unremunerative การใช้
- This service also proved unremunerative and was withdrawn in October.
- The post was an unremunerative sinecure.
- Bounties were offered for dead dogs until it was found that policemen were capturing dogs for a reward instead of chasing unremunerative criminals.
- Beaumont enthusiastically agreed, but Picasso's dealer Paul Rosenberg persuaded the artist to drop that idea as too unremunerative for the amount of work involved.
- In recognition of unremunerative work, Thorpe was granted a civil list pension of ?60 in 1835, and on 17 June 1841 this was increased to ?00 per annum.
- The reason for this was that the line was one of those slated for closure in the first Beeching report published in 1963, listing it as an unremunerative line.
- Many rural branch lines considered to be loss-making were to be closed, in hand with a major reduction in unremunerative wagonload goods traffic and many other changes.
- Later he freighted again until 1880, when the railroad was built, and rendering his business unremunerative, he sold his teams and other paraphernalia of the freighting outfits.
- He invited the BRB to apply for an " unremunerative railway grant " for the rest of the line, a new subsidy which would shortly be introduced by Section 39 of the Transport Act 1968.
- The relatively crude, labour-intensive nature of surviving mining techniques contributed to the false impression that India was poorly endowed with mineral resources or that they were inaccessible or otherwise difficult and unremunerative to work.
- From 1 March 1883, the District operated a service between Mansion House and Windsor, using Great Western Railway tracks from a junction installed just east of Ealing Broadway station, but it was unremunerative and ceased on 30 September 1885.
- The publication of the Beeching Report in 1963 saw the Great Central identified as an unremunerative line earning less than ?, 000 per week in revenue and it was proposed to withdraw passenger services from the line as far as Banbury.
- In other cases they'll work part-time, perhaps as interns, often as volunteers, in entirely new fields, or they'll undertake the advanced study of fascinating but unremunerative things ( comparative lit, anyone ? ).
- An unremunerative railway grant was awarded and the Minister formally refused consent to close the section from Hurst Green junction on 1 January 1969, whilst authorising closure of the 10 miles between Uckfield and Lewes and the section between Ashurst Junction and Groombridge Junction.
- Anyone who has ever struggled to achieve success as an actor in New York is likely to identify with Lena and her friends, who study, accept unremunerative roles in workshop productions and get rare roles only to be ignored or slighted by some undistinguished critic, should the play even merit a review.
- He wrote to a colleague : " Generally in spite of all my hard work, I find water colour to be thoroly [ sic ] unremunerative that I can stand it no longer it is all, all always, rolling the stone up the hill no rest, and such little pay !"
- He paid a short visit to Edinburgh in 1833 and engaged in historical work, but found it so unremunerative that he returned to Aberdeen, and supported himself chiefly by writing for the " Aberdeen Courier, " afterwards the " Aberdeen Constitutional, " which he edited for four years.
- Job interviews and other data on requirements for lower skilled workers in developed countries particularly in the growing service sector indicate that the more workers depend on low wages, and the less skilled or desirable their job is, the more employers screen for workers without better employment options and expect them to feign unremunerative motivation.
- The DR built its own three-platform station to the north of the GWR one, although, following the installation of a connection between the two railways to the east of the stations, DR trains also served the GWR station from 1 March 1883, on a short-lived service running to station, which was withdrawn as unremunerative on 30 September 1885.
- The diocese of Mondo馿do during the time of Gonzalo's episcopate has been described as " economically unremunerative and exposed to attack from the sea; the endowments . . . were meagre; and the bishops were overshadowed in wealth and influence by the great monastery of Lourenz?. " Gonzalo's tenure was spent fighting to sustain the integrity of his diocese, generally unsuccessfully.