111.   Ownership in every business can be counted on to seize every opportunity to cut corners and exploit workers.

112.   Patient advocates, however, are worried that privatization could result in reduced access to health care as companies cut corners to make money.

113.   Only the defendants, of course, know in their heart of hearts whether they set out to cut legal corners.

114.   Other corners are cut by using cheaper buttons and flimsier heels.

115.   Pointing to health care, they warn that market incentives bring the temptation to cut corners and wring larger returns.

116.   Republicans portrayed a money-hungry Clinton campaign that cut corners and possibly violated the law to raise funds.

117.   Ritter asserts pressure from on high to cut corners and stop probing concealment techniques frustrated the inspectors and led him to quit as a team leader.

118.   Republicans portrayed the Clinton White House and the Democratic Party as obsessed with raising money and willing to cut corners and break laws to do so.

119.   Scientists under pressure to publish and secure grants were seen as being tempted to cut corners or fudge data.

120.   She explains that airliners are built safe but that deregulation has put such economic pressure on the airlines that corners have been cut.

v. + corner >>共 288
turn 30.54%
cut 13.18%
round 4.74%
have 3.09%
take 2.88%
work 1.30%
reach 1.30%
fight 1.10%
play 1.03%
leave 0.96%
cut + n. >>共 936
cost 13.27%
tax 4.73%
rate 4.57%
price 3.88%
job 2.05%
production 1.70%
tie 1.68%
number 1.42%
deficit 1.17%
deal 1.15%
corner 1.06%
每页显示:    共 191