance (Provision for Family and Dependants) Act and is awarded £50,000 on the basis she had been "unreasonably" excluded by her mother.

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