In both case scenarios, failure to strike a balance between the two could result in putting your relationship or your
job at jeopardy.
Impeachment does not put an official
at jeopardy of life or limb therefore there is no restriction on how many times he can be impeached for the same action.
«Right now there are millions and millions of New York City renters who are worried that if these rent laws aren't renewed, the future of their home, their family's homes will be
put at jeopardy,» Quinn told reporters, including 1010 WINS» Stan Brooks.
Speaking at the first Prime Minister's Questions since the general election earlier this month, Corbyn said years of Conservative government cuts to local authority budgets had put public
safety at jeopardy and had played a part in the fire that destroyed a tower block in Kensington, west London earlier this month, killing at least 79 people.
This «behavior puts
humpbacks at jeopardy from bottom - set fishing gear such as gillnets and trap fisheries, which is heavily used in our study area and is a known risk to humpback whales,» the researchers note.
you have to understand gamers only buy if their type of game is being supported... I only got a ps3 for god... bayo2 puts that ffuture
purchase at jeopardy....
It is one thing to fight for your rights, yet another t0 put them
further at jeopardy by «force».
And those APIs were used in combination to
win at jeopardy but you can combine them in a bunch of other different ways for legal work.
'' [T] his legal memo, I think, put our
troops at jeopardy because the Uniform Code of Military Justice specifically makes it a crime for a member of our uniform forces to abuse a detainee.»
If that person dislikes you, he or she could make one comment and put your future
job at jeopardy, even if you had a stellar interview with everyone else on the team.
As of now, it remains in one city, but if anybody who has it gets out, the whole country could be
at jeopardy.
Put
myself at the jeopardy of the stupid lieing customer that has misrepresented something or neligently omitted something.