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How To Use Wastage In A Sentence

  • Concerns about the clinical implications, the cost of routine medication, and the possible excessive wastage resulting from the return of units to the blood bank have led us to question our practice.
  • Voluntary redundancies and natural wastage will cut staff numbers to the required level.
  • He had lost half his body weight and suffered muscle wastage during his time in hospital. The Sun
  • Voluntary redundancies and natural wastage will cut staff numbers to the required level.
  • Mr Graber, you have acute muscle wastage caused by the steroidal hay-fever medication that you are taking.
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  • We have recently installed push button taps to stop dripping and wastage, and now they are looking at introducing water hogs for the toilet cistern to save on water.
  • Savings will be made through natural wastage. There will be no job losses.
  • He sees the wastage from the restaurants and God knows where. A World in Violence: Eruption to Hope?
  • Important advantages are its short makeready times of only seven minutes, as well as the minimum initial wastage of just 10 startup sheets to the first sheets of saleable quality. Aktuellste Pressemeldungen der PresseBox
  • When you consider that it costs more than that sum to construct just a good harbour, you can see there was no wastage there.
  • Houses in Ireland are performing very badly in terms of energy usage; wastage is very high, and homes are badly insulated.
  • In the 1980s he worked on syringomyelia, a degenerative disease that leads to muscle wastage.
  • Furthermore, energy wastage should be viewed as socially unacceptable, as it is in some other countries. Times, Sunday Times
  • Most of the savings will be made by natural wastage.
  • There is information on rainwater harvesting, roof water collection, a chart of wastage caused by unintentional use of water, and how to prevent this by simple methods such as stopping a faucet from leaking.
  • The jobs would go through natural wastage, such as retirement, and nobody would be forced to leave, trust chiefs have promised.
  • The state government has brought nuptials of all religious hues under the Essential Commodities Act to prevent wastage of food at wedding feasts.
  • Voluntary redundancies and natural wastage will cut staff numbers to the required level.
  • As we all know, the seat load factor on the Canadian route is, in actual terms, much higher than the average, so this means that most of the wastage is on routes between the UK and the USA. Aviation in the Next Decade
  • Always order an extra 10 per cent to cover wastage and breakages. Times, Sunday Times
  • Milk yields of infected dairy cattle can drop by 40 per cent and some animals that survive suffer muscle wastage. Times, Sunday Times
  • He expresses fears for Britain's farming industry and raises matters such as food wastage and the preservation of rare breeds. The Sun
  • Human resource planners are concerned with trends of employees leaving the organization, sometimes called wastage or turnover; but also with trends of internal employee movements. Personnel Management: A New Approach
  • Staff have been told that the equivalent of up to 1,000 jobs could go across the three sites by the end of 2004 by natural wastage.
  • What with the bias cutting wastage, this comes out pricey by anyone's measure. Times, Sunday Times
  • But he stressed that it should be possible to achieve the job reductions through natural wastage, with 20,000 people leaving work every year.
  • The matching impedance and wastage relate to the TWT can or can not work up to snuff. They are the problems which need be solved when we design the input and output apparatus.
  • But I would hope that the losses would be through natural wastage and early retirement, although I can't be specific.
  • Human resource planners are concerned with trends of employees leaving the organization, sometimes called wastage or turnover; but also with trends of internal employee movements. Personnel Management: A New Approach
  • The company hopes the job cuts will be made through natural wastage and voluntary redundancy.
  • Where possible these changes will be achieved through natural wastage, voluntary redundancy and redeployment.
  • Many of the 1,000 bingo cuts were natural wastage. Times, Sunday Times
  • The most common signs are muscle wastage, diarrhoea and respiratory distress in pigs aged between six and 14 weeks.
  • That will be delivered by natural wastage and voluntary redundancies.
  • The retailer has to absorb the cost of wastage.
  • It could also reduce food wastage which is estimated to cost at least 10 billion yuan every year.
  • This lack of jobs has resulted in a huge wastage of talent.
  • With enough notice, organisations can cut job numbers through natural wastage rather than by making people redundant. Times, Sunday Times
  • Participants were also questioned regarding their institutional practices and policies related to blood wastage.
  • The company hopes the job cuts will be made through natural wastage and voluntary redundancy.
  • The term wastage is somewhat misleading, if not erroneous. Aeroplanes and Dirigibles of War
  • The Secretariat is also launching a campaign aimed at persuading all users to reduce any unnecessary "wastage" of power. Lloyd Mexico Economic Report - May 2001
  • A figure of £424 was suggested for the annual food wastage per person every year.
  • Jobs will be lost, mainly through natural wastage. Times, Sunday Times
  • She has a rare progressive genetic condition that reduces her nerve fibres and results in muscle wastage. Times, Sunday Times
  • The use of harvesters and plastic crates has become essential to minimise wastage during harvesting and transportation.
  • This lack of jobs has resulted in a huge wastage of talent.
  • If it is necessary to reduce the number of posts we will firstly try to do this by natural wastage and then by voluntary means.
  • This lack of jobs has resulted in a huge wastage of talent.
  • Making a soup is a great way to use up leftover veg, so feel free to freestyle and embrace extras here and there to avoid wastage. The Sun
  • Voluntary redundancies and natural wastage will cut staff numbers to the required level.
  • This approach hopes for happy natural wastage. Times, Sunday Times
  • Danny has suffered a lot of muscle wastage throughout his illness, but there is no reason why he can't walk again.
  • Customers are asked by Kerry County Council to please use water sparingly, to check for leaks or wastage in their supply systems, to avoid watering lawns, washing cars etc, and to expect curtailments on the supplies, particularly at night
  • He said by the end of the process the Trust would be employing fewer people and the wage bill would be cut through staff relocation and natural wastage.
  • Thus, it was anticipated that a fighter force of 50 squadrons engaged in active operations would suffer wastage of 1,000 aircraft a month.
  • Existing crew will be offered voluntary redundancy or leave through natural wastage. Times, Sunday Times
  • Eustace bridge, upper Leeson street, though from prolonged summer drouth and daily supply of 12 1/2 million gallons the water had fallen below the sill of the overflow weir for which reason the borough surveyor and waterworks engineer, Mr Spencer Harty, C. E., on the instructions of the waterworks committee had prohibited the use of municipal water for purposes other than those of consumption (envisaging the possibility of recourse being had to the impotable water of the Grand and Royal canals as in 1893) particularly as the South Dublin Guardians, notwithstanding their ration of 15 gallons per day per pauper supplied through a 6 inch meter, had been convicted of a wastage of 20,000 gallons per night by Ulysses
  • Given the large and flexible workforce, much of this can be sorted out through natural wastage. Times, Sunday Times
  • Such a drug would not remove the need to exercise to build up muscles, but it would protect existing muscles against subsequent wastage. Times, Sunday Times
  • Although total wastage in Hurricanes and Spitfires approached 3,000, deliveries to the squadrons were in excess of 3,500.
  • It is obvious that the relatively low price of high grade primary aggregates discourages efficient use of available resources and increases wastage.
  • He could not rule out job losses, but said that, if necessary, that would be achieved through redeployment and natural wastage.
  • Furthermore the committee ask all members to look for and report any leaks and to turn off any running taps as there is serious wastage of water occurring, which has led to the present shortages.
  • And in the case of the latter possibility, or probability, the entire Antarctic Ice Sheet could well compensate for any long-term wastage of the Greenland Ice Sheet that might occur, in terms of how these phenomena impact global sea level. New Content on CO2 Science
  • Voluntary redundancies and natural wastage will cut staff numbers to the required level.
  • This is to encourage energy efficiency and to reduce energy wastage.
  • Membership should be reduced by natural wastage and no new entrants allowed until the number is halved. Times, Sunday Times
  • Jackson and; lack of equipment; advantages; conscription; munitions; relations with Federals at Vicksburg; Army of Northern Virginia; unrenewable wastage; number of troops (1865); Lee's farewell to Captains of the Civil War; a chronicle of the blue and the gray
  • Team coach Tim Murphy had no doubt that their prodigal first half wastage (they shot ten wides to Ballygunner's two) was critical in determining the outcome.
  • His weight loss has resulted in muscle wastage in his legs. Times, Sunday Times
  • Wastage in bulk or weight or any other loss or damage arising from inherent defect , quality or vice of the goods.
  • It is equally clear that, for a department with such a long track record of energy wastage, it should not be hard to make improvements. Times, Sunday Times
  • There is evidence, says Vincent, that the inner layer of muscles that support your lower back show muscle wastage in those experiencing back pain because every time you move you are bracing outer muscles to take the strain.
  • Our comparable figure by then is about - I think if you take our present rates, it is about 9 per cent wastage, but we then lose a further 4 per cent during the two years.
  • Where possible, flawed sections are removed and larger crystals cut into smaller pieces with minimal wastage by splitting the crystal along natural cleavage planes.
  • There is no muscle wastage here and she eats healthily. The Sun
  • Essex Police has decided not to replace those traffic wardens who leave the service through natural wastage.
  • This can lead to bodily weakness and muscle wastage.
  • These included physical exhaustion, muscle wastage and infertility. BLACK KNIGHTS: On the Bloody Road to Baghdad
  • It would also be useful for astronauts spending long periods in space, where the lack of gravity leads to muscle wastage. Times, Sunday Times
  • Their futures looked bleak at the beginning of last year after both were diagnosed with Battens Disease, a fatal condition causing muscle wastage.
  • Mr Brown's aides said it was hoped many of the jobs would go through natural wastage and voluntary redundancies.
  • British Airways said it aimed to achieve the cuts through voluntary means such as natural wastage.
  • Efficient management of creativity then succeeds in channeling these creative outputs into organizational goals, thereby reducing the wastage of resources.
  • Placing the product in a niche can be a tough choice, especially if the board wants the entire market, however it can limit wastage of productive resources.
  • Always allow for some wastage when ordering building materials.
  • If it can be achieved through natural wastage, when people leave, or through voluntary redundancy or early retirement we would still not be happy but it would lessen the impact.
  • To practical men of business like them he is the epitome of the wastage of human energy, he is a good-for-nothing.
  • Anaerobic facultative can remove more than 80% of TNT and RDX in the wastage. Aquatic organism (water hyacinth) can degradate TNT and RDX in some extent.
  • The retailer has to absorb the cost of wastage.
  • The strategy outlines Defence's commitment to reduce water consumption, minimise wastage and maximise use of waste water across Defence properties.
  • Although there is active corrosion and some wastage of the structure in the topside ballast tanks this is relatively minor, the fitting of anodes should arrest the corrosion and the wastage noted can be rectified at no great cost.
  • Because the drugs mentioned above are far more expensive than bronchodilator solutions, wastage of drug in a nebulizer needs to be minimized.
  • The lack of management will cause disorder, confusion, wastage, delay, destruction and even depression.
  • It was a new production technique aimed at minimizing wastage.
  • This paper analyses the coupling wastage in columniform wave guide gas laser, and gives the function between the coupling wastage of laser guide modulo EH11 and the position and radius of reflector.
  • Farmers tell him that livestock graze the sward very tightly so there is no wastage.
  • On a regular morning walk at Marine Drive with her neuro-psychiatrist husband, an infertility specialist was discussing wants vs. needs and how she could avoid wastage in the lab.
  • A lot of wastage can be avoided in toilets, baths and kitchens too with careful planning.
  • Wastage was no doubt a necessary consequence of war.
  • Human resource planners are concerned with trends of employees leaving the organization, sometimes called wastage or turnover; but also with trends of internal employee movements. Personnel Management: A New Approach
  • By getting the domestic consumer to pay an amount of money that is based on usage, there will be more awareness and less wastage of a valuable natural resource.
  • We cannot afford this wastage of our best young minds. Times, Sunday Times
  • The organisation will hire more new officers in the next few months than the total it lost through voluntary redundancy and natural wastage last year. Times, Sunday Times
  • Membership should be reduced by natural wastage and no new entrants allowed until the number is halved. Times, Sunday Times
  • The hope is that job losses of about 1,000 will be obtained by natural wastage. Times, Sunday Times
  • Its storage heaters, which will be produced at the rate of over 600,000 a year in the Shanyang Dimplex joint venture plant, will help to control pollution by reducing wastage.
  • Existing crew will be offered voluntary redundancy or leave through natural wastage. Times, Sunday Times
  • A disciplined approach was introduced to avoid wastage in every department.
  • But this is a compelling history, tinged with sadness, not only for the human suffering and wastage, but also at the despoiling of a unique and magnificent landscape and destruction of the nomadic way of life.
  • In addition , the hydrogen detection by gas chromatography brought less molestation, wastage and time consumption.
  • Often this wastage is a direct result of cost shifting between federal and state/territory governments.
  • Doesn't an automated parking fee system do away with the wastage of destroying unsold coupons every two years, or ensure non-evasion of parking fees, or even eradicate littering in car parks?
  • It is hoped that the bulk of the cuts will be reached through natural wastage, voluntary redundancies and outsourcing of contracts for activities like cleaning and catering.
  • Cheap and nasty food becomes even cheaper and nastier to subsidise the horrendous wastage.
  • They simply cannot be replaced after natural wastage.
  • It is important to insulate under the heating pipes to prevent wastage, particularly if you live in a flat - you don't want to end up providing your downstairs neighbour with a new heating system.
  • Managers hope to make the reductions through natural wastage, retraining and redeployment.
  • The company has made considerable savings through good housekeeping, such as avoiding wastage.
  • Patients need exercise to prevent muscle wastage.
  • Farmers tell him that livestock graze the sward very tightly so there is no wastage.
  • But the corresponding wastage on the Southern side was unrenewed and unrenewable. Captains of the Civil War; a chronicle of the blue and the gray
  • Patients need exercise to prevent muscle wastage.
  • We must decide whether we are serious about environmental blight and energy wastage or not. Times, Sunday Times
  • If we were to compare him, to some extent with Tariq Aziz, the Former Iraqi Foreign Minister and the 'public face' of Former Saddam Hussain's Regime, McClellan, does owe the people of the United States and Iraq and the world an explanation as to why he served an Administration which made war on another country, at such a high cost in wastage of human lives, livelihood and national resources. Blitzer: Most explosive charges I can remember
  • Thankfully, faith in the surgeon was justified and three operations later Weller made a full recovery, following one more season of frustration due to muscle wastage caused by 60-odd days in hospital.
  • First, there is a reduction in feed wastage; second, there is an improvement in the digestibility of nutrients.
  • Poorly maintained sprayers result in wastage of inputs and uneven control of pests, weeds and diseases.
  • Weight training also helps to slow down the rate of sarcopenia, or muscle wastage in the ageing, which can lead to a decrease of up to 40% muscle mass in 60-year-olds and older.
  • The company hopes the job cuts will be made through natural wastage and voluntary redundancy.
  • This indicated that first year examination results were a far superior predictor of wastage than the A-level scores of entrants.
  • It was a new production technique aimed at minimizing wastage.
  • The union has been fully consulted from the outset and we have worked with them to ensure that voluntary redundancies and natural wastage has been maximised to the fullest.
  • Voluntary redundancies and natural wastage will cut staff numbers to the required level.
  • He ruminated on the terrible wastage that typified American life.
  • This can lead to bodily weakness and muscle wastage.
  • Currently, at least 95% of agricultural produce reaches the end consumer through unorganised marketing channels like mandis, which many a times leads to price fluctuations, wastage and poor quality, according to MVS Efarm. Produce Supplier Gets Venture Capital Funding
  • Wastage was no doubt a necessary consequence of war.
  • What many of the experts who develop these programs fail to point out is that the body is extremely catabolic after an eight-hour fast and its metabolism is at its slowest point, which furthers fat loss and increases muscle wastage. Body by Design
  • There is bound to be some natural wastage as there is in any industry, but this area is still likely to retain one of the highest levels of employment in the country and possibly the world.
  • What with the bias cutting wastage, this comes out pricey by anyone's measure. Times, Sunday Times
  • Of course the great wastage is in the verbs and adjectives, but there are hundreds of nouns that can be got rid of as well. Nineteen Eighty-Four
  • The houses and bungalows will be timber-framed and clad with UK-grown timbers, roofed with recycled slates and insulated with recycled newspaper while the plumbing system is designed to cut water wastage.
  • Both must get into top gear with almost immediate effect if they are to have a significant impact on graft and wastage and mechanisms must be put in place to ensure that these are minimised on all fronts.
  • There's already a perceptible muscle wastage in her hind quarters, and I have been encouraging her to take a little exercise: one of her endearing traits is that she can almost always be persuaded to take a walk with me.
  • You must allow for five per cent wastage in transit.
  • There is still too much centralism - all roads do indeed lead to Brussels - and wastage and inefficiency have not been removed from the administrative systems.
  • If power is given free to farmers, they will not care to switch it off soon even after their job is finished; thus, it will result in wastage.
  • Due to high media rates, heavy clutter, and difficulty in reaching discrete targets (i.e., unavoidable media "wastage" or "overdelivery"), building equity is expensive. Tom Doctoroff: How MNCs Fail in China: Six Common Mistakes
  • You must allow for five per cent wastage in transit.
  • The company has made considerable savings through good housekeeping, such as avoiding wastage.
  • Others spoke of wastage and the government leading by example.
  • During the off-season, you have to work on your muscles to prevent wastage.
  • He noted that the problem the region had in the fisheries sector have been the non optimal utilisation of existing resources hence the need to address issues of quality control and wastage arising from inadequate processing facilities.
  • What with the bias cutting wastage, this comes out pricey by anyone's measure. Times, Sunday Times
  • Although economists see this as a reward for financial mismanagement and wastage of tax payer's money, many defend the move.
  • Where possible, flawed sections are removed and larger crystals cut into smaller pieces with minimal wastage by splitting the crystal along natural cleavage planes.
  • I hope that the council at least passes its used cartridges to a recycling agent but by continuing to buy new cartridges it perpetuates oil wastage.
  • There is little wastage from a lean cut of meat.
  • The company hopes the job cuts will be made through natural wastage and voluntary redundancy.
  • Milk yields of infected dairy cattle can drop by 40 per cent and some animals that survive suffer muscle wastage. Times, Sunday Times
  • Used by astronauts to boost muscular performance in space and thus prevent muscle wastage, the trainer is now used by professional football players in Barcelona Football Club.
  • Processing is then designed to minimize wastage and maximize data collection.
  • After all, so many simple things are overlooked in most houses, such as using the optimum amount of water for cooking, getting leaking taps repaired in time and avoiding wastage of water in general.
  • The company has been taking stringent cost control measures, new trade management strategies and increasing efforts to implement lean management programmes and eliminate wastage in all areas of manufacturing.
  • Tories say the job losses would be achieved through natural wastage and voluntary redundancies.
  • Membership should be reduced by natural wastage and no new entrants allowed until the number is halved. Times, Sunday Times
  • Slowly his mood improved, although his long confinement in a hospital room led to muscle wastage. Times, Sunday Times
  • You must allow for five per cent wastage in transit.
  • In this way, people will naturally dismiss egoism, desires for material wealth, extravagance and wastage.
  • Meanwhile, the Audit Commission's scathing report on the running of the criminal justice system says the £80m wastage would pay for thousands more police officers.
  • It is also expected to shed jobs through natural wastage in order to keep costs down.
  • I had never seen him look so old; for there, at that moment, I beheld the wastage and weariness of all his sixty-nine years of sea-battling and sea-staring. CHAPTER XXXVIII
  • It also leads to muscle wastage in frail patients, who remain in bed without moving. The Sun
  • It causes progressive muscle wastage and death. Times, Sunday Times
  • Food wastage is also something people are more conscious of now, and storing food in containers is preferable to throwing it in the bin. Times, Sunday Times
  • Indeed, Japan went so far as to plan for 50% of its power to come from nuclear by 2030, in a nation where people have grown accustomed to not having to open doors because electric motor-driven doors open automatically, and there is similar use or wastage of power, depending on the perspective of the beholder. Sunil Chacko: Cost of Nuclear Power May Enable Renewable Energy to Gain Further Ground
  • Every -- the -- the -- what they called "wastage" -- that was the word that the British army used, meaning the casualties that occur every day without there being a major engagement going on. A Storm in Flanders: The Ypres Salient, 1914-1918: Tragedy and Triumph on the Western Front
  • However, there is 10 per cent wastage on the flowers purchased.
  • We want to get best value for taxpayers and cut wastage by up to 10 per cent by improving the way we spend money on services.
  • The company has made considerable savings through good housekeeping, such as avoiding wastage.
  • Amalgamating the control rooms resulted in the loss of half of the staff through redundancy and natural wastage.
  • The company hopes the job cuts will be made through natural wastage and voluntary redundancy.
  • Lecture [2] sets forth the view that the influence of war on the race, both directly and indirectly, is injurious; he admits that there may be beneficial as well as deteriorative influences, but the former merely affect the moral atmosphere, not the hereditary germ plasm; biologically, war means wastage and a reversal of rational selection, since it prunes off a disproportionally large number of those whom the race can least afford to lose. Essays in War-Time Further Studies in the Task of Social Hygiene
  • A hose with a nozzle or a gun on the end means you can control it and stop the flow, instantly leading to less wastage. Times, Sunday Times
  • A removable fibre cast pot means the 31-year-old can already do vital stretching exercises on his ankle and knee that will prevent muscle wastage.
  • However, one of the effects of long-term overuse of alcohol is considerable weight loss and muscle wastage, which are recognised consequences of the way alcohol damages the body. Undefined
  • He added that staff had been informed there would be no more redundancies - if future jobs needed to be shed, they would try be sourced through natural wastage.
  • Wastage was no doubt a necessary consequence of war.
  • You must allow for five per cent wastage in transit.
  • And the fact that food must be consumed quickly means that wastage is high.
  • Making a soup is a great way to use up leftover veg, so feel free to freestyle and embrace extras here and there to avoid wastage. The Sun
  • There is very little wastage on bottled beers, spirits and minerals.

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