physical price การใช้
- Among many players paying a physical price was Wayne Gretzky.
- The role hads its physical price to pay as well.
- In boxing, the physical price is always the steepest.
- "That's something we've been asking the guys to do more of, to pay that physical price,"
- You've got to pay a physical price ."
- There is a physical price to play San Jose and we have to be willing to pay it.
- NEW ORLEANS _ Some cheerleaders pay a high physical price for their efforts to boost team spirit, according to a Boston study.
- There are two things that have kept him out of the NHL _ consistent play and ability to pay the physical price,
- U . S . natural gas physical prices fell Monday on light demand and moderate weather forecasts for the short term, traders said.
- But both need to be aware that there will be a physical price to be paid when the days of athletic glory are over.
- The country slipped into a recession as the Japanese Yen shot upagainst the Ringgit and physical price of key commodities like petroleumand palm oil collapsed.
- Each time the survivors went to speak before a legislative body and an investigative body, there was always a physical price that had to be paid.
- If you're looking at a team that's trying to win a championship, you have to pay a physical price, and our team is willing to do that ."
- One can imagine curators and museum directors worldwide succumbing to pressure to ship fragile works against their better judgment; even if everything returns home safely, such journeys exact a physical price and can preclude loans to more serious exhibitions.
- If Warner plays well enough this preseason to reclaim his status as an N . F . L . starter that was lost in St . Louis, he will pay a physical price for the opportunity, that much is clear.
- Rightfully so, Keenan feels it took his charges weeks, in some cases months, to get his message : that there is physical price and commitment needed to win in today's NHL . It's hard to believe, but they needed to learn that.
- No one can measure, however, the emotional or physical price paid by uranium miners, many with little understanding of the risks of their jobs, of GIs ordered to hunker down in the desert and feel the blast effects rush over them during tests, or of " down winders,'civilians in surrounding areas.