Sentences with phrase «x amount off»

You can buy yourself a coffee every time you pay X amount off, or reward yourself with something small every month that you follow through with your budget.

Not exact matches

«Anything that shoots off an armored vehicle, «x» amount of meters, and makes something blow up, is not good for the integrated dismounted / mounted operations.
The reason being is that usually in Week 1 two of the top X amount of teams will face - off and while the Winner leaves feeling happy..
With that said... I say: If Vegas «pre-paid» a Kansas St. lay - off early in the line... (pre-paid layoffs don't have to go to the action - favourite, only a line shift needs to be anticipated with intention of middling the layoff and the action)... then they will have bought x amount of Kansas WTS units at +9.5 in anticipation of selling x amount of units at +7.5 in attempts to middle a 8 - 9 point spread where they'd win the action as well as the layoff.
I think the sign off from CRA above says it all... Just like when you read a voter ballot on propositions, I go straight to the source of who is behind the voice, and CRA consistently has used this «trace» argument time and again, just like the chem companies do with the lead in lipstick (I just attended the Teens Turning Green national summit, and found the debriefing almost verbatim to the CRA «counterpoint» above... it's only a «little» lead, not enough to... blahdeblah, times «x» amounts of applications per day times «x» amounts of other products with «trace» amounts, ad infinitum...)
If you see the phrase «x amount of dollars off,» make sure it says «off of MSRP.»
If book «x» is trad published and successful enough to sell, let's say, 20,000 books (or whatever, just a number I grabbed at), and book «y» is indy published and sells the same amount, there is no doubt that the author of the indy book is going to be FAR better off.
With these, after «x» amount of time, the physical «good» is paid off and then the loan account is closed or canceled.
Tell them you have X amount of dollars and you're willing to pay them off if they'll remove the charged off debt from your credit report.
For instance, when we got to the point where we were paying off our car loan ($ 17,000), I set personal goals to have «X» amount of dollars paid off by the end of the year, etc..
The only way to achieve all these conditions is to «solve for x» and find the amount of money to pay the bank each month, that covers monthly interest to pay off the loan by year 30.
If you could somehow make one of the debts disappear then you would definately choose the mortgage, but you can't just disappear it, you can only pay off X amount of debt in a given time and it should always be the higher APR..
In a way they are alreaday «out» because most games have some level of frame drops or are locked at a frame rate that is below that of the display (60 fps)... That running out thing is basically B.S. computers, all of them were always out of memory and processing, super computers can take days (or months) to finish rendering some simulation, render farms can take hours to output a single frame of a movie, database servers can require hundreds of gigabytes of memory of RAM just for their daily operations, web servers can only handle x amount of requests per seconds before slowing down or completely crashing, game machines, be it PC or consoles all need some trade offs to run games at a given frame rate / resolution... you can not just declare a machine ahs run out of ressources like that, it depends on the scope of the project you want to achieve!
I then put those figures in a spreadsheet, calculated the trend (y =.1213 x), subtracted again by eye to get the difference (total off by.3) and then calculate the RMS of the differences which amounts to, ironically,.85.
And due to our semi-arid climate, usually, a good amount of the water runs right off it like you got a Rain X windshield treatment.
My goal is to have x amount of houses paid off free & clear in 13 - 15 years so I can retire early.
I have been contacting listings that are overpriced and have been on the market way too long... my conversations are usually less than 3 minutes and go something like this «I'm Dustin with HomeSmart... I like your property listed at 225, I have cash buyers that I would love to show this to but they want to make x amount of profit and would be willing to pay somewhere around x amount... I usually wait for there response which is anywhere from f# % $ & off to «the seller won't take 175 but he would consider 185»... I would say I can get a 20 - 40 thousand discount on about 1/3 of my calls... I've never had one of these calls last longer than five minutes.
My hunch is that she's collecting some sort of property management fee from this couple, and / or telling them it's rented for X and only sending them Y amount that she's collecting from some other property — basically she's figured out some way to profit off this couple.
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