Sentences with phrase «cent piece made»

The first, an oversized one - cent piece made of silver, retails for $ 55.

Not exact matches

99 - cent store toys are made cheaply so you won't want to risk having a piece breaking off in your kid's throat.
In his first money - making venture a six years old, Buffett sold packs of Juicy Fruit, Spearmint and Doublemint for five cents a piece, according to Alice Schroeder's 2008 biography, «The Snowball: Warren Buffett and the Business of Life.»
When I get the craving, I'll often just make a pit stop at my corner deli and either order their version of my go - to turkey club, or, in this case, if I have some random sandwich fixings already, I'll ask them to just sell me two pieces of whole wheat sandwich bread for 50 cents.
Make a hole and begin to stretch the hole out until it's the size of a 50 cent piece (or about 1.5 - 2 inches).
In contrast, the factory - made washable cloth diapers (not the homemade triangular pieces of cloth) cost a fraction of that with an average 50 - 80 per cent savings.
That may sound obvious, but many physicists were hoping that photons — particles of light — could help us to piece together the nature of the mysterious stuff thought to make up 85 per cent of the universe's matter.
That 99 cents can be a taco tomorrow morning, or a piece of gum to make your breath smell better before seeing that guy in chem.
Publishers currently make up to 75 per cent of the price of a digital novel and Amazon wants a greater piece of that pie.
Selling 1,900 copies at 99 cents doesn't make for a mass medium either, exactly, but the hope is that the Singles model might allow for a kind of renaissance of the pamphlet, with benefits accruing to reported pieces.
These are very valuable points, often well over 2 cents a piece, so this will make sense for lots of people looking to stay at SPG properties or even transfer them to travel partners.
You can always redeem your points for statement credit at 1 cent a piece, but that would be the lowest valuation for your points, making this bonus just $ 500.
One set of stats that didn't make it into my piece: 78 per cent of subjects who display an «egalitarian» and «communitarian» worldview believe that most scientists agree climate change is happening (which is true)-- compared with only 19 per cent of those with a «hierarchical» and «individualist» worldview.
I have a piece up at The Guardian looking at Hockey's adaptation of the «47 per cent» line made famous by Mitt Romney.
However, some people have made a good start: Stephane Foucart, a science journalist at Le Monde, wrote a piece on Le cent - fautes de Claude Allegre (the «Hundred Errors» — this is a play on words, «un sans - faute» (pronounced the same way) means a perfect score) and Sylvestre Huet from the Liberation started a series of debunkings and is now at part five (also in French) and which he has turned into a short book!
With a shocking 37 per cent of Brits admitting they don't think their recycling efforts make any difference, it's no surprise that there are more than 5 TRILLION pieces of plastic waste in our oceans.
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