1.
· Not letting little things bother to an extent that is unrelated to its seriousness
2.
The cover will be to the extent of the sum assured of the policy
3.
In case of medical insurance, the individual is covered only to the extent of the actual expenses incurred on medicine/hospitalisation (up to a maximum limit of the sum assured)
4.
Remember almost all of us are emotionally immature to some extent
5.
· Be prepared for the unexpected to the extent possible
6.
Questioning and even rebelling to an extent is healthy and should not be opposed without solid reasons
7.
In counseling the close relatives and friends; one is usually spontaneous in giving as well as accepting the advice and to some extent can be insisted upon
8.
"Let me show you the extent of your foolishness
9.
Tiny Robot Archimedes, however, had built his ship efficiently enough so that it would traverse the extent of his vision of the ocean: 2
10.
The creation process as enunciated in our religious scriptures matches to a great extent with the evolving scientific hypothesis of Big Bang and expanding and contracting universe
11.
Only His Spirit can help us understand the full extent of all this
12.
‘To some extent that is how it is, Liz
13.
’ I said, my voice cracking as my emotions catch up now that the pressure is off to a large extent
14.
The cleaning has been my salvation to some extent
15.
Using just as much theatrics, Moamar read the long list of charges, the council shouted 'witness' on cue in unison if not quite on key, and then Moamar shouted 'GUILTY' and that was about the extent of it
16.
To that extent it wouldn’t matter if this nation were called Babylon, Medo-Persia, Greece, Rome, or the kingdom of the beast
17.
To an extent, the question does arise as to how Satan is able to have his own kingdom on this earth
18.
To another extent, it seems obvious
19.
He slowly stroked a hand up her side and then to her chest and took her, caressing and tempting her nipples to rise to their full extent with his fingers
20.
It had been hard visiting Abery before but Joris hadn’t been there and she’d been able to withdraw into herself to some extent … and the European trip had been hectic, demanding her full attention … and in London afterwards she’d been occupied in achieving Joris’s purpose … and the trip across had kept her mind busy, first with JJ and then Iain … and even coming back, being at The Centre and travelling on the wasteg … that too had been manageable … but now … with no purpose to drive her, no solitude to enfold her and no Joris but only the shadow of his memory imprinted in JJ’s face and voice … she felt naked, vulnerable and viciously exposed to the scouring of her grief
21.
Normally, the extent of the surface to be planed will determine whether the procedure
22.
I’d never been close to my mother, she’d never wanted it … so I had become independent and, to some extent, isolated within myself as a result
23.
I’ve known her for several years, and she’s a straightforward, non-hysterical woman; some people would say that she was cold and unemotional but that may just be in comparison with the temperamental musician she’s married to – after all someone would have to be the down-to-earth sane one in that partnership! Try as I do, I cannot imagine her screaming at me or making a scene … a consoling thought to some extent, but it still doesn’t explain why she wants to see me
24.
I tell her how very strong Abi is being, how she’s latched onto the idea of the little boy David saved and that this is helping her with her grief to some extent
25.
Alexis drew me over to the mill and the extent of what had been developing was evident once the entrance was open
26.
What do you think? It would make an evening of it to some extent
27.
“We could be fighting the immune response of a single organism millions of cubic light-years in extent
28.
Kelvin didn’t really care about the technology of it, that sentence was enough to tell him the true extent of what they were fighting
29.
extent of an injury
30.
‘Being a writer helps, I think, his books are his children to some extent
31.
We are pathetic creatures to some extent
32.
a thorough extent Adam’s Bible is able to teach about the use of money
33.
Wolfgang spoke up, “We should say that our methods measure the minimum possible extent of the substrate we are in, we have mapped neurons used by souls from Earth as far as that extent
34.
Daedelus went on, “We have measured the extent of the area involved in the entanglements that give our spirits new life in this heaven
35.
“On the order of four hundred quadrillion by the same methods that allowed us to determine its extent
36.
He doesn’t have a finite extent you can measure with any instrument, no matter how long it takes to learn to interpret it
37.
) To whatever extent it is, it often is
38.
It is a sad fact of life, that even in our enlightened society, women still shoulder the responsibility to a large extent when it comes to being left literally holding the baby
39.
Uncle Bertram, her father, was strict and old fashioned; Aunt Clarissa just went along with his views to a large extent
40.
but that is a female thing to a large extent
41.
The hole spread over a large area, possibly three or four metres across in places; muddy throughout its entire extent: deep, claggy, black mud, sloppy with water and dotted with bits of green from the decimated plants which had been wrenched from the ground by its making
42.
He took it out on the troupe to a large extent and one or two of the girls, fed up with him yelling at them, gave notice and walked, even though they hadn’t anything to go to – a lethal situation for any performer
43.
Chrissie, apparently asleep, looking young and vulnerable; Mary, an older, less polished version of the same features to some extent, looking older than her years
44.
It was a big step moving out of the student house, but although I enjoyed the company to some extent, I had to get up to go to work and partying until all hours really did not fit with that lifestyle
45.
The entire valley floor is populated to an extent that would prevent undetected camping, just like you thought
46.
This culminated in two planet-wide empires centered on Dempala, a vast city that grew to six hundred miles in extent at it’s peak
47.
extent of what she’d been through
48.
Harold produced a couple cigars and they lit them, but that was about the extent of their 'smoking
49.
Desa isn’t like Jmory and Kaha and to some extent Sharni, looking for a chance to show themselves and be admired
50.
suggested she come with me to assess the extent of the
51.
He could have no interest to employ them, unless he expected from the sale of their work something more than what was sufficient to replace his stock to him ; and he could have no interest to employ a great stock rather than a small one, unless his profits were to bear some proportion to the extent of his stock
52.
They are regulated altogether by the value of the stock employed, and are greater or smaller in proportion to the extent of this stock
53.
The funds destined for the payment of wages, the revenue and stock of its inhabitants, may be of the greatest extent; but if they have continued for several centuries of the same, or very nearly of the same extent, the number of labourers employed every year could easily supply, and even more than supply, the number wanted the following year
54.
The province of Holland, on the other hand, in proportion to the extent of its territory and the number of its people, is a richer country than England
55.
A new colony must always, for some time, be more understocked in proportion to the extent of its territory, and more underpeopled in proportion to the extent of its stock, than the greater part of other countries
56.
In a country, too, where, though the rich, or the owners of large capitals, enjoy a good deal of security, the poor, or the owners of small capitals, enjoy scarce any, but are liable, under the pretence of justice, to be pillaged and plundered at any time by the inferior mandarins, the quantity of stock employed in all the different branches of business transacted within it, can never be equal to what the nature and extent of that business might admit
57.
"Hopelessly infatuated then, captivated, mesmerized, bewitched, call it what you will," he said and to a larger extent than he wanted to admit to himself, meant it
58.
The extent of the market, by giving employment to greater stocks, diminishes apparent profit;
59.
proportion to the extent of his trade, and his annual accumulation in proportion to the amount
60.
She turned out to be a great swimmer, a skill that few city people mastered to any extent
61.
The same extent of ground not only maintains a greater number of cattle, but as they we brought within a smaller compass, less labour becomes requisite to tend them, and to collect their produce
62.
In waste and uninclosed lands, any person who discovers a tin mine may mark out its limits to a certain extent, which is called bounding a mine
63.
When the full extent of his crime became
64.
In rice countries, which generally yield two, sometimes three crops in the year, each of them more plentiful than any common crop of corn, the abundance of food must be much greater than in any corn country of equal extent
65.
In China and Indostan, the extent and variety of inland navigations save the greater part of this labour, and consequently of this money, and thereby reduce still lower both the real and the nominal price of the greater part of their manufactures
66.
wasn’t the full extent of our ingenuity
67.
But the extent of their respective markets is commonly extremely different
68.
It clearly demonstrates, first, their great abundance in proportion to that of corn, and, consequently, the great extent of the land which they occupied in proportion to what was occupied by corn ; and, secondly, the low value of this land in proportion to that of corn land, and, consequently, the uncultivated and unimproved state of the far greater part of the lands of the country
69.
It clearly demonstrates, that the stock and population of the country did not bear the same proportion to the extent of its territory, which they commonly do in civilized countries ; and that society was at that time, and in that country, but in its infancy
70.
If this rise in the price of some sorts of provisions be owing to a fall in the value of silver, their pecuniary reward, provided it was not too large before, ought certainly to be augmented in proportion to the extent of this fall
71.
His abilities, in both these respects, are generally in proportion to the extent of his stock, or to the number of people whom it can employ
72.
The produce of land, mines, and fisheries, when their natural fertility is equal, is in proportion to the extent and proper application of the capitals employed about them
73.
are in the most perfect good order, the same number of labourers and labouring cattle will raise a much greater produce, than in one of equal extent and equally good ground, but not furnished with equal conveniencies
74.
Will you agree with me on this one? We have some knowledge of the world we live in… but to a limited extent
75.
known in a greater extent than everything I did
76.
Though we frequently, therefore, express a person's revenue by the metal pieces which are annually paid to him, it is because the amount of those pieces regulates the extent of his power of purchasing, or the value of the goods which he can annually afford to consume
77.
there is, but not to the extent that they claim
78.
Though he has generally in circulation, therefore, notes to the extent of a hundred thousand pounds, twenty thousand pounds in gold and silver may, frequently, be a sufficient provision for answering occasional demands
79.
Let us suppose, for example, that the whole circulating money of some particular country amounted, at a particular time, to one million sterling, that sum being then sufficient for circulating the whole annual produce of their land and labour; let us suppose, too, that some time thereafter, different banks and bankers issued promissory notes payable to the bearer, to the extent of one million, reserving in their different coffers two hundred thousand pounds for answering occasional demands ; there would remain, therefore, in circulation, eight hundred thousand pounds in gold and silver, and a million of bank notes, or eighteen hundred thousand pounds of paper and money together
80.
They invented, therefore, another method of issuing their promissory notes; by granting what they call cash accounts, that is, by giving credit, to the extent of a certain sum (two or three thousand pounds for example), to any individual who could procure two persons of undoubted credit and good landed estate to become surety for him, that whatever money should be advanced to him, within the sum for which the credit had been given, should be repaid upon demand, together with the legal interest
81.
There would immediately, therefore, be a run upon the banks to the whole extent of this superfluous paper, and if they showed any difficulty or backwardness in payment, to a much greater extent ; the alarm which this would occasion necessarily increasing the run
82.
By issuing too great a quantity of paper, of which the excess was continually returning, in order to be exchanged for gold and silver, the Bank of England was for many years together obliged to coin gold to the extent of between eight hundred thousand pounds and a million a-year; or, at an average, about eight hundred and fifty thousand pounds
83.
In this case, the resource of the banks was, to draw upon their correspondents in London bills of exchange, to the extent of the sum which they wanted
84.
The practice of raising money in this manner had been long known in England ; and, during the course of the late war, when the high profits of trade afforded a great temptation to over-trading, is said to have been carried on to a very great extent
85.
From England it was brought into Scotland, where, in proportion to the very limited commerce, and to the very moderate capital of the country, it was soon carried on to a much greater extent than it ever had been in England
86.
To be decent, but to what extent would
87.
When a banker had even made this discovery, he might sometimes make it too late, and might find that he had already discounted the bills of those projectors to so great an extent, that, by refusing to discount any more, he would necessarily make them all bankrupts ; and thus by ruining them, might perhaps ruin himself
88.
It was the duty of the banks, they seemed to think, to lend for as long a time, and to as great an extent, as they might wish to borrow
89.
The idea of the possibility of multiplying paper money to almost any extent was the real foundation of what is called the Mississippi scheme, the most extravagant project, both of banking and stock-jobbing, that perhaps the world ever saw
90.
The extent of the propaganda is fantastic, and here
91.
In the progress of improvement, rent, though it increases in proportion to the extent, diminishes in proportion to the produce of the land
92.
happened in Greece to a greater extent than
93.
happened in some extent
94.
I knew that it wasn’t normal for my power to increase to the extent
95.
It is greater or smaller, according to the supposed extent of those powers, or, in other words, according to the supposed natural or improved fertility of the land
96.
Holland, in proportion to the extent of the land and the number of it's inhabitants, by far the richest country in Europe, has accordingly the greatest share of the carrying trade of Europe
97.
The extent of the home trade, and of the capital which can be employed in it, is necessarily limited by the value of the surplus produce of all those distant places within the country which have occasion to exchange their respective productions with one another ; that of the foreign trade of consumption, by the value of the surplus produce of the whole country, and of what can be purchased with it; that of the carrying trade, by the value of the surplus produce of all the different countries in the world
98.
Its possible extent, therefore, is in a manner infinite in comparison of that of the other two, and is capable of absorbing the greatest capitals
99.
Speaking of the ideal republic described in the laws of Plato, to maintain 5000 idle men (the number of warriors supposed necessary for its defence), together with their women and servants, would require, he says, a territory of boundless extent and fertility, like the plains of Babylon
100.
Penelope, again, had to wonder what was truly behind them and though superstitious to an extent, she was not readily convinced that ancient queens and their undead minions had much to do with it