Sentences with phrase «slightly earlier bookings»

Make use of deals and research places that offer deals on dining — often for slightly earlier bookings.
7 This was also the conclusion of a slightly earlier book which never received the publicity of Schweitzer's work.

Not exact matches

We now have a contract and a slightly revised version of my earlier book in the hopper.
I wish I had realized this when I paid Amazon $ 11.99 for a book that turned out to be a slightly longer version of a book I'd bought for $ 4.99 a year earlier.
Scribd, the popular document sharing service, jumped into the ring earlier this month with a slightly cheaper ebook subscription service — $ 8.99 per month — but an undisclosed number of books to read.
When to put together a boxed set of the early books in a series and using that as another type of Book 1, perhaps with a different cover and blurb to appeal to a slightly different audience.
One experiment that I'd like to see would be an eBook price that starts HIGHER than the physical book but is available slightly earlier.
That's at the upper end of the range for such books and I note the irony that such a price is slightly over the $ 35 price of an ounce of gold that held throughout a large part of the early 20th century.
We do advise early booking as these accommodation are in high demand, we have a range of apartments from 4 to 22 - the price may alter slightly depending on your choice of apartment.
Stezaker, who had a retrospective at the Whitechapel Gallery earlier this year, collects old photographs — movie stills, publicity shots, postcards, book and magazine illustrations — slices them in two, then splices them with other cut pictures to create something altogether new and often slightly disturbing.
In that post, I noted how Dr Schneider offered one slightly more subtle variation of Gelbspan's favorite phrase in 2009 — «Journalist Ross Gelbspan wrote a book called The Heat is On... Citing leaked internal GCC documents, he reported that their plan was to «reposition'the debate as «theory, not fact»» — and on another occasion a year earlier offered one quite a bit more subtle — «a coalition of liars and spin doctors to reposition the debate onto the issue of uncertainty, way beyond [what] the scientific community agreed with.»
But in his book, Dr. Lomborg cites figures from the United States Census Bureau, the International Monetary Fund, the World Bank and the European Environment Agency to show that the rate of world population growth has actually been dropping sharply since 1964; the level of international debt decreased slightly from 1984 to 1999; the price of oil, adjusted for inflation, is half what it was in the early 1980's; and the sulfur emissions that generate acid rain (which has turned out to do little if any damage to forests, though some to lakes) have been cut substantially since 1984.
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