Sentences with phrase «peril if»

We've got ourselves convinced in Canada that consumers will be in peril if we don't have two agents in every transaction and that these agents must adhere to strict rules of practice, trust accounts need to be audited, a dozen committees need to meet quarterly and CPE courses need to be completed annually.
Referring to the policy provision noted above, it wouldn't be listed as a covered peril if it didn't cover something.
While water is a covered peril if it comes from a broken pipe or your upstairs neighbor, flood is specifically excluded.
Even war is an excluded peril if a domestic war were to break out in Youngstown, OH.
Answering a complaint can be fraught with peril if you admit things that can work against you later.
And of course by that time these lawyers and others, these borrowers can face debt loads as we mentioned before that are far higher than the amount they originally borrowed, because of all the money that they had to borrow to go to law school, and we're putting these young lawyers and their futures into financial peril if they are found at the end of 10 years to be ineligible when they had every reason to believe they had been eligible.
The case, which ended up before Ontario's Court of Appeal, demonstrates the fact that employers act at their peril if they try and skirt termination entitlements by making changes to an employee's working arrangements in order to force an employee to quit.
Ask the people of Pakistan, Sri Lanka, Queensland, or any the other places in peril if it is OK to mislead the public in this intentional and dishonest way.
I mean some of these folks the entire planets future is in peril if we stay on this path.
New York Times — By WALTER SULLIVAN — December 21, 1975 — Page 32 — «Experts Fear Great Peril If SST (supersonic traffic) Fumes Cool Earth»
The vast majority of nuclear scientists never told us that we were almost certainly going to put our civilization in peril if we kept going about our daily lives as usual, doing exactly what we were already doing, which is what the climate scientists have been telling us for years.
If your dog is particularly food possessive your cat may be in peril if there is food around.
While water is a covered peril if it comes from a broken pipe or your upstairs neighbor, flood is specifically excluded.
And, of course, the big news which you ignore at your peril if you want people to find your site on the Internet.
We put ourselves in serious peril if we continue this posture.
Scientists are concerned that butterflies with small, isolated populations may be in severe peril if their habitats are burned too frequently and in large blocks at a time, which can mean that butterfly refugia — unburned areas that provide refuge — are limited.
«There is indeed much more diversity in the tropics and it may in fact be in peril if temperatures rise quickly enough.»
Yet Labour will be in equally great peril if Jeremy's presence on the ballot distracts attention from the fact that two of his rivals are currently offering only superficial modifications to the Miliband approach that just consigned us to one of the worst defeats in our history.
I remembered this story when I read of warnings from William Hague and Tony Blair that the Union would be in peril if the rest of the UK (excluding Scotland) votes to enjoy the same independent nation status as America, Australia, Canada, India and New Zealand.
The national church stands in peril if it is not reaching out.
(Exodus 24:4 - 8) And always in the hinterland of animal sacrifice lurked age - old ideas of the magical potency of blood as a powerful agency of deliverance if rightly used (E.g., Exodus 12:12 - 13) and a supernatural peril if wrongly handled.
Your policy contemplates a wide variety of risks, and you can add additional coverage — you can even make your policy cover open perils if you prefer.
Your policy contemplates a wide variety of risks, and you can add additional coverage — you can even make your policy cover open perils if you prefer.

Not exact matches

I have killed men in the performance of my duty and would not hesitate to do so again if our country or citizens were in peril.
«It was a pivotal point — if the culture at Airbnb had failed to evolve beyond the fast and loose rules of startup culture, the company's existence would have been in peril
Renters insurance will cover mold damage to your personal property only if the mold was caused by a peril you are covered for.
If the increase in Irma suits affects rates for wind insurance the way AOB suits have driven up costs for all - perils coverage over the past two years, policyholders won't feel it until the summer of 2019, Patel said.
If you choose to throw your money into Bitcoin in spite of this advice, just know you're doing so at your peril.
If you're planning a trip to see a client, avoiding these 10 common perils of business travel can save -LSB-...]
Businesses share sensitive data that, if compromised can put their business at risk and their customer's privacy in peril.
Perhaps good will come of it, though, if bishops conferences are reminded that there are also very practical perils in suggesting that they are the real leadership of the Church.
``... If we continue to deny it for long, we will do so only by putting our political democracy in peril.
As they talked of St Thomas More or Edmund Campion and the dangers they faced, one could almost feel the sense of peril and difficulty of discretion, as if such laws were around today.
The word «nihilism» has a complex history in modern philosophy, but I use it in a sense largely determined by Nietzsche and Heidegger, both of whom not only diagnosed modernity as nihilism, but saw Christianity as complicit in its genesis; both it seems to me were penetratingly correct in some respects, if disastrously wrong in most, and both raised questions that we Christians ignore at our peril.
In his contribution, «The All - Determining God and the Peril of Determinism,» David Polk explores the meaning of God as the «all - determining power» in Pannenberg's system.2 The question of power is a difficult one, as Polk shows: if Pannenberg overemphasizes God's control, he falls into the morasses of determinism alluded to in Polk's title; conversely, «the freedom of the other» must be «genuinely authenticated» (TWP 159).
The authoritative word given by the Holy Spirit to the Church at the defining and pivotal moment of Vatican II nearly fifty years ago was especially «made incarnate» in Britain in September, 2010, during Benedict's apostolic visit: to seek unity with our separated brethren in the other Christian confessions, to affirm all that is good and true in secular culture without in any way watering down our witness to the truth of the fullness of the Christian faith, to declare without apology that the Catholic patrimony of faith and reason working in harmony remains a gift that the twenty - first century desperately needs if it is to avoid self - destruction, and which it neglects or dismisses at its own peril.
Similar is the mood of the striking description in Psalm 65, which, if we may illustrate the greater by the less, has been the inspiration of our fine hymn, «For Those in Peril on the Sea»:
If one is not stuck with Luke 21:25 - 36 on the second Sunday of Advent he is not thereby released from the thundering New Testament words about the signs of the times, the invasive and convulsive power of the kingdom, the perils of drunkenness and stupidity in the midst of crises which are rich in threats of damnation and promises of redemption.
If aesthetic enjoyment with spiritual lethargy is the peril of the wealthy city church, plainness with lack of spiritual passion is the pitfall of the poor rural church.
If we fail to engage it, we do so at our peril.
But if PTL became more a resort for saints than a hospital for sinners, it would not be the first time — nor the last — that perfectionist Christians found out that the road to perfection is pitted with perils.
Especially if the old LDS had the equivalent of Christine O'Donnell in their ranks sharing her views on the perils and condemnation of masturbation!
But it is one of the lessons of fairy - stories (if we can speak of the lessons of things that do not lecture) that on callow, lumpish, and selfish youth peril, sorrow, and the shadow of death can bestow dignity and even sometimes wisdom [ibid., pp. 44 - 451.
If we are to avoid the perils and realize the promises of the coming decades, vision and a plan of action are essential.
I wonder though if history would indicate that surrendering rights puts them in peril for everyone.
The groundbreaking Paris Agreement is in peril; if the United States withdraws in 2020, it will be the only country in the world not signed to the accord.
Believe him at your peril, hate him if you must, but don't ever question his desire
saw the SPUDS play CHELSKI and now I know that we are in trouble our given right to 4th place is in peril, frankly we stand no chance if the other top five keep playing like this....
That Allardyce's first answer was to bolster his defence wasn't going to surprise anyone: his focus on defensive organisation was likely what won him the job with the perils of relegation looming, even if it has since appeared overblown.
Alcohol: Occasional indulgences are fine, but if you cross the line know about its perils too.
a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z