at any expense การใช้
- I don't know, but education is the answer, education at any expense.
- At any expense I decided to admit these crimes and I know that even life imprisonment may follow,
- In the hallway beyond, table top after table top was covered with materials emphasizing survival at any expense.
- While we're going through due diligence and it would be nice, it cannot come at any expense of our CART program.
- Investors said the composition of the new cabinet allayed some concern the government would be composed of officials bent on cutting unemployment at any expense.
- At the top of the list was working with the White House and congressional Democrats to shore up the Social Security system, but not at any expense.
- "I could support something reasonable as far as Mars is concerned, " he said, adding : " But not at any expense ."
- "It was kind of cruel in a way, " he said the other day, adding that he wanted the shot but certainly not at any expense.
- Not having a pile of IPO-generated cash, Dolce said, has forced a sharper focus on getting to profitability, instead of " driving top-line revenue growth at any expense ."
- In a March 1969 internal memo, another Grace executive wrote, " The inclination of public agencies to protect the worker at any expense ( usually the employer's ) . . . should be of considerable concern to us.
- One criticism ( not entirely unfounded ) that Wikipedia often garners is its level of detail in TV shows, sci-fi, anime, etc ., potentially at the expense of other subjects ( though whether this is really at any expense is clearly debatable ).
- "If we want to enter Europe, we have to change some priorities, but we can't do it at any expense, " said Valerio Calderoni, chief executive of a maker of silver tableware founded a century ago by his grandfather in a town near Novara.
- In a 1940 speech, Roosevelt argued, " Some, indeed, still hold to the now somewhat obvious delusion that we & can safely permit the United States to become a lone island & in a world dominated by the philosophy of force . " A national survey found that in the summer of 1940, 67 % of Americans believed that a German-Italian victory would endanger the United States, that if such an event occurred 88 % supported " arm [ ing ] to the teeth at any expense to be prepared for any trouble ", and that 71 % favored " the immediate adoption of compulsory military training for all young men ".