Goods
in sentence
3286 examples of Goods in a sentence
We need more front line health workers, teachers, farmer trainers, sales agents for life-improving
goods.
We just need to deliver proven
goods
and services to everybody.
Palm oil is used to manufacture a wide range of consumer and industrial
goods.
In addition, we will need many more resources and raw materials to make consumer
goods
and industrial
goods.
If we implement this type of approach and use these carbon recyclers, then we wouldn't have to remove any more rainforests to make the food and the
goods
that we consume.
Furthermore, since oil is used to manufacture multiple other goods, industrial products and consumer products, you can imagine being able to make detergents, soaps, lotions, etc., using these types of crops.
Syria was largely a place of tolerance, historically accustomed to variety, accommodating a wide range of beliefs, origins, customs, goods, food.
I heard you but did not listen, all these years when you said that this amazing new world wasn't amazing for you, for many of you, across the industrialized world; that the open, liquid world I relished, of people and
goods
and technologies flowing freely, going where they pleased, globally, was not, for you, an emancipation.
And it's showing you the route of what was the world's largest ship just a year ago, a ship which was taking so many containers of
goods
that when they were unloaded, if the lorries had all gone in convoy, they would have been 100 kilometers long.
Apple is a seller of luxury
goods.
And we would expect a manufacturer of luxury
goods
to have products that include more features.
This is true not just for electronics like smartphones, but for many kinds of
goods
and data, things like medicine, luxury goods, any kind of data or product that we don't want tampered with.
Because once you feel that you can't stand in the central space and speak on behalf of the world, you will feel that you can offer your
goods
up to a small, select group.
My first mall job that I had as a teenager was at a sporting
goods
store called Herman's World of Sports.
Only by educating people to a true solidarity will we be able to overcome the "culture of waste," which doesn't concern only food and
goods
but, first and foremost, the people who are cast aside by our techno-economic systems which, without even realizing it, are now putting products at their core, instead of people.
Think about the purpose of currency, which is to be exchanged for
goods
and services.
If the total amount of currency in circulation increases faster than the total value of
goods
and services in the economy, then each individual piece will be able to buy a smaller portion of those things than before.
On the other hand, if the money supply remains the same, while more
goods
and services are produced, each dollar's value would increase in a process known as deflation.
So, some of you might know that in 32 states across America, we actually charge a luxury
goods
tax on women's products like feminine care products, so tampons and pads are taxed like luxury
goods
items.
That was a real story told to me by Christopher, a very energetic human resources manager at a big consumer
goods
company.
Others continue to charge fines, but they want to offer alternatives to their library patrons, and so they do things like food for fines, where you bring in canned goods, or read away your fines, where you can read off your fines.
We need those face-to-face interactions where we learn the choreography of altruism and where we create those spiritual
goods
like friendship and trust and loyalty and love that redeem our solitude.
It allows musicians and vloggers to get paid in digital
goods
from fans.
They also think trade agreements sometimes are unfair, like NAFTA and the Trans-Pacific Partnership, because these trade agreements allow companies to reimport those cheaply produced
goods
back into the US and other countries from where the jobs were taken.
So the real question is, does it make sense for us to drive up prices to the point where many of us can't afford the basic
goods
we use every day for the purpose of saving a job that might be eliminated in a couple of years anyway?
In Lagos, where public
goods
are rarely publicly available, slum dwellers are often at the forefront of innovating solutions.
Well, in the past, people moved to the cities not because they loved the city itself but for the things you could have in a city, more job opportunities, easier access to services and
goods
and a rich social life.
So what was the next reason why people move to cities? Access to services and
goods.
Supplying
goods
to a shopping mall is easy.
It could dramatically reduce demand for food, transportation, electricity, buildings,
goods
and all the rest, thereby reducing emissions.
Back
Next
Related words
Services
Public
Which
Their
Trade
Global
Would
Countries
Other
People
Capital
Market
Prices
World
Demand
Markets
Exports
Economy
Economic
Could