Sentences with phrase «small incidents much»

It's generally a small coverage, between $ 1,000 and $ 5,000, and it covers basic medical expenses for small incidents much faster than liability might.
It's generally a small coverage, between $ 1,000 and $ 5,000, and it covers basic medical expenses for small incidents much faster than liability might.

Not exact matches

Those questions, although important, are less interesting to aviation researchers than determining just how much damage increasingly common drones — like the 1.4 - kilogram quadcopter in the Staten Island incident — can potentially inflict on helicopters and small, low - flying aircraft.
According to Stern, this problem would vanish if the icy bodies were actually much brighter — reflecting at least 15 % of incident sunlight instead of the generally assumed 4 % — and, consequently, much smaller.
However, new work by astronomers at the University of Sheffield has discovered an incident of a star being destroyed by a supermassive black hole in a much smaller sample size — a group of just 15 galaxies.
The actual Buzz Aldrin shows up to confirm that the giant leap for mankind of July 20, 1969, was actually a small incident in the endless Autobot - Decepticon war, which will, in our own time, lay waste to much of the city of Chicago.
A much smaller percentage of bullied students reported incidents outside on school grounds (19.3 percent), in a bathroom or locker room (9.4 percent), in the school cafeteria (22.2 percent), or on a school bus (10 percent).
At $ 35 per incident, overdraft is truly small - dollar credit, whereas problems with a mortgage could cost a family thousands of dollars if not their homes — making it much more likely that a consumer wronged by a bad mortgage would seek help from the CFPB than someone who incurred a $ 35 overdraft penalty fee.
Owner Chad Snyder is pretty choked up about the incident — and while he says he understands the importance of tranquilizers, says it was too much for his small dog.
Bottom line: a contamination incident at a single small peanut processor exposes a much smaller population to the hazard of salmonella.
No need, and yes, rather dumb * of me to forget the decay products (* or perhaps just evidence of lack of time on my part), although the broader point I made still stands, which is that some sources of radiation are otherwise chemically benign and others are not, though I admit much ignorance on the relative importance of chemical toxicity and wouldn't be surprised to find out it is generally quite small in such incidents like Fukushima and Chernobyl — but I don't actually know it; I thought perhaps it deserved clarification (and maybe — note that I'm not justifying this — that's why some people may see radiation from a pollutant as worse than radiation from natural source?).
An accident with a UPS truck or tractor trailer may have much more dire consequences than a regular accident between two smaller vehicles, especially if you are riding a bicycle, a motorcycle or happen to be on foot at the time of the incident.
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