Prices
in sentence
6195 examples of Prices in a sentence
Commodity
prices
are like this.
It takes into account everything from the pitcher match-ups, to the weather, to the team records, in setting
prices
for the consumer.
When they catch the fish they call all the market towns along the coast to find out where they get the best possible
prices.
And there is an emerging case that maybe that was what happened last July when the oil
prices
were so high.
And whatever the short-run price for taking action on climate change or on security, or taking action to provide opportunities for people for education, these are
prices
that are worth paying so that you build a stronger global society where people feel able to feel comfortable with each other and are able to communicate with each other in such a way that you can actually build stronger links between different countries.
There was a time when we failed to negotiate the [intra-ocular lens]
prices
to be at affordable levels, so we set up a manufacturing unit.
If, for example, house
prices
are routinely described as climbing and climbing, higher and higher, people might naturally assume that that rise is unstoppable.
The
prices
from the contractors were between five to 700,000 dollars.
If you look at a long-term chart,
prices
are at historical lows and yet global demand for forced labor is still real strong.
That's slightly problematic for me because I work in HIV, and although I'm sure you all know that HIV is about poverty and gender inequality, and if you were at TED '07 it's about coffee
prices
... Actually, HIV's about sex and drugs, and if there are two things that make human beings a little bit irrational, they are erections and addiction.
We now have the money, given these low prices, to distribute AIDS drugs all over the world to people we cannot presently reach.
Today these low
prices
are available in the 25 countries where we work, and in a total of 62 countries, and about 550,000 people are getting the benefits of them.
They are notorious for knocking off high-end designs and selling them at very low
prices.
I mean, how affordable is it to continue to live in suburbia with rising gas
prices?
Well actually I started, oddly enough, studying stock market
prices.
Now discontinuities are a nuisance, so in many studies of prices, one puts them aside.
In spite of falling oil prices, he brought this country up here.
There are some web pages like this, you know, but they take some nourishment down from the databases, but people put
prices
on them, stupid passwords and boring statistics.
Everybody else raised their
prices
to the gatherers of Brazil nuts because we would buy it otherwise.
They set the prices, and I don't even know.
But actually, I mean, this feeling of helplessness comes in because most Americans actually feel that oil
prices
are the result of a conspiracy, not of the vicissitudes of the world oil market.
So, you might be wondering why it is that, every time we have high oil
prices
or an oil spill, we call these CEOs down to Washington, and we sort of pepper them with questions in public and we try to shame them.
The only thing that really reduces the amount of oil that we consume is much higher
prices.
Gasoline costs are a tremendous drain on the American economy, but they're also a drain on individual families and it's kind of terrifying to think about what happens when
prices
get higher.
CA: And those
prices
are coming down.
AI: And those
prices
are coming down very quickly.
Saddled in the performing arts as we are, by antiquated union agreements that inhibit and often prohibit mechanical reproduction and streaming, locked into large facilities that were designed to ossify the ideal relationship between artist and audience most appropriate to the 19th century and locked into a business model dependent on high ticket revenues, where we charge exorbitant
prices.
The surviving men are either high
prices
gigolos in back alley clubs, or crazed lunatics in run down football stadiums plotting to overthrow the 'Lesbian Conspiracy'.
Lisa Grant (Adrienne Barbeau) is a real estate agent who finds herself in jeopardy of getting killed by a deranged maniac who kills people in her profession who he feels make house
prices
too high.
As a CA resident, I'd like to see the jackholes who were shutting down the electricity plants to raise the
prices
get some jail time too.
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