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Page "Corporate social responsibility" ¶ 42
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For and commonly
For example, automobile wheels made of an aluminium alloy are commonly referred to as simply " alloy wheels ", although in point of fact steels and most other metals in practical use are also alloys.
For slaves however, there was no such protection and they commonly experienced persecution.
For example, the General Mills Betty Crocker's Cookbook, first published in 1950 and currently in its 10th edition, is commonly found in American homes.
For many years, bouldering was commonly viewed as a playful training activity for climbers, although in the 1930s and late 1940s Pierre Allain and his companions enjoyed bouldering for its own sake in Fontainebleau, considered by many to be the Mecca of bouldering.
For example, a temperate grassland or shrubland biome is known commonly as steppe in central Asia, prairie in North America, and pampas in South America.
For example drive straps are now commonly employed to transfer torque as well as lift the pressure plate upon disengagement of vehicle drive.
For example, 14 and 15 are coprime, being commonly divisible by only 1, but 14 and 21 are not, because they are both divisible by 7.
For example, the use of state funds by the poor and financially needy is commonly referred to as ' social welfare ' or ' handouts ', which the ' coddled ' poor ' take advantage of '.
For practicing Buddhists, references to " dharma " ( dhamma in Pali ) particularly as " the Dharma ", generally means the teachings of the Buddha, commonly known throughout the East as Buddha-Dharma.
The impressionists exaggerated his stiffness, raised shoulders, and nasal tenor phrasing, along with some of his commonly used introductions, such as " And now, right here on our stage ...", " For all you youngsters out there ...", and " a really big shew " ( his pronunciation of the word " show ").
For example, dynamite is a mixture of highly sensitive nitroglycerin with sawdust, powdered silica, or most commonly diatomaceous earth, which act as stabilizers.
For such standardized values the name of the enthalpy is commonly prefixed with the term standard, e. g. standard enthalpy of formation.
For a thrown snap, especially in formations wherein the ball may be snapped to players in different positions, the snapper will commonly bend over looking between his legs.
For commonly used fluorescent compounds, typical excited state decay times for photon emissions with energies from the UV to near infrared are within the range of 0. 5 to 20 nanoseconds.
For short, landscaping walls, gravity walls made from dry-stacked ( mortarless ) stone or segmental concrete units ( masonry units ) are commonly used.
For local detail surveys, tacheometers are commonly employed although the old-fashioned rectangular technique using angle prism and steel tape is still an inexpensive alternative.
For electron microscopy, the most commonly used fixative is glutaraldehyde, usually as a 2. 5 % solution in phosphate buffered saline.
For reloading cartridges intended for use in military-surplus firearms, rifles especially, " hard " primers are most commonly used instead of commercial " soft " primers.
For the group of animals commonly known as " hyaena ", see Hyena.
For those who take the genealogies of Genesis to be historically accurate, Japheth is commonly believed to be the father of the Europeans.
For Spain, dates commonly used are the death of King Ferdinand II in 1516, the death of Queen Isabella I of Castile in 1504, or the conquest of Granada in 1492.
For example, religions that preach of the value of faith over evidence from everyday experience or reason inoculate societies against many of the most basic tools people commonly use to evaluate their ideas.
For instance, polyethylene ( PE ) is a cheap, low friction polymer commonly used to make disposable shopping bags and trash bags, and is considered a commodity plastic, whereas medium-density polyethylene ( MDPE ) is used for underground gas and water pipes, and another variety called Ultra-high Molecular Weight Polyethylene UHMWPE is an engineering plastic which is used extensively as the glide rails for industrial equipment and the low-friction socket in implanted hip joints.
For mosques in other areas, it has most commonly been taken that non-Muslims may only enter mosques if granted permission to do so by Muslims and if they have a legitimate reason.
For many monosaccharides ( including glucose ), the cyclic forms predominate, in the solid state and in solutions, and therefore the same name commonly is used for the open-and closed-chain isomers.

For and overlooked
For all these reasons Costa Rica was by and large unappreciated and overlooked by the Spanish Crown and left to develop on its own.
For a player with such an impressive goal ratio, it is astonishing that he was constantly overlooked by Walter Winterbottom, the England manager at the time.
For many years, Lewis ' legacy was overlooked, inaccurately assessed, and somewhat tarnished by his alleged suicide.
For example, low-selling but high-quality works from small press publications, which may be overlooked by other awards, often receive a critical spotlight in the World Fantasy Awards.
The Spectrum once sat between JFK Stadium ( top ) and Veterans Stadium ( below ) all of which are now gone. For its first 25 years, the Spectrum overlooked the 102, 000 seat John F. Kennedy Stadium ( known prior to 1964 as " Municipal Stadium ") located roughly 600 feet south of the indoor arena.
For a short time the panelled rooms of Compton Wynyates were open to the public: the chapel overlooked by the chapel drawing room, the King's bedroom, the heavily panelled drawing and dining rooms with their moulded plaster ceilings, and works of art, such as the crucifixion by Matteo Balducci, were on limited public display.
For many years after their deaths, their contributions to the revolutions of South America were suppressed and although those of Bolivar were revived a decade later and he was returned to the status of a hero, Manuela's role generally was overlooked until the late twentieth century.
For the subsequent one-day tournament, and the following World Cup, Read was overlooked for selection, with Paul Nixon taking over the wicketkeeper position.
For whatever reason the selectors chose, Hauritz's performances were overlooked and NSW fast bowler Stuart Clark was picked for the fourth Ashes Test.

For and motive
For most of the book, it is assumed that the perpetrator is mentally deranged and that this is a sufficient motive.
Sabata and If You Meet Sartana Pray for Your Death, directed by Gianfranco Parolini introduces into similar betrayal environments a kind of hero molded on the Mortimer character from For a Few Dollars More, only without any vengeance motive and with more outrageous trick weapons.
For example, in " Well Worn Daffy " ( 1965 ), Daffy is determined to keep the mice away from a desperately needed well seemingly for no other motive than pure maliciousness.
For the first time a Hundertwasser motive was also used on a Cuban stamp, as part of the art exhibition Salon de Mayo ( Havana, 1967 ).
For example, " vengeance upon one who has not deserved it, or to a greater extent than it has been deserved, or in conflict with the dispositions of law, or from an improper motive " are all sinful.
For perspective, the best estimate is that 86, 000 people were deported from France without racial motive, overwhelmingly resistants, a number that exceeds that of Gypsies and Jews deported from France.
For many years the road was well-known among railfans for its unusual stable of F7 " covered wagons " -- unusual motive power of choice for a backwoods southern shortline.
For his part, George Hatherill, in his book A Detective's Tale, stated that the motive behind the return of the money was not known for certain.
For a businessman who has the profit motive as the prime interest, it is a losing proposition to offer below or above market wages to workers.
For example, the genus of a smooth projective curve C which is an interesting invariant of the curve, is an integer, which can be read off the dimension of the first Betti cohomology group of C. So, the motive of the curve should contain the genus information.
For example, the Künneth standard conjecture, which states the existence of algebraic cycles π < sup > i </ sup > ⊂ X × X inducing the canonical projectors H < sup >∗</ sup >( X ) ↠ H < sup > i </ sup >( X ) ↣ H < sup >∗</ sup >( X ) ( for any Weil cohomology H ) implies that every pure motive M decomposes in graded pieces of weight n: M = ⊕ Gr < sub > n </ sub > M.
For the greater part of its existence the railway relied upon steam locomotives for motive power, and it owned no diesel or electric locomotives.
For instance, a lawyer might say: " Only she had the means, the motive and the opportunity to kill him.
For example, an individual may disappear under circumstances where a specific suspect had a strong motive to murder the individual.
For a few years following O ' Brien, the decision was primarily cited to by the Court for the proposition that an illicit legislative motive would not render a law unconstitutional.
For some unknown motive, probably a desire to ruin his rival, Comyn revealed the conspiracy to Edward.
For an arrest to stick, however, the player must possess hard evidence of the three basics: motive, method and opportunity.
For From Russia with Love, Cain designed a $ 150, 000 set for a chess match which repeated the " chess pawn " motive throughout the room.

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