Sentence examples for provision to accommodate from inspiring English sources

Exact(3)

Lambie-Mumford's study was based on 25 in-depth interviews with a range of food bank staff and volunteers in 2012 and 2013 and found many food banks were adapting to demand by scaling up food collection and storage provision "to accommodate the future trajectory of need".

The installation sector being not willing to invest in specialising in decentralised CHP technology and therefore lacking service provision to accommodate potential users of the technology is also problematic.

Last July, Abe and his cabinet re-interpreted the provision to accommodate the right of "collective self-defense," allowing it to aid allies who are under attack if the situation threatens Japan's welfare while leaving the stated conditions under which this would be put into effect vague and confusing.

Similar(56)

There are currently 15,000 migrants here, but there are provisions to accommodate as many as 30,000, organizers say.

Not only did officials offer to sell the land for about $14.5 million, a fraction of what it would be worth if sold commercially, but they also made several provisions to accommodate the Christianites' way of life.

The strut-mounted helium tank has provisions to accommodate two separate experiments, one at each end of the tank.

Lieberman said he was already thinking about reworking his bill's R&D provisions to accommodate SARPA--a Security Advanced Research Projects Agency modeled after the Pentagon's agile Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency.

The second experiment shows how AppaaS takes advantage of the cloud computing elastic resource provisioning to accommodate increasing number of users while satisfying certain quality of service (QoS) constraints.

Taxes can indeed be a burden, but Noem's story shows that contrary to Republican talking points about how the "death tax" hurts farmers and small business owners, the tax actually comes with special provisions designed to accommodate them.

Some benefits consultants say companies may be increasingly willing to test the boundaries of the law because there has been little enforcement, even though there is a provision requiring employers to accommodate workers with medical conditions limiting their ability to meet certain standards.

This provision was intended to accommodate the likelihood that many workers might lose jobs and offered an incentive for quick re-employment.

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