Sentences with phrase «practical purposes amount»

Not exact matches

[3] And eight well - functioning, modest - sized, local bond markets amount to the same thing as a «regional market» for most practical purposes.
Nowadays, anybody with the tiniest amount of common sense can preserve their work for the foreseeable future (which may not be forever but it; s close enough for all practical purposes).
However, the incremental amount of risk reduction decreases exponentially with the number of holdings, so that the reduction in portfolio volatility by addition of another holding quickly approaches zero for all practical purposes.
However, attainment of culture skills for practical purposes (communicating in a foreign context, for instance) requires extensive amounts of interaction, over a prolonged period of time in a variety of different circumstances, often to such extent of production that would exceed most serious games.
Due to the huge volume of sea water and the density differentials between air and ocean that would be impossible or would require such huge amounts of atmospheric heating and such huge lengths of time that for practical purposes it should be ignored.
They called carbon dioxide, and oxygen and nitrogen, «ideal gases», and said they behave as per basic ideal gas description (pre Van der Waals), in other words, they have taken all the properties and process of real gases out of their «gases» and reduced them to hard dots with no mass, (no volume, weight or attraction and therefore nothing to be subject to gravity), and they say these travel at great speeds through empty space as per ideal gas, bouncing off each other in elastic collisions and so «thoroughly mixing» that they can't be unmixed (without an immense amount of work being done, so for all practical purposes can not be unmixed).
If you want to get a basic understanding of what life insurance would cost you, complete the form on the right and choose your face amount, term period and use a «Standard» rate class for all practical purposes.
F.) Are asked to perform and submit large amounts of work as an «experiential interview» technique that take up more time than what should be considered practical for evaluation purposes.
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