Sentences Generator
And
Your saved sentences

No sentences have been saved yet

10 Sentences With "noncommercially"

How to use noncommercially in a sentence? Find typical usage patterns (collocations)/phrases/context for "noncommercially" and check conjugation/comparative form for "noncommercially". Mastering all the usages of "noncommercially" from sentence examples published by news publications.

"There are some things that operate better noncommercially, and that's O.K.," she said.
The "high value" designation is cited as a reason for a variety of circumscribed freedoms, from detention in a secret location that lawyers can't visit, to minute and seemingly meaningless restrictions like the prohibition on noncommercially sealed food items.
The license for these font files is as follows: > These fonts are free software. Unlimited permission is granted to use, copy, > and distribute them, with or without modification, either commercially or > noncommercially. THESE FONTS ARE PROVIDED "AS IS" WITHOUT WARRANTY.
WNPE (102.7 FM) is a public radio station, providing programming from The Public's Radio (formerly known as Rhode Island Public Radio) to southern Rhode Island from its transmitter at Narragansett Pier. It was the first FM transmitter in the network. Prior to operating noncommercially, the 102.7 facility was a commercial radio station from its sign-on in 1990 to 2007.
Televisa, owns the Las Estrellas and Canal 5 networks, while TV Azteca owns the Azteca 7 and Azteca Uno networks. There are also several other commercial networks with less than 75% national reach. Chief among these are Televisa's NU9VE, which in some areas shares time with regional programming, and Multimedios Televisión, which broadcasts mostly in northeastern Mexico. Noncommercially, Canal Once operated by the Instituto Politécnico Nacional is the oldest educational television service in Latin America.
The Creative Commons website states, "Since each of the six CC licenses functions differently, resources placed under different licenses may not necessarily be combined with one another without violating the license terms." Works licensed under incompatible licenses may not be recombined in a derivative work without obtaining permission from the copyright owner. Richard Stallman of the FSF stated in 2005 that he couldn't support Creative Commons as an activity because "it adopted some additional licenses which do not give everyone that minimum freedom", that freedom being "the freedom to share, noncommercially, any published work". Those licenses have since been retired by Creative Commons.
Plays, notably by Shakespeare, have very often been heavily abridged for television to fit them into ninety-minute or two-hour time slots. (The same is true of long classical ballets such as the two-and-a-half hour Sleeping Beauty, which has almost never been performed complete on television.) It was done more often in the past than it is now (such as in Hallmark Hall of Fame from the 1950s to about 1970). With the advent of such noncommercially- sponsored PBS anthologies such as Great Performances, Live from Lincoln Center and the BBC Television Shakespeare plays, there is now less pressure to cram a play lasting at least three hours, such as Hamlet, into a two-hour time slot.
WRSL-FM became WXKY-FM, branded as "Kentucky's Maximum Country", on July 23, 2001, in a bid to play up its regional broadcast area. However, the station would not remain country for long. In January 2002, after being initially approached the year before, owner John Smith opted to lease the station to the Educational Media Foundation, which resulted in the Air 1 network being heard in central Kentucky for the first time; Smith noted that he thought his father, Cal, would have appreciated EMF's ministry, and that he hoped the change would further reinforce perceptions of WXKY-FM as a regional, not a Stanford, station. WXKY was sold in 2004 to EMF itself for $800,000, allowing it to operate noncommercially, and thus completely as a satellite.
In 1986, Adams- Shelton sold KYXX to the Southwest Educational Media Foundation of Texas (SEMFOT), which took control on January 1, 1987. The new ownership, headed by a T. Kent Atkins, changed the call letters to KENT and instituted a middle-of- the-road Christian music format, augmented by syndicated programs from James Dobson, J. Vernon McGee, Warren Wiersbee and others; the station operated noncommercially, seeking support from listeners. Two years later, KENT acquired the construction permit for noncommercial station KOFR at 90.5 MHz, which was owned by Family Radio, and brought it to air as KENT-FM, a simulcast of the AM station. The signing on of KENT-FM and co-owned FM radio stations in Amarillo and Lubbock, however, would turn into a years-long legal headache for SEMFOT.
In 1955, WNAO radio and television moved from 219 South McDowell Street into the former Club Bon Air supper club building on Western Boulevard at Pullen Pike, which had been built in 1946 and had last operated as the Chez Gourmet restaurant. It also was able to begin carrying CBS network color presentations. That year, the company entered into discussions with the University of North Carolina; the year before, UNC had launched educational station WUNC-TV (channel 4), which now found itself in budgetary trouble; three parties inquired as to potential use of the channel, which was noncommercially reserved. In June 1956, WNAO-TV proposed that channel 5 be moved from Raleigh to Rocky Mount and a UHF allotment be assigned in its stead; the FCC went ahead with awarding the channel to Capitol Broadcasting Company, which built WRAL-TV.

No results under this filter, show 10 sentences.

Copyright © 2024 RandomSentenceGen.com All rights reserved.