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So bosses should try hard to accommodate their employees' family responsibilities, but only in ways that do not harm the bottom line.
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Architects should try harder to accommodate popular taste, it was believed.
It seems pretty clear that Apple could try harder to accommodate Flash, but they're not going to, and yes, it's a sound business decision.
At the 2011 World Cup, Powell stressed that the FA had tried hard to accommodate Chapman's requirements: "Katie was away with us in 2009 when we paid for her family to come along but at at (sic) the end of the day there is not a bottomless pit of money in the women's game".
Don't try hard to be scene.
David Robertson, guest conductor of the Philadelphia Orchestra, was trying hard to be accommodating, the way most visitors would in someone else's home.
"But we did try very hard to accommodate the family's needs".
"I don't understand why we're trying so hard to accommodate something people in Okinawa tried so hard to resist," said Kim Jong-hwan, 55, a tangerine farmer, referring to the Japanese islanders' struggle against the American military base there.
But Mr. Sen and others may be trying too hard to accommodate these studies.
Mr. Domingo conducted ably, though he sometimes tried so hard to accommodate the singers that the orchestra's execution faltered.
"The administration is trying very hard to accommodate the community's need for a waterfront park," said Annette M. Barbaccia, director of the Mayor's Office of Environmental Coordination and an author of a report titled "A Diamond in the Rust," outlining a proposed $7 million park near Tiffany Pier.
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Since I tried Ludwig back in 2017, I have been constantly using it in both editing and translation. Ever since, I suggest it to my translators at ProSciEditing.

Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com