Sentence examples for its knowhow from inspiring English sources

Exact(3)

Boxing Day was the biggest in Dixons' UK history with more than £100,000 flowing through its tills every minute, said James, who also declared that staff on its Knowhow division had:  performed minor miracles in delivering and installing all these new purchases through some, to say the least, very wild weather.

In contrast, Ferrero executives have plenty to say about both products and the company, with its 30,000-strong workforce at 14 locations, its €8bn ($10bn) revenue, 72% share of the chocolate-spreads market, 5 million friends on Facebook, 40m Google references, its hazelnut plantations in both hemispheres securing it a round-the-year supply of fresh ingredients and, of course, its knowhow.

At present prices the market is putting very little on the company's patents, its knowhow, its powerful proprietary positions.

Similar(57)

It therefore reflects on the capabilities of its workers (staff), its technological knowhow, business processes and so on, and answers the question of whether it can achieve its goals with what it already has on ground or look out for ways to complement (Sev, 2009; Isaksson and Lantz, 2015).

If reports about the success of this latest launch are correct, the regime can reasonably claim to have significantly improved its technological knowhow.

Microsoft, under former CEO Steve Ballmer, attempted to leverage its software knowhow to take on increasingly powerful tech rivals, but the company has beat a quick retreat under new CEO Satya Nadella, with the venture taking on water. .

Saddam's regime was "not judged likely" to share its weapons or knowhow with terrorist groups.

As human rights groups condemned murders carried out by Tunisian police, the French foreign minister, Michèle Alliot-Marie, said France would lend its own police "knowhow" to help Ben Ali's forces maintain order.

According to the senators on the Permanent Subcommitte on Investigations, Apple transferred offshore into low-tax countries the economic rights to its intellectual property - its valuable and usually patentable knowhow - with the result that it avoided around $10bn £6.5bnn) of US tax every year (what the senators characterise as $44bn, or £29bn, of US tax avoidance over the past four years).

In the Guardian, Richard Norton Taylor, pointed out that Corbyn's idea "is being described as the 'Japanese option', sometimes called a bomb in the basement'", meaning "Britain would keep the knowhow but its nuclear warheads would not be operational".

Another immediate concern is how much of its nuclear and rocket knowhow North Korea might yet share with Iran.

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