Sentence examples for offices to compete from inspiring English sources

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Mitt Romney, eager to capture a state President Obama carried four years ago, is planning another visit on Tuesday as he bulks up his 11 field offices to compete with Mr. Obama's 17.

Mr. Bartlett and his business partner, Marshall Fisher, were groundbreakers in the residential real estate industry -- among the first to enable hundreds, and later thousands, of brokers operating from their own offices to compete with the regional and national chains that began emerging in the late 1960s.

Most of the enormous value captured by landowners exists because it is well-nigh impossible to build new offices to compete those profits away.In this section Space and the city Great expectations Three cheers for democracy Punch and duty Not so special ReprintsThe costs of this misfiring property market are huge, mainly because of their effects on individuals.

The top 100 finalists flew to the company's New York offices to compete for $55,000 in prizes as well as a chance to work at Google.

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The law allows the mayor and all other elected city officials who are serving their second four-year term in office to compete for a third term.

Soon, more than fifty women were lined up outside Meridian's office to compete for positions that would pay as much as thirty-eight hundred dollars a month — more than ten times Fiji's annual per-capita income.

Back-Office Space Competition For New Jersey Beyond manufacturing, the administration has been focused on creating an inventory of less expensive back-office space, to compete with 12 million square feet of office space built along the waterfront in New Jersey.

The idea is to demolish outdated buildings and erect modern office buildings to compete with London or Singapore.

"We're going to try to get office buildings to compete against one another," Mr. Johnston said, to see who can reduce energy levels the most.

But things have not gone according to plan in neighborhoods like Downtown Brooklyn, which was rezoned to foster development of new office towers to compete with New Jersey.

PEG BREEN President, New York Landmarks Conservancy New York, Sept. 2, 2013 To the Editor: Kenneth T. Jackson is right that New York City's future requires new skyscrapers: office buildings to compete with other global cities, residential towers to increase supply dramatically.

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