「afford」の共起表現一覧(1語左で並び替え)
該当件数 : 646件
l servants whose previous political activities | afford no assurance that they will at all times give |
Intramolecular aza Wittig reactions also | afford isoquinolines. |
base, only long enough to fuel, provision, and | afford a period of recreation for the crew. |
ffs, which rise to 200 ft above sea level, and | afford spectacular views of the Cumbrian mountains an |
passage of the food along the intestines, and | afford an increased surface for absorption. |
uld, by his own command, divide the river, and | afford them an easy passage over it. |
ign and build a laboratory set for Darkman and | afford helicopters and professional stuntmen to film |
John Andrew | Afford (born 12 May 1964, in Crowland, Lincolnshire) |
Andy | Afford is currently the editor of All Out Cricket, a |
s chess, ping pong, yoga, jazz and rock bands, | afford students an opportunity to become involved in |
m, he was working as a waiter and could barely | afford his rent, and had almost given up on getting g |
While they both | afford the opportunity to converse with the dead, onl |
Chlorination and bromination | afford other dyes. |
sly declaring that the "wealthy Chicagoans can | afford their own water." |
His parents are rich and can | afford to hire the very best lawyers whereas Christie |
data should not be restricted to those who can | afford the exorbitant fees. |
with his new coworkers, who wonder how he can | afford those expensive things on his salary, but appa |
nomination was an honor, stating "Maybe I can | afford to book Dave Chappelle at the baby shower now. |
ions among children based on whose parents can | afford to buy them fashionable clothing to wear to sc |
pment store, but realizes none of the kids can | afford those fancy shoes or jerseys. |
People in small towns who can | afford a movie, where they can't afford anything else |
If you can | afford a Type 35, you can surely afford a heated gara |
o cares about the future of the human race can | afford to miss The Normal Heart," while director Haro |
r family life at prices which wage earners can | afford. |
ely it would be better policy if those who can | afford the time and money would abandon mechanical de |
h such aid as mechanics under your command can | afford, they may be completed, I am assured, in 60 da |
hina and you can pay to be excluded if you can | afford it so I'm not sure I see it as particularly no |
Notable is the 5th song, "I can | afford to love", which was originally a duet with Ste |
arge, this has been the forte of those who can | afford it. |
Few can | afford the huge cost of such enterprises, and those w |
ises to repay it to a local church when he can | afford to; the film depicts the man's constant frustr |
growth guidelines and include homes people can | afford. |
, second, or third ballots, but I think we can | afford to take chances that about 11 minutes after tw |
eating two meals to the church; those who can | afford to be more generous are encouraged to give mor |
ts that low and moderate income households can | afford. |
e American in search of a home in which he can | afford to live.” |
is always advisable to only risk what you can | afford to lose. |
The regime can | afford to wait out the sit-ins and demonstrations for |
ction of private health care for those who can | afford it. |
ansbury...no connoisseur of musical comedy can | afford to miss Miss Lansbury's performance. |
player, and most importantly, by what they can | afford to buy, or whether they can find the item by l |
Surely we can | afford to make a distinction between the people whose |
Without financial problems they can | afford some quirks and have acquired a chalet in the |
r he pleases (within the limits of what he can | afford, given the money he is receiving). |
rio - Beatrice, Henry, & Montagu - "No one can | afford to be too fussy, prim, and proper..." |
e with (sudden or long-term) lower incomes can | afford insurance |
Christians can | afford to be put to torture and to death, and the mor |
d, Kathy, whose medicine cost more than he can | afford - that is until he starts running narcotics ac |
Temples that can | afford it will usually involve at least one richly ca |
s who frequent a crack house and those who can | afford a Starbucks on a regular basis, I'm not sure w |
ding of a large two storied building which can | afford complete accommodation for the family and prov |
Criticizing that only wealthy people can | afford to purchase a bunad and to carry out this trad |
ve better quarters, it's the Anglicans who can | afford the better halves!" |
llage an attractive prospect for those who can | afford it. |
anyone interested to buy-of course if they can | afford it. |
to pay extravagant wedding neither of them can | afford. |
ttached coupon, and just give whatever you can | afford, as God directs. |
ent, where infected mothers simply can’t | afford to feed their children with anything other tha |
She wants a baby and, because she can't | afford to get pregnant due to her job, she says they |
r orphans or from very poor families who can't | afford to send their children to a state school. |
cribe how Cochran wants a convertible he can't | afford and a girl who he fears will not go out with h |
the day, Roy?" and Roy responds, "never, can't | afford to keep her." |
However the council can't | afford it." |
CAN'T | AFFORD NO FOOD (2:01) |
"I can't | afford a mansion right now, so it's like I fall aslee |
Or you're unemployed and can't | afford health insurance. |
at a shame it is that the market traders can't | afford to donate a tree to the local church this year |
A fellow can't | afford to have nerves in this business.... |
le in their flat, Rodney laments that he can't | afford a holiday, whilst Del Boy considers signing Da |
nderstand the disappointment but Croydon can't | afford to build a new leisure centre." |
I know you want to study further but I can't | afford that any more. |
kata and its suburbs allowing people who can't | afford a newspaper to read it. |
nd instruments for kids in hospitals who can't | afford them. |
She buys things she can't | afford and her daughter is upset when she does this. |
a wealthy man who helps poor people who can't | afford medical assistance. |
l as subsidies and waivers for those who can't | afford coverage, and the importance of tort reform in |
aboratory Earth: The Planetary Gamble We Can't | Afford to Lose, Weidenfeld & Nicolson, 1996. |
"Don't ask me about the referee, I can't | afford the fine … however, if the referee needs to be |
stated: "It needed to be done because we can't | afford to lose someone like Lee for a lengthy spell." |
est days I've had as a manager, Football can't | afford to be losing a player of his ilk." |
re to a ranch in Northern Canada, but he can't | afford the property. |
Jude wishes to attend the university, he can't | afford to get his degree and is thereby shut out from |
itude, attitude was all she sent/Now she can't | afford antiperspirant/Books and school just give you |
m out of the house but soon realizes she can't | afford the payment on the apartment on her own. |
to the students of secondary classes who can't | afford tution fees payable to private tutors. |
ng a class system of labs which can and cannot | afford to pay subscription fees to proprietary data. |
them in a rented apartment, which they cannot | afford. |
resource which the people of Louisiana cannot | afford to lose." |
censorship because most Canadian films cannot | afford to be produced without government assistance. |
he receives treatment (which the family cannot | afford due to Scrooge's miserliness). |
ght to hand in his resignation, as Alan cannot | afford to lose Rodney, and thus will not fire him. |
We cannot | afford to sleep. |
has meant significant numbers of locals cannot | afford to buy property of their own now, with prices |
ing for abortions to indigent women who cannot | afford the fees. |
tly responds that the government simply cannot | afford them. |
he state of Florida and Puerto Rico who cannot | afford to interrupt their careers or relocate to a co |
ches the Dalits, Bahujans and those who cannot | afford this education. |
parties are coming from, and that they cannot | afford the time to rescue everyone who needs rescuing |
cial support to athletes whose families cannot | afford for them to receive academic tutoring, partici |
Philippine government, on July 5, still cannot | afford to buy mass vaccine, which is estimated to cos |
The Food We Eat: The Book You Cannot | Afford to Ignore (2nd ed. |
old that there is in sex a fury that we cannot | afford to inflame; and that a certain mystery must at |
We cannot | afford to be ignorant of the world in which disputes |
l to get my degree in four years, and I cannot | afford a fifth. |
ontinual medical support-something they cannot | afford. |
The Union cannot | afford to lose the rice and bean crops from that area |
And even if there [were], people cannot | afford fridges to cool the breast milk when the weath |
s his landlord a large sum of money and cannot | afford the expenses for his journey home. |
underprivileged children in Africa who cannot | afford to go to school or college to do so. |
When he discovers that he cannot | afford Maria's services, Bryant is forced to hire ano |
orer labourers live there, because they cannot | afford to go farther, and there become debased. |
When Dennis cannot | afford cigarettes because of his drink, Ken gives him |
regular camera is forgotten, or if one cannot | afford a regular camera. |
s a single mother with six children and cannot | afford to raise them on her own without any outside f |
He wrote that "[a] democracy like ours cannot | afford to throw itself open to the world where every |
mings, despite the fact that the family cannot | afford it and the daughter does not want it. |
r financial aid in the case, arguing he cannot | afford legal representation) the station's future fun |
The Dutch cannot | afford protectionism against the unpredictable tides |
isease, financial support for those who cannot | afford treatment, and money for research. |
mission to the school but whose parents cannot | afford the fees, The City of London School Scholarshi |
is said to be in fuel poverty when they cannot | afford to keep adequately warm at reasonable cost. |
se to these criticisms has been that he cannot | afford to be biased towards the service. |
o high that Tibetan families very often cannot | afford it. |
vide buses in remote areas where people cannot | afford transportation.” |
is hometown but also recognizes that he cannot | afford not to, so he uses his limited showbiz knowled |
ld is Going On?: 10 Prophetic Clues You Cannot | Afford to Ignore" 2008, Thomas Nelson (257 pages) ISB |
features inherently exclude people who cannot | afford those features. |
jewelers who are just starting out and cannot | afford to make pieces in gold, or as a practicing mat |
illage, where he can serve the poor who cannot | afford to go to the city for medical treatment. |
y poor and highly populated country and cannot | afford necessary defense against flooding such as flo |
Allan recognizes him as a fugitive who cannot | afford to let them go, they take him hostage to leave |
s offer public speaking opportunities we can't | afford to pass up, and come only once every 2 years.' |
program in an effort to help diabetic children | afford attendance to diabetes camps. |
ings became very popular among those who could | afford to stay at fashionable hot springs resorts - a |
Prior to this, only the wealthy could | afford to commute from their estates to the other sid |
eople out of Russia at that time that he could | afford only to pay the costs for a single passage. |
d, as costs had risen more than the park could | afford. |
lly the perfect situation because all we could | afford to do was write songs 24/7. |
e specialty pieces that only the wealthy could | afford. |
east, who produced whiskey in volume and could | afford the flat fee. |
That inheritance also meant he could | afford to spend 20,000 livres on rebuilding of the ho |
ge P. Hunt proclaimed of Morse, "If Life could | afford only one photographer, it would have to be Ral |
house politicians and even if a workman could | afford the tariff he would not be allowed to stay the |
s, in the days before police departments could | afford their own radio transmitters. |
We went to what we felt we could | afford. |
As few people could | afford to pay 6d. or 7d. |
d it difficult to attract candidates who could | afford to enter Parliament, but three of its candidat |
Realizing that not everyone could | afford such care, in 1910 Beck founded a sanitorium, |
ed to the fund, allowing any family that could | afford the fee to enroll its children (around $2 per |
e throne was sufficiently secure that he could | afford to grant Parliament what they wanted, when in |
are the beloved pets of the wealthy who could | afford this elaborate burial place such as film direc |
late in his child support payments if he could | afford to feed the Cubans. |
The de Braose dynasty could | afford to rebuild Oystermouth castle in stone. |
fear of losing revenue if passengers who could | afford to travel in second class switched to third cl |
o anyone in the world who wanted one and could | afford the $250 asking price. |
ntaining equipment that few universities could | afford. |
elaborated to the extent that those who could | afford it would make all sorts of arrangements for th |
r brokers Anning, Chadwick and Kiver and could | afford to specialise in large capacity motor-racing. |
number of hours each day at a price they could | afford. |
han the rice and vegetables the populace could | afford, but the recipe grew from humble roots. |
ition of prisons was what the government could | afford, he said. |
with a sum of £20 which was all the Club could | afford. |
first team experience and so that Wigan could | afford another player under the salary cap. |
seating were used until the congregation could | afford permanent furnishings. |
had agreed a shirt sponsorship deal, and could | afford to sign him. |
e the fortress had fallen, however, they could | afford to send troops into Albania. |
ing to the boat for those living inland) could | afford, as rates of pay had increased about 70%. |
became restricted to boys whose parents could | afford its fees. |
oad often received higher payments, thus could | afford a wider range of goods to purchase. |
ither the Latin king nor the Muslim emir could | afford to let the other capture the rich prize of Egy |
de against the Tweed Ring, no politician could | afford to ignore it." |
reportedly had to return a dress so they could | afford to go out to dinner to celebrate. |
on of 2009-10 and for the first time, he could | afford a Coach. |
ople who became muhtasibs were those who could | afford to buy their way into the sinecure. |
Chinese schools"; those Thai Chinese who could | afford to study overseas studied English instead of C |
ila the Hun's death, however, the Romans could | afford to turn their attention back to the Vandals, w |
heir wages to a level that their masters could | afford. |
photography as a creative outlet when he could | afford to do so. |
the Sri Lankan selectors felt that they could | afford to play a specialist keeper in Test matches. |
vest in real estate other than what they could | afford to build for themselves, and few incoming work |
h of which had been used on the way, and could | afford little enough for the garrison before he start |
being one of the few teams in Brazil who could | afford to maintain their talent base throughout the s |
d an occasional portrait of somebody who could | afford it, and idled much of the rest of the time, co |
can exhibitors claimed anyone in America could | afford. |
He could | afford to swim there once a week, on 'dirty water day |
n the 66th minute, and by this time they could | afford to make a sentimental decision. |
s a product that small professional labs could | afford equipment to develop. |
re served by 22 employees - a luxury few could | afford. |
erosene lamps but probably all that they could | afford. |
ion largely by spending his inheritance) could | afford. |
was so expensive that only the magnates could | afford to buy it. |
either he nor Bond's sister Wendi Wilson could | afford to pay the full £1500. |
the late Victorian era only the wealthy could | afford legal action, and only one in eight qualified |
dually spread to large corporations that could | afford funding the huge investment in hardware, softw |
Second, those who could | afford to live elsewhere, non-students, and students |
gan to work in the stockyards so that he could | afford to attend the Art Institute of Chicago where h |
rary was open to people who by the 1830s could | afford to buy a four guinea share and pay an annual s |
s), and even minor government officials, could | afford to hire servants, usually also Muslims, in a s |
classes neither deserved the former nor could | afford the latter. |
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