Sentence examples for terms to accommodate from inspiring English sources

Exact(9)

Willing to be flexible with payment terms to accommodate the cash flow needs of young, rapidly growing suppliers?

In addition he often coined Hebrew terms to accommodate the ideas of the authors he was translating.

"Once you make a deal and arrive at a budget," the agent said, "you have to start reducing your terms to accommodate their budget.

But occasionally Council offices have two shortened terms, to accommodate redistricting after each new census and to reconcile their election cycle with those of other city offices.

As the law stands, some Council members are limited to six years, rather than eight like most elected officials, because the Council's terms periodically run in sets of two shorter terms to accommodate redistricting in the wake of the census.

Mr. Hargrove said that the Windsor factory would only become a potential strike issue if G.M. did not agree to pension changes and other terms to accommodate the employees affected by the closing.

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Similar(51)

But they also address a disturbing aspect of addiction – how it changes the brain's physiology long-term to accommodate neural pathways for craving and compulsive drug-seeking.

At the Supreme Court session on Monday, scheduled four weeks before the formal opening of the court's new term to accommodate Congress's request to accelerate judicial review of the new law, these arguments will be packaged not as policy but as propositions of constitutional law.

Models developed based on the Hertz contact theory and augmented with a damping term to accommodate the dissipation of energy during the impact process, which typically is a function of the coefficient of restitution between the contacting solids, are considered in this study.

Bryce noted that "OpenStack" is a broad enough term to accommodate new projects — and the Linux Foundation is still the Linux Foundation, too, after all, even though Linux is just one of the many projects it now hosts.

The term representing drug‐induced decay can be constant or exponential, driven by drug exposure, and it can incorporate a resistance term or a delay term to accommodate a wide range of tumor response shapes (see refs. 8, 9, 19, 20, 21, 22, 23, 24 for reviews).

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