How To Use Shoring In A Sentence

  • Movements like onshoring, pushed by the current administration, have gained steam as the jobs market remains anemic.
  • For many multinationals, in fact, offshoring can be a public-relations nightmare at both ends of the pipeline.
  • And then came the off-shoring of America's industry and jobs hemorrhaged. Sen. Fritz Hollings: U.S. Is in a Trade War, Whether It Likes It or Not
  • In this regard, offshoring is likely to show up more in the compensation trends of our domestic workers in affected sectors than in their employment trends.
  • To date, 35 state legislatures have drafted bills addressing offshoring and 161 state laws restricting or banning offshoring have been proposed.
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  • The short term savings from offshoring or onshoring are pocket change relative to losing the value of the intellectual property.
  • Attempts to shore up the value of a derivative without shoring up the value of the assets from which they ultimately derive their value are likely to be in vain however cleverly we may try to finagle.
  • Widespread opposition to a proposed Afghan law is less about liberating women than shoring up Western authority.
  • The new public relations manager has the difficult task of shoring up the company's troubled image.
  • Outsourced homeshoring jobs grew 20% last year, to 112,000 jobs, estimates tech-market researcher IDC, and will hit 330,000 by 2010. Archive 2006-01-01
  • But this country's response to offshoring cannot be protectionism - although protecting a few jobs in certain places will be necessary.
  • Carrington said many U.S. companies who outsource prefer to use U. S.-based employees - called "homeshoring" - instead of those in call centers in India or other countries. Gazette.com :
  • Speed Shore's Shoring Shields combine the benefits of aluminum hydraulic shoring with the solid-wall security of a static shield.
  • The TAA program should be expanded to cover individuals dislocated by offshoring in service industries or in public employment.
  • The first great offshoring of service jobs occurred when back-office work and call centers went to Northern Ireland over a decade ago.
  • Shoring up vertical trench walls and shielding workers from cave-ins are more than just sound excavating safety practices.
  • Those losses are caused as much, or more, by productivity gains from automation than from so-called offshoring.
  • Shoring up domestic output, protecting employment and achieving recovery took precedence over fighting inflation, defending exchange-rate parities or preserving the gold value of the currency.
  • No shoring, no boring, no blasting, no jackhammers, not even a shield to contain a breakout. CORMORANT
  • The trend, known as onshoring or reshoring, is gaining momentum as a weak U.S. dollar makes it costlier to import products from overseas. Caterpillar Joins 'Onshoring' Trend
  • A dash of the same brine will help keep the ballast right, then a skysail-yard breakfast must be carefully stowed away, in order to give a firmness to the timbers, and on the strength of these two blocks for shoring up the hull, you must begin little by little, and keep on brightening up until you have got the craft all right again. An Outcast or, Virtue and Faith
  • The money could be spent on shoring up doors and windows as well as measures to protect interiors and wiring.
  • If the ground gets worse, we're closing down until we have proper shoring. CORMORANT
  • We've been onshoring customer service for 40 years, knowing that a local, dedicated staff in the countries we work in is key to our clients' success.
  • Another story takes a longer look at one homeshoring firm, Decisions Design.
  • What Blagojevich is doing is what "normal" politicians call shoring up their base. The Senate has the power to exclude Roland Burris, say lawprofs Akhil Reed Amar and Josh Chafetz.
  • But because they are some distance away from the older basement walls and footings, there was no shoring of existing foundation required during construction.
  • Others include off-shoring, co-sourcing, subcontracting, leasing, computerising and open sourcing. Times, Sunday Times
  • From a political point of view he's also been very effective in shoring up his popularity. The Softer Side of Ashcroft
  • The shoring also enabled the construction of new foundations without disrupting existing utility systems.
  • In a few hours, with the aid of some telephone poles and some shoring, the Chinese lifted the wing, Tex lowered the gear and drove the down lock in with a sledge hammer.
  • Fausto Fasano spoke about an experiment on code inspection, while the final presentation Rafael Prikladnicki from PUCRS examined different offshoring and onshoring strategies. The ICGSE in Munich
  • In this paper author deals with anchors - gunite - web shoring's mechanism and its effecting factor.
  • It would be ironic for the United States, which has invested so much of its prestige in shoring up historic Lebanon, were constitutional reform to increase rather than diminish Syrian influence within the country. Shedding Light on Lebanon
  • Following the "homeshoring" meme, there are lots of reports this month about American firms souring on offshore outsourcing and reverting to onshore outsourcing instead.
  • Onshoring of production of these other fuel efficiency components is already happening.
  • No shoring, no boring, no blasting, no jackhammers, not even a shield to contain a breakout. CORMORANT
  • The US debate over offshoring of high skilled jobs is of more than academic interest to New Zealand.
  • The rise of "homeshoring" -- the practice of putting outsourced call-center work in the hands of home-based workers right here in America -- is in part a move by some companies to recapture customer loyalty and in part an acknowledgement that overseas operations often create more drawbacks than their savings are worth. MarketWatch.com - Top Stories
  • But does this policy solution also make sense vis-à-vis the challenges posed by offshoring of service employment?
  • What's interesting about onshoring is that it's not in competition with offshoring or outsourcing. The Outsourcing Rush Is Over
  • Teams of carpenters and laborers begin positioning column forms and setting up shoring for the floor above.
  • 58% of respondents said that for production that has either already been nearshored or is being considered for nearshoring, they have reduced their total "landed cost" by up to 20%.
  • In a globalized world and given the economic environment in the West, onshoring should be given as much importance as offshoring.
  • But it's cozier in there; the smolder of tobacco fumes collects on the structural beams that maintain the shelter and mixes with raw breath to mildew man and trench shoring.
  • Most of the new homeshoring jobs are independent contractor positions offered by outsourcing companies. Archive 2006-01-01
  • The term outsourcing is often used interchangeably-and incorrectly-with offshoring, usually by those in a heated debate. CIO.in
  • Stronger standards are also leading to more onshoring of American jobs.
  • Soon after being brought on, Sally was given a thorough "onshoring" training course at the company's US headquarters. The Daily WTF
  • Further benefits are derived from offshoring through the ability of US corporations to deliver their services back to the USA more cheaply.
  • Digging is not without its hazards - landslides or rockfall are a serious hazard in some cases and may require properly engineered shoring.
  • Welcome to a growing trend called "homeshoring," with thousands of positions available to be filled right now. Forbes.com: News
  • I am still underimpressed that trade in goods is the same as offshoring labor. Getting Ricardo Wrong, Arnold Kling | EconLog | Library of Economics and Liberty
  • A similar number of posts were cut in 2003 when the company, losing money heavily at the time, announced it was off-shoring some operations to India.
  • Demands for reduced cycle times provide an incentive for nearshoring or onshoring.
  • The popular word these days is homeshoring.
  • From forcefully chaperoning the merger of two French pharmaceutical giants to shoring up ailing engineering group Alstom, Sarkozy has been giving new meaning to the old concept of dirigisme.
  • In an ironic counterpart to the trend of offshoring programmer jobs to India, the business of writing about programming is also on the move.
  • To erect the trusses, the steel erector used twelve 78-ft-tall shoring towers, one under each tip of each cantilever.
  • Shoring up Fannie and Freddie will also compensate for tighter credit elsewhere.
  • In December, workers removed the steel shoring that had held the home up since 1997.
  • The airline has figured out how to cut costs and still avoid offshoring.
  • The shoring was removed, so that the tunnel started to collapse, and protesters were dragged out by ropes attached to handcuffs.
  • The measures were aimed at shoring up the economy.
  • For tech workers, at least, the threat of offshoring is also a strong motivator.
  • Here's a link to a press release from Housteau, a firm dealing with homeshoring, opening up a new development center in Columbus.
  • A mind-set has emerged busying itself with quick fixes, stopping change or shoring up its excesses.
  • But it's cozier in there; the smolder of tobacco fumes collects on the structural beams that maintain the shelter and mixes with raw breath to mildew man and trench shoring.
  • It credits the need for reskilling and the threat of offshoring for the the increase in numbers.
  • Given the stringent requirement that no temporary shoring be used in the river during erection, cantilever construction was deemed the most suitable method.
  • Still, offshoring can test the management skills of some startups.
  • Therefore, our tunnels (unlike the fancy ones you have seen in the movies) were about two feet in diameter with no bracing or shoring of any kind.
  • I think offshoring and outspourcing played traunt. Think Progress » Cavuto to Krugman: ‘You Are Lying To People’
  • Shoring was removed as final welds and structural diaphragms were added to ensure that the primary structural system performed as intended.
  • This suggests that energy-intensive sectors are more likely to experience onshoring.
  • Nevertheless, for Thagard, there are still ways of shoring up coherence with varying degrees of vigour.
  • Companies looking to save money by offshoring would make bigger savings by looking at the processes behind their software development.
  • The island's seawall, which is more than 100 years old, also requires shoring up, and some 1.4 million square feet of historic buildings need restoration. City Readies Island Money
  • There was a host of tasks, from shoring up the fire escape to re-wiring to new windows.
  • They're perfect for shoring up unfilling salads and brothy soups, stuffing small birds and pork loins or standing in for rice in risottos. Get Your Freekeh On
  • Despite the discouraging outlook, many black-owned businesses are proving that offshoring does not spell the end of contracting as we know it.
  • Chances are that while you are there a carpenter or glazier will be at work shoring up as window or correcting a lean.
  • The irony of the Reformation was that in the name of shoring up the old order, its dogmatism unintentionally gave birth to the living traditions of civil and political liberty. Telegraph.co.uk - Telegraph online, Daily Telegraph and Sunday Telegraph
  • Broken cultures therapeutically confabulate, mythologise former ways of life, and fight off meaninglessness by shoring up crumbling identities.
  • Crews first remove the shoring, followed by the formwork.
  • There is a trend back to onshoring with more work being done here because you've got better consistency of quality.
  • The Iranian government asserts absolute control: by taking on the intellectual and political elite sympathetic to the opposition; by asserting control over key ministries; and shoring up the alliances of its myriad armed forces including the Revolutionary Guard, the Army, the Police and the feared baseej militia. Christopher Herbert and Victoria Kataoka Rebuffet: Weekly Foreign Affairs Roundup
  • ProLogis has succeeded in shoring up its balance sheet with asset sales since late 2008, when some analysts were warning of bankruptcy. ProLogis, Blackstone Near $1 Billion Property Agreement
  • Want some shoring in anyway before they start tunnelling again. CORMORANT
  • China is no longer the low-cost supplier of labor, and onshoring is becoming a viable possibility for many companies.
  • But this group must do better in shoring up a 25th-ranked run defense. Raiders have JaMarcus ... now can they improve?
  • I thought dunning Burner for wanting to raise the cap on SS withholding and then accusing her of wanting to "raise taxes" was deceptive --- especially when you consider that Ronald Reagan DOUBLED SS withholding under the guise of saving retirement money for Baby Boomers and then spent ALL of the money on his dubious military prjects and in shoring up an economy that was failing because of tax breaks for the rich. Sound Politics: Seattle Times endorses Reichert
  • Follow his advice and you'll turbocharge muscle growth, drive up your metabolism, and increase your bone density, while shoring up your joints.
  • By elevating individual liberties so far above the common good -- without reference to justice -- those who absolutize these virtues unwittingly undermine democracy instead of shoring it up. Tim Suttle: The Irony Of The Tea Party
  • Offshoring's underestimated sibling, homeshoring, is about to hit a growth spurt," says IDC analyst Stephen Loynd. From On High
  • At issue is a megabuck Pentagon jet deal that could go a long way toward shoring up Boeing's bottom line.
  • We should cheer the good news, of course, but the downgrading of offshoring as a national issue is a big mistake.
  • Justified or not, the call for reparations seems to me to be based around shoring up racial tensions rather than diffusing them.
  • Parcel pusher DHL is considering offshoring the last remnants of its IT department.
  • The bad experiences are creating a boomerang effect -- the return of jobs to the United States -- which some have dubbed "onshoring. SHOULD I STAY OR SHOULD I GO?
  • Keeping the supply chain local is part of a new trend called onshoring, a push back against the offshoring and outsourcing that has sent jobs and manufacturing overseas, and gobbled up fossil fuels. ScrippsNews
  • They also set shoring up their legal claim against Portugal's pretensions to the newly discovered lands.
  • Indeed, offshoring - sending work overseas - isn't always all it's made out to be.
  • As much as I’m an advocate for progressive labor laws, all this off shoring is a direct response to the (relatively) high expectations for laborers in this country. Waldo Jaquith - What’s wrong with this picture?
  • Beams spanning the roof to shoring towers on either side were located slightly offset from roof arches, which align with skylight mullions.
  • They have reacted with a mixture of dismay and anger to the spate of legislative activity aimed at banning overseas outsourcing or offshoring of government contracts.
  • Knowledge-based offshoring could play a critical role for many technology start-ups. Times, Sunday Times
  • The company will be onshoring parts of the assembly process for its PCs throughout the south, the blog said.
  • CHRISTINE ROMANS, CNN CORRESPONDENT: A company that is homeshoring, as it calls it, not offshoring. CNN Transcript Aug 24, 2004
  • Removing the rusty metal presented us with a somewhat unstable-looking climb down of about 4m complete with plenty of scaffolding shoring.
  • Bank profits are being channelled into shoring up their balance sheets, rather than new investments.
  • Removing the rusty metal presented us with a somewhat unstable-looking climb down of about 4m complete with plenty of scaffolding shoring.
  • Here's where the accelerated practice of offshoring creates a new and prodigious challenge.
  • This would be consistent with the homeshoring phenomenon of tech sectors doing well in lower-wage areas outside of Silicon Valley.
  • Talk of offshoring can get them hot under the collar.
  • That manufacturers are not only nearshoring their own operations, but also their subcontractors and vendors as well.
  • It is time to expand this program to workers who lose service jobs to offshoring.
  • I'm not sure we have any comparative advantage, for example, in trivial feats in software design or education - aren't we off-shoring software jobs because other countries have relatively good software designers as a result of their relatively good educational systems? Where Can America Compete?, Arnold Kling | EconLog | Library of Economics and Liberty
  • It is joyous stuff, evoking for me not only happy days of yore in Len's studio but also shoring up my belief that Len's cutlines (captions, you'd say) were masterpieces of the English language.
  • The system's stay-in-place design also suits commercial flooring applications as it eliminates the need to strip forms and reduces the need for shoring compared with wood flooring systems.
  • Moreover, thicker slab areas and extra shoring had to be provided along a predetermined load path, a path that had to be carefully marked on the base slab to restrict and guide crane movement.
  • And although some companies are already moving to other countries, the effect on onshoring trends i.e. returning employment to the West will take a very long time. Immigration Holds Key to Labor Shortage
  • Offshoring is merely the latest manifestation of a well-established process.
  • His last hope of shoring up his flagging position was to relieve Richard's great fortress of Château-Gaillard, the key to Normandy, which Philip was besieging.
  • How can you simultaneously defend the practice of offshore outsourcing but still celebrate homeshoring?
  • No shoring, no boring, no blasting, no jackhammers, not even a shield to contain a breakout. CORMORANT
  • The software company represents the fourth solution, U.S. onshoring.
  • The end result of corporate adjustments to offshoring is a boost in Ryla's revenues, which are expected to hit $7 million in fiscal 2004.
  • The botched experiment led the company to the notion of "homeshoring centers" in the United States that nonetheless offer low costs to customers.
  • Lower House Speaker Gianfranco Fini said that parliament would pass the reforms by Sunday aimed at boosting growth and shoring up public finances in a so-called "maxi amendment" to the 2012 budget currently before parliament. Reuters: Press Release
  • Offshore tax domiciling is, of course, an entirely different issue than offshoring. Ian Fletcher: Lessons Learned: How John Kerry Blew It on Trade in 2004
  • He expects this outsourcing and offshoring to increase and insists both practices will benefit the US economy in the long run.
  • The sensationalist press is quite content in front-paging the frenzied screams of the anti-offshoring activists - all gleefully flaunting their PhDs in `I told you so'.
  • The option to captive offshoring is to outsource to a third party vendor abroad, something that is seen as being more cost effective and in some ways more painless.
  • Two days after the attack, Urban Search and Rescue crews from Montgomery County, Virginia worked to clear debris and strengthen temporary shoring at the disaster site.
  • All in all, shoring up the line of lower-profile ongoings seems like a better deal than banking on scattershot miniseries. Six in one hand… | Robot 6 @ Comic Book Resources – Covering Comic Book News and Entertainment
  • Other techniques are emerging: off-shoring, sub-contracting, homesourcing, relocating and leasing of lawyers. Times, Sunday Times
  • Whether you call it "onshoring," or "insourcing," it's good news and it's beginning to take root in cities and regions across the country. Forbes.com: News
  • And, for help on getting the best homeowners insurance coverage without skimping, read our article on  shoring up your coverage from Consumer Reports Money Adviser. Lightning strikes twice? Not quite, but it's hitting homes more often.

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