perishability

NOUN
  1. unsatisfactoriness by virtue of being subject to decay or spoilage or destruction
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How To Use perishability In A Sentence

  • In order to manage perishability, we need to understand the dynamics of supply and demand.
  • Ms. Spiotta addresses the perishability of memory from many angles, but without a discernible pattern. Quixotic Obstinance, Quicksilver Memory
  • Owing to the perishability of the material, however, only a few have survived.
  • Dealing with their perishability is easy: Buy them fresh, bring them right home, keep them well chilled while you store them, and cook them as soon as possible, preferably the same day that you buy them. SARA MOULTON’S EVERYDAY FAMILY DINNERS
  • The online grocery business has proven difficult to succeed in given the perishability of fresh food and the industry's small profit margins, analysts have said. Walmart Online Grocery Delivery Service Tested In California
  • But with the kind of sales we're seeing there isn't much concern about perishability.
  • As a result, shippers, fruit jobbers, and retailers were primarily concerned about fruit weights, perishability, and aesthetic qualities, including color, flavor, and texture.
  • There's always a lot of attention paid to the perishability of 50-year-old works, but I'd argue that with the relatively short shelf life most SF & Fantasy books experience, producing ANYTHING for audio download ensures it will live on. IDW Announces New Science Fiction Line
  • The same concept of perishability applies to the technology embedded in exported goods.
  • There's an essay or series of linked essays patchworked in my mind that involve object and information persistence, perishability, pertinence, mutability, etc., which involve multiple dimensions.... Making Light: Amazon & Macmillan
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