Why can't one put off by showboating simply be put off by showboating?
|
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" So, as Savitt put it: "If it can be put off, it should be put off.
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But I've always been put off by it, and I continue to be put off by it.
|
|
Of those who have delayed care in the past 12 months, 55 percent put off dental and/or orthodontic work, 43 put off delayed eye care, and 30 percent put off annual exams.
|
|
He just wanted to try to make a change, to make a difference, and he was put off and put off.
|
|
And Mr. Kasich said he was put off by it.
|
|
Put off doing things as a way to punish others?
|
|
But Krauthammer put off attending and enrolled at Oxford, instead.
|
|
Falling prices cause consumers and businesses to put off spending.
|
|
And not everyone is put off by a public proposal.
|
|
Remember, retirement is a goal you can't put off forever.
|
|
Whatever the reason, it cannot be put off any longer.
|
|
Decades of violence in Corsica put off investors in tourism.
|
|
One, we couldn't believe we put off reading the book.
|
|
But similar requests by Turkey have been put off before.
|
|
They've put off moving out, getting married and having kids.
|
|
The infected machines had all put off updating their systems.
|
|
We would have to put off overdue investments in capital.
|
|
But she keeps finding reasons to put off the ceremony.
|
|
But money problems led him to put off that idea.
|
|
That can cause people to put off investing all together.
|
|
Voters also seem to be put off by Trump's tactics.
|
|
I'd put off answering that question for a long time.
|
|
You've put off buying gifts until the last possible moment.
|
|
In Harare, government decisions, big and small, are put off.
|
|
His sentencing has been put off until after Menendez's trial.
|
|
"Don't be put off, go for that one," he says.
|
|
The survey found that 34 percent of millennials have delayed buying a home, 31 percent have delayed saving for retirement, 16 percent have put off having children and 14 percent have put off getting married.
|
|
But he can't put off the hard questions for much longer.
|
|
Or they may put off travel until late in their pregnancies.
|
|
Not all are put off by the increased political conversation, though.
|
|
First, it must consider whether its advertising will put off customers.
|
|
Washington put off the meeting for a second time in June.
|
|
Put off an important conversation for another day if you can.
|
|
I have a lot of stuff I want to put off.
|
|
We've had to put off having children because of this incident.
|
|
I remember feeling a bit put off by the man's fury.
|
|
People who put off their journeys then are now making them.
|
|
I put off watching it until all the episodes were released.
|
|
People either embraced it or were very put off by it.
|
|
"I put off hiring a staff for six weeks," he says.
|
|
A lot of people are put off and that's their choice.
|
|
Some oldsters who were put off did eventually get the message.
|
|
Many obstetricians said they were urging women to put off pregnancy.
|
|
But sometimes the parents can't be put off and matters escalate.
|
|
Victoria was a little put off when he started sniffing her.
|
|
And he won't be surprised or put off by your weight.
|
|
Don't be put off: It's an adventure waiting to be experienced.
|
|
Once you have kids, you can't put off something for them.
|
|
Much of the world seems fairly put off by Donald Trump.
|
|
But the president has put off making a decision for now.
|
|
They were initially put off by the steep homeowners association fees.
|
|
SAN FRANCISCO — For years, Uber and Lyft put off going public.
|
|
Jansma is not the only one who has been put off.
|
|
It wasn't only members of polite society who were put off.
|
|
Then the credits rolled, the fallout put off until next week.
|
|
And yet one core group hasn't been put off: the customers.
|
|
Deutsche Bank put off plans to create 250 jobs in Raleigh.
|
|
You would think people might be put off, but they weren't.
|
|
Plans to buy homes or have children have been put off.
|
|
Mr. Huang was initially put off by the roughly $35,000 price.
|
|
The democratization of Chinese politics can be put off no longer.
|
|
Some grandmas put off retiring specifically to help support the grandkids.
|
|
Now witnesses can put off prison instead by appealing their verdicts.
|
|
But too often, women put off seeking treatment for their symptoms.
|
|
The same caution has put off public announcements of possible deals.
|
|
Without the incentives, he said, he would likely put off renovations.
|
|
None of the brand's plans for growth are being put off.
|
|
During the recession, consumers and businesses put off buying new vehicles.
|
|
Even women are put off by other women speaking that forcefully.
|
|
Staying home to work on a long-put-off home improvement project.
|
|
Are you buying a tablet to put off splurging on a computer?
|
|
I was touched and confused and put off at the same time.
|
|
VANDER PLAATS: Well, I don&apost think it should be put off.
|
|
He may not be so easily put off using them in office.
|
|
Every day you put off your job search is another day wasted.
|
|
Others are put off by mobs of trolls and reams of misinformation.
|
|
But terrorism and insurgency have put off investors, both foreign and domestic.
|
|
Other executives are put off by its insufferable lawyers and hypocritical protectionism.
|
|
Some women, put off by all the bickering, decided not to attend.
|
|
But it could put off younger voters, and those in the centre.
|
|
How often do we put off something until we've lost the weight?
|
|
But people in the room were put off by the dictatorial mindset.
|
|
And a younger audience is put off by the puzzle's impenetrable rules.
|
|
Then, with marriage plans put off until after Rio, Johnson became pregnant.
|
|
I put off adding up my debt for a really long time.
|
|
They were most put off by Sanders' socialist ideas and Trump's unpredictability.
|
|
The United States has recommended that Americans put off travel to China.
|
|
She had put off having children, but never doubted that she would.
|
|
I close my eyes again and put off getting out of bed.
|
|
North Korea also claims that it was put off by this comment.
|
|
Have you put off camping because all the gear seemed incomprehensibly expensive?
|
|
Pai was also put off by the racial politics on Harvard's campus.
|
|
Larger banks can be put off, at least in part, by regulation.
|
|
The strident tone and frequent self-references will put off many readers.
|
|
Unfortunately, I was really put off by the screens on both phones.
|
|
At first, she was put off by Mr. Healy's sense of humor.
|
|
Many people in the health care profession are put off by this.
|
|
Burlakoff had a history that might have put off some potential employers.
|
|
"People are a little put off by hearing that stat," he said.
|
|
Watch out for miscommunications and delays, and put off making important purchases.
|
|
And obviously the ratings agencies and bond markets didn't seem put off.
|
|
Aren't you even a bit put off put by questions like this?
|
|
I put off lunch, instead opting for something to cheer me up.
|
|
But sex toys appear to be the biggest put-off for many.
|
|
Have you ever put off doing everything until the absolute last minute?
|
|
I put off the question to enjoy my time with my grandmother.
|
|
But you probably haven't seen too many surgeons put off medical procedures.
|
|
"People were put off from coming to Big Sur," Mr. Freed said.
|
|
Olympic fallout She put off having children to compete at Tokyo 2020.
|
|
Need another excuse to put off washing dirty dishes or doing laundry?
|
|
At the time, Trump said he'd put off imposing new tariffs indefinitely.
|
|
"They are not put off at all," he said of his clients.
|
|
Please check out everything, please don't be put off by the nuns.
|
|
Not one to be put off by rejection, Mr. Marchionne doubled down.
|
|
Activists believe 'vote Labour or babies will die' leaflet put off voters.
|
|
There are certain things you said that I put off the record.
|
|
Nor do they put off any initial odors to be dealt with.
|
|
I put off using it for a while after I get home.
|
|
But they're especially put off by that which has a prosecutorial tone.
|
|
Shortly thereafter, Brexit, deal or no deal, was put off yet again.
|
|
So— WILFRED FROST: Were there aspects that you were put off by?
|
|
"They want to put off debate as much as possible," Kasahara said.
|
|
He was put off by the high taxes and cost of living.
|
|
Many people are put off by a listing with a firm price.
|
|
Many Catholics were put off by the tone and emphasis of Mrs.
|
|
National elections can often dampen demand as buyers put off major purchases.
|
|
We have a tendency to avoid and put off during tax season.
|
|
The first vote was put off last week and scheduled for Feb.
|
|
Lack of control could put off some possible bidders, the people said.
|
|
We didn't think so; better put off any big tasks until February.
|
|
I was put off and uninstalled the app the first two times.
|
|
But French officials have acknowledged France's strict labour laws can put off businesses.
|
|
But fans have been put off by pricey tickets and poor album reviews.
|
|
And it just made me need to remind everybody don't put off anything.
|
|
I'll just have to put off eating my packed lunch for another day.
|
|
The court put off major cases on abortion rights, immigration and LGBTQ rights.
|
|
Plans for the company's next major commercial airplane have effectively been put off.
|
|
Ms Iizuka never married, fearing that her infertility would put off any suitors.
|
|
That feature restrain doesn't appear to have put off Note loyalists, at least.
|
|
Why are they not put off by his apparent contempt for their sex?
|
|
According to the Daily Mail, Thorne was put off by Disick's heavy drinking.
|
|
For many people, it just may not be feasible to put off retirement.
|
|
Bougon is not concerned that a low oil price could put off investment.
|
|
Mini purists — and there are many — will be put off by its size.
|
|
This year, major savings don't have to be put off until Black Friday.
|
|
Yet many of us put off investing because it's seems intimidating or overwhelming.
|
|
Even Tesla's shareholders, who are rarely put off by bad news, are jittery.
|
|
Others fret that a steady drip of small scandals might put off some.
|
|
I had put off registering beforehand due to a severe allergy to bureaucracy.
|
|
Others are put off by the tactic of using arrests to generate publicity.
|
|
The Republican candidates were unanimous in saying Obama should put off a decision.
|
|
I decide to bike back and put off my errands for another day.
|
|
On September 21st the Federal Reserve put off a rate rise yet again.
|
|
The longer you put off planning for it, the farther behind you'll fall.
|
|
Rowling wasn't about to be put off by trolls, either. Obviously. Duh. pic.twitter.
|
|
Yet it will not be possible to put off invoking Article 50 indefinitely.
|
|
This put off investors and in 2012 Israel officially halted any new exploration.
|
|
People put off working towards their true passions until their old and stale.
|
|
Meanwhile, many young professionals are being put off from working in the industry.
|
|
And don't use it as an excuse to put off saving for retirement.
|
|
The G4 Cube's high starting price of $1,799 put off many potential customers.
|
|
Tesla is far from the first automaker to be put off by Brexit.
|
|
But visitors may be put off by health warnings from the quake zone.
|
|
The F.B.I. has put off a court hearing while it tests the method.
|
|
Though easily put off by feelings I am not ashamed Of my embarrassment.
|
|
Don't get put off by the process—they're not trying to be dicks.
|
|
"Too many couples put off sex therapy and the problem snowballs," she says.
|
|
There are other physical cues you can use to put off a bully.
|
|
It meant I could put off the final ascent for a few days.
|
|
When 2017 arrived, we couldn't put off getting each other off any longer.
|
|
Consumers have put off booking trips or canceled their plans for upcoming flights.
|
|
For now, borrowers will be able to put off two monthly loan payments.
|
|
I feel clients in general might feel put off by the physical proximity.
|
|
However, our results indicated that moms weren't put off by the new rules.
|
|
Well then, let's put off the entire ... Sorry, Google, about all those investments.
|
|
If you're a beginner, you can put off buying other, specialized bar tools.
|
|
Mr. Burr repeatedly put off questions from reporters about the dispute on Thursday.
|
|
Baron decided he'd do whatever he could to get the trial put off.
|
|
Democrats were on the other side, coaxing him to put off the vote.
|
|
My favorites put off answering the question for as long as they can.
|
|
"It's not money I'd want to put off for 20 years," he said.
|
|
Though one threat has been put off, the A.C.A. is far from safe.
|
|
He had planned to stay only a few months, but put off leaving.
|
|
Ms. French looked into culinary school but was put off by the expense.
|
|
Mr. McConnell promptly put off until Thursday the formal reception of the paperwork.
|
|
Luckily, there's something that'll help put off that decision for a little longer.
|
|
The owner, Larry Wallrich, put off the sale because his wife was pregnant.
|
|
To put off cuts was to risk turning Britain into the next Greece.
|
|
Resist the temptation to put off the inevitable by five or 10 minutes.
|
|
But that tough stance also put off some who had voted to remain.
|
|
He was also put off by the constant churn of men's wear seasons.
|
|
Another banker said Poland's political situation may also have put off some funds.
|
|
Others were kind of put off by it (like it was something wrong).
|
|
Lots of men — and plenty of women — weren't put off by his misogyny.
|
|
Fed officials say tariffs and trade tension are causing businesses to put off spending.
|
|
Affleck seemed genuinely put off by all the teasing, which only spurred Colbert on.
|
|
It would be "unwise" to put off raising interest rates, she said earlier Tuesday.
|
|
However, any fundraising exercise would probably be put off until mid-2019, he said.
|
|
For instance, we've put off buying our first house, getting married and having children.
|
|
Perhaps uninsured people are rushing to get health problems fixed that they've put off.
|
|
I believe millennials will be even more put off by hypocrisy, sanctimony and smear.
|
|
Democrats stalled action, forcing McConnell to put off debate for at least a week.
|
|
It had looked as if that moment might be put off for some time.
|
|
Households will probably put off big-ticket purchases such as motorbikes or white goods.
|
|
Voters have been put off by frequent scandals, from petty corruption to sexual harassment.
|
|
"Big banks can't assume they can put off the full application process," Haben said.
|
|
SebastiAn says Gainsbourg was put off by his directness, and very possibly his drunkenness.
|
|
Sawiris also criticised state meddling in business that he said would put off investors.
|
|
It put off from 2019 to 2020 its goal of reducing inflation to 403%.
|
|
And maybe start planning that Caribbean vacation you had put off during hurricane season.
|
|
But Findlater wasn't put off and even managed to find the men more work.
|
|
Of course, not everyone has been put off by The White Moose Cafe's posts.
|
|
That meant voting in a small number of precincts was put off to Sunday.
|
|
Or a rat trap in Astoria that would put off a self-respecting rat.
|
|
And then there are all the limitations, which will surely put off potential users.
|
|
A financial reckoning, should it come, can be put off for years, even decades.
|
|
She was seeking a strong woman who wouldn't be put off by someone unconventional.
|
|
"All parties are saying, 'Let's put off the sales tax rise'," YouthCreate's Harada said.
|
|
There is a real risk going forward that households start to put off purchases.
|
|
And, in the past, most fans have not been put off by higher costs.
|
|
"Unfortunately since I put off surgery I had more damage than expected," she said.
|
|
Of course, that hasn't put off millions of fans from flocking to the app.
|
|
But the administration can put off a final decision on that issue until February.
|
|
A major deficit increase could put off some GOP lawmakers concerned about fiscal discipline.
|
|
That could have put off some users, leading to the feature's more minimal adoption.
|
|
As businesses lose profit opportunities, they are likely to put off investing and hiring.
|
|
"It's intrigue and being slightly put off," Mr. Both said of the usual response.
|
|
First, the irritation factor, or how much consumers can absorb without being put off.
|
|
Readers who insist on a traditional narrative thread might be disappointed, even put off.
|
|
Previous attempts have been put off or received no response, Viacom directors have said.
|
|
The longer policymakers put off implementing reforms, the more abrupt the changes will be.
|
|
Because of her student loans, Michelle Fernie-Oley has put off children — for now.
|
|
Marshall brilliantly put off his clients' obligations, sometimes for as long as two decades.
|
|
The effort was put off amid legislative battles over heath care and tax reform.
|
|
I was immediately put off by how awful and pixelated the VR video looked.
|
|
If any of them were put off by my stories, they never said so.
|
|
The ruling follows one earlier this month that temporarily had put off his deportation.
|
|
Even Laurel and Hardy lovers may be put off by its somber, experimental mood.
|
|
Weren't they put off by the warnings against going into business with family members?
|
|
Imagine someone who is, in his occluded heart, sincerely put off by Cam Newton.
|
|
And that's why many governments are recommending women put off getting pregnant for now.
|
|
I'm tackling a job I've put off for decades: sorting through boxes of photos.
|
|
The two had been married for several years but had put off having children.
|
|
You may decide to put off buying a home until the pandemic settles down.
|
|
Despite the benefits of talking to children about money, people put off these talks.
|
|
Don't be put off by the recipe asking you to make your own seitan.
|
|
But I suspected that they were also put off by their associations with hospice.
|
|
But he continued to put off a professional career until he finished high school.
|
|
BISHKEK, Kyrgyzstan — Officials in Kyrgyzstan knew they could no longer put off the decision.
|
|
You can put off payment of federal loans by requesting a deferment or forbearance.
|
|
It also put off a vote on electronically delivering funds' written materials to investors.
|
|
It is not a problem that can be put off for a few decades.
|
|
Investors were put off by the company's losses and questions about its corporate governance.
|
|
Opinion ____ "Procrastibaking," baking to put off work, is both a habit and a hashtag.
|
|
He has only a middle school education, and thought that would put off editors.
|
|
This could put off older customers, as it makes the screen harder to read.
|
|
George McGovern for the presidency, put off by McGovern's opposition to the Vietnam War.
|
|
He seemed put off by the question; the answer, to him, was so obvious.
|
|
Scots have put off dealing with these issues by putting the blame on London.
|
|
They put off-season clothes into storage, and bought free-standing wardrobes from Ikea.
|
|
You can put off buying a new outfit, or a new piece of furniture.
|
|
In 1999, the Senate did put off the witness issue until after opening arguments.
|
|
His funeral was originally planned for Tuesday, but has been put off to Wednesday.
|
|
They can do their job, and put off gift wrapping 'til the last minute.
|
|
As Roy made excuses to put off his plans, her texts became more insistent.
|
|
Etymologically, "procrastination" is derived from the Latin verb procrastinare — to put off until tomorrow.
|
|
He succeeded in using internal divisions within NATO to put off the decision indefinitely.
|
|
Eddie Vedder told him to put off his death for as long as possible.
|
|
Such bespoke transactions can require a bevy of lawyers, which can put off smaller firms.
|
|
Others still have put off their IPO plans as they wait out the market uncertainty.
|
|
His predecessors, Bill Clinton, George W. Bush and Barack Obama, consistently put off that decision.
|
|
Don&apost be put off by the intimidating name — pronounced "shi" with a soft "sh".
|
|
Trump had wanted to put off more hearings while an appeals court weighs the case.
|
|
I have a list of items to do today that I put off last Friday.
|
|
Tulsi Gabbard: D Congresswoman Gabbard probably put off a lot of people with her responses.
|
|
It's as if Grado is actively trying to put off people attracted by superficial things.
|
|
However, asking for a day off when you're sick can be harder to put off .
|
|
If the first thing you see is those crazy colored lights, don't be put off.
|
|
That image threatened to put off non-oil business and also to deter female migrants.
|
|
So we're guessing she wasn't put off by all of those sketchy tweets of his.
|
|
They were startled and put off by the concept that Jewish ritual could be cool.
|
|
Banking is late to the smartphone age because entrepreneurs have been put off by regulations.
|
|
Especially if Republicans aren't already put off by the now-reduced cost of the wall.
|
|
Some people are still put off by it, and that's the way they see it.
|
|
I think, I tell you what: There's been times I've been put off having children.
|
|
People are put off by frizzy, flyaway hair, but I've celebrated that in my career.
|
|
The PhD students we spoke to said they were put off by the seminar style.
|
|
However, convincing them to put off getting married and having kids is significantly more expensive.
|
|
Lanng has not been put off from pursuing opportunities in the world's second-largest economy.
|
|
This was driven by a fall in domestic visitors, put off by anti-Islam rallies.
|
|
They also fret that the requirement to get a degree will put off poor applicants.
|
|
I should start by confessing that I usually find myself put off by Tarantino's films.
|
|
Tourists have been put off the French market on the back of the terrorist attacks.
|
|
Put off making deals or commitments for now—it's time to review, not push forward.
|
|
There's almost never a good reason for the average person to put off an update.
|
|
The bottom line: People put off health care services based on their ability to pay.
|
|
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - U.S. Congress negotiators on Thursday moved to put off until after the Nov.
|
|
The club has put off building a youth academy to save a few million euros.
|
|
Difficult decisions on a successor pact may therefore be put off as long as possible.
|
|
But it once again slightly put off an exit from the policy to mid-2017.
|
|
"That's a simple enough statement, and people are not put off by that," she said.
|
|
People without insurance put off doctors visits, and stop taking expensive medicines, all the time.
|
|
Murray Perahia, 69, put off reckoning with the four-movement 45-minute "Hammerklavier" until recently.
|
|
When he finally gets wind that she's pregnant, he's not actually pissed or put off.
|
|
This can be put off until the children are old enough to behave when traveling.
|
|
On Twitter this week, some women urged others not to put off getting an IUD.
|
|
But lower interest rates doesn't mean you should stop saving money, or put off starting.
|
|
As more women put off their first pregnancy, that could have unintended yet serious implications.
|
|
But plans to develop it have been put off several times over the past decade.
|
|
Nearly half of millennials have put off needed medical care because they can't afford it
|
|
Risky endeavors of all kinds are put off in an effort to avoid tempting fate.
|
|
Students may be put off by construction's reputation as a dangerous, cyclical field, he said.
|
|
It's tempting to put off personal matters — like meal prep, errands, and mail — on workdays.
|
|
Even so, he put off making a decision for almost a month and a half.
|
|
Thursday would have been the MLB's Opening Day had the season not been put off.
|
|
I confess I went to the exhibition intrigued rather than put off by these characterizations.
|
|
That, and they're quick and easy, y'all who have put off shopping 'til RIGHT NOW.
|
|
"I was a little put off that there was no bidding war," Mr. Morris said.
|
|
Ms. Williams was put off by the clutter in the house and its unfinished basement.
|
|
It's a prime example of my most dreaded task, the kind I'd normally put off.
|
|
It is a bold move that may put off some of her fans, but shouldn't.
|
|
Voice requires users verify who they are, which will put off people who want anonymity.
|
|
Onscreen, letting us be put off or confused by the main character isn't an option.
|
|
He urged Germans already at home to stay there and put off any planned travel.
|
|
Many Amish are "put off by [Trump's] hubris, self-serving style and language," Kraybill said.
|
|
"I was very put off, especially, by the president's comments regarding Dr. Blasey," he wrote.
|
|
But they put off deciding on how to afford the price tag at the time.
|
|
It's unclear how long the Treasury Department's measures could put off a debt-ceiling vote.
|
|
Such a decline could force companies to lay off employees and put off new investment.
|
|
It was not immediately clear whether Sullivan will agree to put off the scheduled Jan.
|
|
But why would investors from India or Canada or the United States be put off?
|
|
It's OK to be put off by his praise and apologia for philosophically aligned tyrants.
|
|
But, if possible, try to put off salary talk until later in the interview process.
|
|
Sam Mee, Social Analysis and Research 'I was forced to put off big life decisions.
|
|
But that meeting was put off, according to two people familiar with the committee's schedule.
|
|
We sweated everything and put off repairs and expansion plans because we couldn't afford them.
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Jeong said the exercise had been put off pending further consultations between Seoul and Washington.
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They had to put off rent payments, utility bills, and cellphone, cable and internet bills.
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The judge's ruling vacates Ms. DeVos's decision to put off the regulation by two years.
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The attorney general's office described Williams' appeal as "procedural gamesmanship" to put off the execution.
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If you're like most Americans, you put off taking care of your eyes and your teeth.
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So it tends to be put off, or given to someone else like a financial adviser.
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If I don't clean them in a batch, I'll be lazy and put off eating fruit.
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Forty percent claimed the debt caused them to put off having a child or getting married.
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Chris worries that they'll be put off, but Rose assures him that they are very liberal.
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In the meantime structural reforms would be put off while Italy's lawmakers haggle over voting systems.
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The reality star has said that their turbulent marriage is why she put off having children.
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Then again, why should they be put off, when Republican leaders are also supporting Mr Trump?
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It's not a big ask for the tech-savvy, but it'll surely put off some users.
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People were trying to get ahead of higher tariffs before they were sort of put off.
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Weak demand and looming oversupply have already prompted some miners to put off near-term investments.
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The bottom line: Don't put off updating your devices because of fears of slowing them down.
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My longer-term projects need attention, and I put off a few requests from my manager.
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Honda was among those who persuaded Abe to put off the tax hike until April 2017.
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He is not put off by the prospect of paying lobola, or bride price, if necessary.
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My dad was big on preaching that it was essential to learn to put off gratification.
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So, if you are surprised by these images or put off in any way, just pause.
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They may be more inclined to put off child-bearing or have fewer children, researchers said.
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Chai said he had put off plans to buy a second property and a new car.
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If you have managed to put off holiday shopping thus far, congrats — you're not totally screwed.
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Trump, who commands the armed forces, then put off Pelosi's trip overseas on a military plane.
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They've also put off-duty cops on the payroll, who'll be in uniform at the clubs.
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Laughing, she explains that she put off her wedding planning in order to finish the book.
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It was the second time this year a congressional appearance by Cohen has been put off.
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The ban is not yet law, as final action has been put off until this year.
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But critics say new elections have been put off because Maduro is afraid of the outcome.
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The Fed itself considered such changes at last month's policy meeting, but decisions were put off.
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They'd put off the hard work of designing a realistic replacement for the law for years.
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This is the second time McConnell has had to put off Senate consideration of ObamaCare repeal.
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Tony Clement of the official opposition Conservatives said Trudeau could not put off hard calls forever.
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I put off hundreds of friends, associates and students who called or wished to fly over.
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You get a tax break today and put off paying taxes on future gains until later.
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Accounting industry officials have expressed concerns that rocketing fines will put off people working in audit.
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The Socialists' stronger line on Catalonia could also put off potential partners among the regional parties.
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Setting up iPhone Family Sharing only takes a few minutes, so don't put off the process.
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The talks will come as welcome news to many residents put off by steep calling costs.
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Apple has also outlined a detailed consent process, which might also put off some potential users.
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But political turmoil in the country has to led any deal being put off, for now.
|
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By engaging in mindfulness, chronic procrastinators overcame their urges to put off the task at hand.
|
|
That government effort worked, but today there are many options to put off paying back loans.
|
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But the longer you put off planning for your golden years, the farther behind you'll fall.
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But he was not able to afford insurance, and his wife had to put off surgery.
|
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The North Koreans, put off by the vice president's harsh criticism, canceled at the last minute.
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|
May's tactics, and some are increasingly angry as confidence ebbs and investment decisions are put off.
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It's easy to put off rolling over your 401(k) when you get a new job.
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"They are going to be put off by it and might well stay home," he said.
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|
It's OK to put off decision making right now and ask for more time to consider.
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|
J. Lyons and Company was named after a less-Yiddische partner to put off anti-Semites.
|
|
And when medical personnel serve as substitute guards, often their health care work is put off.
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|
He could have surgery for the injury, which he decided to put off in the season.
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|
It seems kind of alien and weird, and so you're kind of put off by it.
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|
In 2013, Mr. Sherchan put off plans to ascend Everest because of a lack of finances.
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|
They either put off having children or planned on fewer children than they would have liked.
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|
"The goal of Big Sugar is always to put off the day of reckoning," Draper said.
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|
I point it out to Sarah, who if anything is more put off than I am.
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|
America cannot put off forever the day when it gets a grip on this lethal legacy.
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|
I was initially put off by the title, as it seemed not only unnecessary but stuffy.
|
|
Sternlicht said he's even put off projects within his own business for a quarter or so.
|
|
Unresolved trade conflicts have led to greater uncertainty about policy, causing businesses to put off investment.
|
|
And Corker has criticized lawmakers who try to put off painful fiscal decisions, saying it's irresponsible.
|
|
Still, the longer you put off planning for your golden years, the farther behind you'll fall.
|
|
It also revealed that 42 percent of workers in this category have put off medical treatment.
|
|
But it has proved controversial, with some people put off from becoming senior officials at banks.
|
|
U.S. stocks dropped Friday as the United States and Canada put off resolving their trade dispute.
|
|
Many were put off by the way actors appear as cats but keep their human features.
|
|
But that's no reason to put off your annual checkup, especially with an uncertain economic outlook.
|
|
Last year's European heatwave also hit the company hard as customers put off last-minute bookings.
|
|
Graham, who later taught economics at Columbia when he wasn't managing his investments, wasn't put off.
|
|
They put off preventive screenings, so they come into Medicare at 65 with more health problems.
|
|
However, pressure from the Congressional Black and Progressive caucuses forced them to "put off" the issue.
|
|
He was a real intellectual, so I don't think he was put off by that description.
|
|
The veteran pollster Stanley Greenberg told me that he's seeing signs of this is in his recent focus groups: One was with moderate Republicans, all of whom "were put off'' by Trump's behavior, and another was with "secular conservative Republicans,'' half of whom were put off.
|
|
Just as it is easy for individuals to put off saving for retirement when the rent comes due or to splurge on a weekend getaway, firms feel pressure to put off long-term investing to make shareholders happy in the short term by boosting stock price.
|
|
For now, Democrats have tried to put off a difficult debate and focus on what unites them.
|
|
Instead, he said, he was put off by rumors that solar panels would actually make things worse.
|
|
You're supposed to put off life for work; that shouldn't be the way we have to live.
|
|
Luckily he's a chill person and wasn't put off by the weird things I do for journalism.
|
|
Though some analysts were put off by the weak guidance, the market is apparently looking past that.
|
|
"The change of government that the people expected has now had to be put off," he said.
|
|
States may try to renegotiate prices agreed when renewables were more expensive, which could put off developers.
|
|
But it is very likely that these will be put off while the new regime beds in.
|
|
But Mr. Reeves argued Thursday that the state could not afford to put off long-term solutions.
|
|
No one knows how many passengers would be put off by the prospect of flying device-free.
|
|
Not only is economic growth perking up; uncomfortable decisions, put off too long, are also being taken.
|
|
Some investors had their fingers burned and were put off, says Peter Harrop of IDTechEx, a consultancy.
|
|
Talented LGBT employees of such firms, especially those who are married, are put off by Singapore's strictures.
|
|
If you've put off the inevitable, hunker down and rock out as you polish off your 1040.
|
|
News of the deaths and their connection to the hashtag goes public, but people aren't put off.
|
|
Many growers are put off by the cost of complying, for benefits that often do not materialise.
|
|
Credit downgrades have put off investors, and the Treasury warned that capital outflows could destabilise the economy.
|
|
Chinese President Xi Jinping, however, has warned that the issue of unification cannot be put off indefinitely.
|
|
My weekly pass is going to expire later tonight, but I put off reloading for the morning.
|
|
I put off watching Divorce because a lot of people whose opinions I trust absolutely hated it.
|
|
The Fed put off interest rate hikes several times this year, in part because of the election.
|
|
Ms. McLaughlin made clear that she had been put off by his remarks, but accepted his apology.
|
|
Critics fret that the focus on harder end-of-year exams will put off less scholarly children.
|
|
One weakness of his previous campaign was a perceived lack of piety, which put off some voters.
|
|
You've put off your holiday shopping and totally missed out on Black Friday and Cyber Monday deals.
|
|
"Companies don't like uncertainty so they could put off investment plans if trade frictions escalate," he said.
|
|
He warned of the possible consequences if lawmakers put off addressing the trajectory of the government's finances.
|
|
It had put off making that decision until 2019 after announcing its deal with Allergan last November.
|
|
Dow futures up by about 137 points after it looks like the tariff deadline is put off.
|
|
He had hinted when he was sworn in on Monday he might put off implementing the tax.
|
|
The ECB at its meeting last month put off any rate hike for at least a year.
|
|
Since people tend to put off dealing with financial tasks, these half-finished items can cause stress.
|
|
Despite being put off by his incessant requests for photos, she's not been deterred from voice noting.
|
|
The price could put off other major manufacturers such as Samsung and Huawei from buying the technology.
|
|
S. trade dispute is forcing businesses to put off investments, while spreading turmoil in world financial markets.
|
|
The more Egan researched her book, the more she put off writing it by doing more research.
|
|
"I've literally never seen employees so shocked by something and so put off by something," Hornsey said.
|
|
When it announced its planned Allergan deal last November, Pfizer put off making the decision until 249.
|
|
This is not a decision you can put off because this is a very short time frame.
|
|
I'm always put off by places that advertise their products at you when you're already buying them.
|
|
To Stanford, to begin her freshman year, which she put off to train for the Meyer milestone.
|
|
But ultimately I was put off by how tough and dry the outer layer of pasta was.
|
|
And the longer those decisions are put off, the harder it becomes to get spending under control.
|
|
They will put off getting care until diseases are at more advanced, less treatable & more costly stage.
|
|
Just don't put off important conversations—it's a crucial time to stay on top of your communications.
|
|
What's more, private companies, put off by the lackluster economic outlook, have been pulling back on investment.
|
|
I stared for years at Caleb Carr's "The Alienist," but was put off by the book's length.
|
|
They are put off by high prices for condos and seeing less and less value in homeownership.
|
|
"Hearing could very easily been put off; don't understand why it wasn't," Mr. Coley tweeted to me.
|
|
If that's you, shifting tasks that you often put off until later in the day can help.
|
|
JOHNSTON I was a little put off by Bonnie Hunt's performance on the first day of shooting.
|
|
But Mr. Trump is not that easily put off, even when his quarry has disdain for him.
|
|
News of SoftBank's urging WeWork to put off its IPO was initially reported by the Financial Times.
|
|
Despite Egypt's looming water crisis, however, Farrag has not been put off his dream of sustainable farming.
|
|
The tax increase, which has been put off for six months, amounted to 25 cents a gallon.
|
|
She has put off the depo several times, citing various reasons including movie roles and engagement parties.
|
|
Some handled only "non-detained" cases, so would have been empty once those cases were put off.
|
|
Respondents were, not surprisingly, put off by the unpleasantness that would be involved in collecting stool samples.
|
|
Bombassei said that although the company's forecasts had been put off, the company's fundamentals are very solid.
|
|
Many people who often would put off signing up for a policy are finally making the jump.
|
|
Such costs lead individuals to put off needed care, resulting in alarmingly high rates of preventable deaths.
|
|
He was a day later than originally expected; he had put off traveling as long as possible.
|
|
France had put off fundamental changes to revitalize its economy far longer than its European Union partners.
|
|
As a result, some people do whatever they can to put off signing a lease until fall.
|
|
After that motion, Sullivan put off Flynn's long-delayed sentencing by about a month, to Feb. 27.
|
|
Republicans are expected to pass the rules to put off the question of witnesses without Democratic votes.
|
|
I initially put off reading this piece, because I feared that it would hit close to home.
|
|
He was puzzled, and then put off, by Roberts' view that the ACA provisions could be severed.
|
|
"I've put off learning to swim ever since, even though my friends tease me," Tsokney told CNN.
|
|
It has already urged its citizens to put off all travel to Hubei, whether urgent or not.
|
|
It has already urged its citizens to put off all travel to Hubei, whether urgent or not.
|
|
"I, frankly, was a little put off by her desire to serve on this jury," he said.
|
|
The justices decided instead to put off further discussion of mootness until the December 2 oral arguments.
|
|
The infrastructure and jobs plan is being put off until next year (which is to say never).
|
|
Johnson, senior technical research analyst at Piper Sandler, wasn't too put-off by PayPal's record-hitting trek.
|
|
Giles, though, has put off back surgery for as long as possible, wary of the side effects.
|
|
Hard-hitting stories are often softened, squashed or put off indefinitely, if they get reported at all.
|
|
She was hurt, but audiences were not put off, and she gamely finished a four-week run.
|
|
And while she's shaken after sparring with her dad, she's certainly not put off the job forever.
|
|
I was put off when I learned that the knitting had been "outsourced" to his unnamed mother.
|
|
Several in India are also put off by the reported amount Facebook spent to advertise the service.
|
|
Some longtime users seem put off by the new colorful design while others are questioning the design choices.
|
|
Finally one day, after being put off many times, I got to speak to the administrator in charge.
|
|
Many voters were put off by the corruption that flourished under Jacob Zuma, president from 2009 to 2018.
|
|
Much of that began when adults started to join in masses, causing younger users to feel put off.
|
|
But every time I tuned in, I was put off and couldn't even sit through a full episode.
|
|
A strong euro at the start of 2018 also put off tourists from spending in Europe, executives said.
|
|
You will mentally chain yourself to a desk and finish everything you've put off until the sun rises.
|
|
"If you'd like to get a dog, don't be put off by the fact you're elderly," he said.
|
|
I'm probably in the minority of MacBook owners who wasn't completely put off by its lack of ports.
|
|
It isn't the first time that such a trip has been put off – although it's been a while.
|
|
Conservatives and adults over 55 years old tended to be more put off than liberals and younger adults.
|
|
"People should not be put off exercising for fear of it suppressing their immune system," Dr. Campbell says.
|
|
At the same time the CSU's anti-migrant stance has put off pro-refugee conservatives, in particular churchgoers.
|
|
But failure may give some European banks an excuse to put off adding extra equity or reducing risks.
|
|
The family's $2,400 rent hangs over her head each month, and she's put off getting her daughter braces.
|
|
But Roksana pleaded with her parents to put off the marriage until she could finish her school exams.
|
|
In 2010 a Conservative-led government cancelled the project and a final decision has been repeatedly put off.
|
|
Hungary meanwhile is expected to put off any rate-tightening plans in response to the ECB's dovish pivot.
|
|
The longer you put off making a dent in it, though, the more intimidating the prospect will be.
|
|
Last week, we spoke to a 32-year-old publicist in Michigan who put off negotiating for years.
|
|
Over the next five years, we put off parenthood and did what we could to shed the debt.
|
|
These workers on average said that a $36,000 raise would convince them to put off having a relationship.
|
|
The defence establishment seems to have been put off by some of the early setbacks to quantum links.
|
|
I put off all my calls till after boxing, because it puts me in a much calmer place.
|
|
Maybe potential voters didn't connect with her message or were put off by her well-documented homophobic comments.
|
|
So, is the designer put off by fashion's sudden, seemingly insincere interest in overt political and social outcry?
|
|
The alien was put off by the question but later admitted he was, in fact, a green alien.
|
|
All they've done is put off the disaster, and they've made the disaster bigger and harder to control.
|
|
Achilles, who lives in St Petersburg's Hermitage museum, is deaf, however, and was not put off his meal.
|
|
The president was particularly put off by Mr. Pruitt's performance in an interview on Fox News, aides said.
|
|
Many young people now study until their mid-20s and put off having children until their late 30s.
|
|
This becomes problematic when consumers put off getting effective treatment, prolonging their painful symptoms and leading to scarring.
|
|
Companies that put off their debuts back then are rushing out the door now before it closes again.
|
|
We don't want ppl deterred from buying the dolls or future investors put off from a possible collaboration.
|
|
Financial literacy and independence was something that intimidated me, and that made me put off learning about it.
|
|
NEW YORK (Reuters) - A U.S. bankruptcy judge on Friday put off making a decision on SunEdison Inc's SUNE.
|
|
Fourteen of the sixteen Walmart employees told Reuters that they were put off by the program's poor compensation.
|
|
The two percentage point tax increase, the second of two planned rises, has already been put off once.
|
|
AP Photo/Ariel SchalitThe are many reasons one might put off a much-needed home improvement project. Budget.
|
|
Starwood purchased the 227-acre property about 10 years ago, but put off development when the economy plummeted.
|
|
We put off patching applications and operating systems even when their authors tell us there is a vulnerability.
|
|
So, learn from Buffett: If you want to become a millionaire, don't put off business until you're older.
|
|
Turns out, the satirists agreed: Mr. Che and Mr. Jost put off their hiatus to fly to Cleveland.
|
|
One perfect way to address the problem, but put off fixing it, is to focus on developing talent.
|
|
An even bigger decision that cannot be put off — it will be made by American voters on Nov.
|
|
Trump may have been pushing back on reports that he put off a strategy decision despite the meetings.
|
|
Rather than put off those household chores, embrace them as another opportunity to nurture and transform the mind.
|
|
The Trump administration also wants to open offshore areas to exploration that the Obama administration put off limits.
|
|
This is the second time McConnell has had to put off Senate consideration of the ObamaCare repeal bill.
|
|
The company had warned earlier this year that Brexit was causing consumers to put off their holiday plans.
|
|
After a business's initial formation, many business owners think they can put off basic legal and admin issues.
|
|
At the time, Belarusian tech circles feared the arrest might put off investors, but that evidently didn't happen.
|
|
Economists said short-term money market investors were similarly unlikely to be put off by the Sinai attack.
|
|
Despite these challenges, lawmakers continue to put off meaningful reforms to how the federal government approaches flood insurance.
|
|
President Obama first nominated him back in September, but a number of political disputes put off the confirmation.
|
|
This phase lasted a while and even made him put off what was going to be our engagement.
|
|
A Gallup poll found that 22019 percent of respondents said they had put off treatment because of costs.
|
|
Stress over debt is leading many millennials to put off major life and relationship milestones because of money.
|
|
Now, according to Mnuchin's latest statement, taxpayers can put off filing for up to 90 days as well.
|
|
Western investors have been put off by Cambodia's endemic corruption, not to mention the official anti-Western rhetoric.
|
|
But the flip side of that is that some lingering questions have been put off to another day.
|
|
They get nervous to change jobs and put off making big life decisions, such as buying a home.
|
|
Republicans would rather put off dealing with the problem until March 5 "deadline" given by Trump in September.
|
|
Alaska said arrivals from anywhere must do so; Hawaii asked tourists to put off visiting for a month.
|
|
The People's Bank of China just put off-balance-sheet WMPs on its macroprudential assessment of banks' risks.
|
|
If you've been put off from buying earbuds because of their fit, I can't recommend these highly enough.
|
|
Trump should put off the meeting until the table has been set for it to achieve maximum results.
|
|
Men were significantly more likely than women to be put off by student debt in a romantic relationship.
|
|
She wants worker representation on company boards and has put off the date for reaching a budget surplus.
|
|
In the message Flack wrote about how she had put off dealing with the stresses in her life.
|
|
It reversed a decision that Scott Pruitt, the E.P.A. administrator, made in June to put off an Oct.
|
|
I put off getting out of bed until 7:30, then jump in the shower and get dressed.
|
|
How many other wives put off the ceremony because they empathize with the dispiriting plight of the handmaids?
|
|
Joe and Karen Stermitz didn&apost want to put off their dreams of seeing the world any longer.
|
|
The state's move is designed to get more people insured who now are put off by Obamacare prices.
|
|
The latest Apple Watch comes with a hefty price tag that might put off a lot of customers.
|
|
And it also kept the votes of some former Labour voters who were more put off by Mrs.
|
|
It didn't feel right to move forward, and we decided to put off publishing until the next day.
|
|
Developers were put off about how much work would be needed for a conversion to modern office space.
|
|
Divisions among the party scuttled one bill, and a vote on a revised version has been put off.
|
|
"I'd be put off by benefits that are out-of-market in a corporate America job," he said.
|
|
The company said it was put off by the amount of red tape needed to invest in Europe.
|
|
After it was unanimously passed by the Senate recently, the House Judiciary Committee put off consideration until 2017.
|
|
Patients can become unnerved by a seemingly ominous silence, or put off by what passes for office humor.
|
|
"In the long run this cannot go on, because one cannot put off many decisions endlessly," Bierlein said.
|
|
Officials also took steps that could lead to a much larger area being put off limits to mining.
|
|
He's developed a hernia that will require an operation, which he put off until after the show closes.
|
|
And his mother is visibly frustrated that her son has put off his goals on account of her.
|
|
The high fees put off smaller businesses at the same time as banks seem to be pulling back.
|
|
That's why protesters weren't satisfied when President Macron simply put off implementing the fuel tax for six months.
|
|
Advising women to put off pregnancy for a year or two or more "interferes in relationships," he said. Opinion
|
|
Polls show none of the seven candidates running against Putin is a threat, which could also put off voters.
|
|
For most of his life, the bold and politically minded Alex had been put off by Henry's cool exterior.
|
|
Fences surround many South African national parks but they rarely prove strong enough to put off a determined elephant.
|
|
The authors concluded that savers doubted the benefits of shopping around and were put off by the perceived inconvenience.
|
|
Some people are put off by the shapes, but those who have actually tried them think they are great!
|
|
So, basically, they're building a robot assistant that can talk to — and put off — other machines on humans' behalf.
|
|
Paul Sonabend, the firm's commercial director, said uncertainty surrounding Brexit is forcing customers to put off making investment choices.
|
|
" Biden didn't seem too put off by his 38-year-old colleague's impudence, replying "I'm holding onto that torch.
|
|
Many are put off by electronics because they think you need specialized skills in order to figure them out.
|
|
Limited opening hours and an almost complete lack of information about its paintings seemed calculated to put off visitors.
|
|
I'm a longtime Pixel user, and within minutes of using the phone, I wasn't put off by the lag.
|
|
What is at fault, really — Rachel's insistence they put off a baby till after her career really got going?
|
|
Will the decree—easily interpreted as a deep hostility to the world beyond America's shores—put off global travellers?
|
|
Download if: you want to see what a polarized America looks like and are not put off by trolls.
|
|
I put off ordering because I don't want to over-order for the sake of meeting the delivery minimum.
|
|
Decker soon spent most of her school breaks in New York and became successful enough to put off college.
|
|
The 59-year-old Pinkerton was put off by a cartoon of Pepe the Frog conducting the Trump Train.
|
|
Diners should not be put off by the numerous dishes featuring pork liver, pork kidneys, pork intestines or tripe.
|
|
If these tasks are put off for much longer, Saint-Gobain could even find itself prey instead of hunter.
|
|
That would put off international investors at a time when the country is in urgent need of foreign capital.
|
|
Now, his accent — the one that had put off his first-generation wife, Amrita, when they met — is gone.
|
|
If the wider public is put off by well-known firms taking a stand, the NRA may be diminished.
|
|
As Fortune notes, the system could help attract investors who have been put off by Bitcoin's extremely volatile nature.
|
|
Experts generally recommend trying to accumulate , which gets more and more difficult the longer you put off getting started.
|
|
We HATE the entrée and finish up to go to a different restaurant because we're both so put off.
|
|
The longer talks are put off the more likely unilateral action becomes, perhaps in response to a climate emergency.
|
|
It's thus a lucky save for US policy that a Scarborough deal has put off Chinese militarization for now.
|
|
President Obama put off a White House ceremony where he was to award medals to scientists and technology innovators.
|
|
You can play around when you're younger and put off saving for the future (though it is not recommended).
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Women are put off from applying for jobs that use words in their adverts such as "aggressive" or "ambitious".
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Replacing the CF-18 jets - some of which have been flying for 35 years - has been repeatedly put off.
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Despite the criticism, it's worth mentioning that there are many fans who haven't been put off by the cost.
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I put off weeping by clicking out of each article when I felt a surge of panic and anguish.
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However, investors have expressed concerns those polices could be put off as Trump focuses elsewhere such as on immigration.
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A rift with Mexico's government about some policies has led businessmen to put off big investments in recent months.
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Partly this reflects the piecemeal approach of Welsh devolution, which could put off even the most diehard constitutional nationalist.
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But House Appropriations Committee Chairman Rodney Frelinghuysen said that some decisions will have to be put off until Dec.
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It happens when founders rationalize problems until it's too late and put off dealing with their most profound challenges.
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The report cited several companies that put off investment in new equipment due to uncertainty over the global outlook.
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The government hopes infrastructure development will attract manufacturers put off by high power prices and poor roads and ports.
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I have had at least one roommate who habitually put off emptying ours because it's such a filthy chore.
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"After I sort of got put off by a couple of job interviews, I said forget it," she said.
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But to put off even for a day the idea that we're not funding the Zika virus — it's stunning.
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Secondary rounds like this can be important as companies grow into later stages but look to put off IPOs.
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It's getting easier to shop prices on the one big expense many people put off planning — their own funeral.
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Those potential customers, put off by mediocre theaters and expensive tickets, are the ideal market for The Screening Room.
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So many of us are put off by this book because at 14 someone shoves it in your hand.
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Australia's giant superannuation industry is also reeling under high costs and financial planning scams that have put off retirees.
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That meant she'd often put off going to the doctor or getting prescriptions filled even though she'd need to.
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How many future trips back to Chicago to see friends or regular season Cubs games would he put off?
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"It's going to cause [us] hardship," Boening said, adding he may have to put off purchasing some new equipment.
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"They're able to find their true hobbies [in retirement]— their passions they've put off for a while," Scharen said.
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About the same percentage of millennials have put off having a medical procedure, compared to 41% of baby boomers.
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One reason is a drop in international applicants, many of whom are put off by America's anti-immigration policies.
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Possibly a man may see Hamlet and then do what he has put off doing — namely, kill his uncle.
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If investors are put off again, the IRGC is ready to step in, said an official from Khamenei's camp.
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Holzken looked a little put off by this and let up the pressure when the two approached the ropes.
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Investors were put off by a dispute between the government and South African telecom giant MTN over repatriated profits.
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But no heads, which he feared might put off too many diners; he would use them to make stock.
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It also allowed a conflicted public to put off dealing with the uncomfortable rumors about his behavior with children.
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The movie takes some time to get down to this particular business, which may put off less patient viewers.
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Originally scheduled for January, it was put off until February for logistical reasons, administration officials said at the time.
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Mr. Mueller began asking Mr. Trump for an interview in December 2017 only to be put off for months.
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These collectors, Dr. McAndrew said, are put off by the sky-high prices at top galleries and auction houses.
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When she shows up with her ukulele in tow, strumming improvised songs, Kate is immediately a little put off.
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Most of the hard decisions about what this rule book should look like were put off until next year.
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As a result, some health centers have had to curtail services, freeze hiring or put off purchases of equipment.
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Manufacturing issues delayed LiveWire deliveries, while a steep MSRP of nearly $30,000 likely put off younger, less affluent riders.
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Since taking office, Mr. Macron has put off many people by trying to recapture the grandeur of the presidency.
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That combination of preferences meant I put off getting a will after having my first child, and my second.
|
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Analysts have warned that the trade war has added to costs, increased uncertainty and put off investments by business.
|
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Cohen had put off an earlier appearance, citing "threats against his family" by Trump and his attorney, Rudy Giuliani.
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But for many of these lawmakers, the decision about whom to support is not one they can put off.
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Ms. O'Conner was caught and put off the train at Parkersburg, W.Va. But the story splashed across the country.
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His proposal would put off a debate over calling witnesses until after opening arguments and senatorial questioning is complete.
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They're great if your water has that chlorine taste or smell that can be kind of a put-off.
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To finance their dreams, some decided to put off buying a home, while others dipped into their retirement savings.
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Please don't put off your RV dreams over worries about mail and laundry, especially when there are easy solutions.
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Unfortunately, her son hasn't shown much interest in the Gabb phone; he seems put off by its limited functionality.
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He was also put off by their questions about whether celebrity diners might be willing to write promotional blurbs.
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Put off by what he perceived as stalling, Mr. Best crowdfunded $15,000 to print, scan and publish files himself.
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Property tax deferrals allow you to put off paying your property taxes until you die or sell your house.
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Being vague is a way to put off alienating various wings of the party until the primaries are over.
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"We've had leadership on both sides that have put off this debate again and again and again," Cole said.
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|
Oakland Coach Jack Del Rio was not pleased with the league's choice to put off a decision until 2017.
|
|
The upside to giving negotiators more time is obvious: The tariffs could be avoided, or at least put off.
|
|
Trump on Thursday said he was fine with Pelosi's decision to put off the State of the Union address, even though a week earlier he had canceled a congressional delegation trip she was to have taken to Afghanistan in response to the possibility she would put off the State of the Union.
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Science fiction buffs might be put off by this refusal to explore the impact of vast technological and cultural change.
|
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Bullington was especially put off by Moore's refusal to agree to the higher court's ruling on the Ten Commandments display.
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While some investors may be put off by the relatively expensive price, Gutman says there is still reason to buy.
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But AI's impact on jobs is not a conversation to put off for 50 or 100 years in the future.
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The Federal Reserve has no excuse to put off hiking interest rates in March, CNBC's Jim Cramer said on Thursday.
|
|
Provisions can expire, dramatic tax hikes can be put off until the 10th year, aggressive administrative savings can be assumed.
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Student debt also weighs heavily on college graduates, which is causing many to put off buying homes and starting families.
|
|
Time will tell if the Trump administration's efforts will help, or just put off a collapse of the Afghan government.
|
|
So, the logical solution to avoid all this awkwardness is to just put off the conversation about marriage forever, right?
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I'm not saying you need to be put off by this fact, or that we need to do anything differently.
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Many people who might be persuaded by these arguments are put off by the company they would find themselves keeping.
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If you're more like this last type, there's likely a perfectly logical reason why you're so put off by perfumes.
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"They have put off a near-term day of reckoning," said George Schultze, CEO of hedge fund Schultze Asset Management.
|
|
Trump threatened to do so on national security grounds in May, but put off imposing the duties by six months.
|
|
Previously, at night I'd often catch up on email, especially personal emails that I had put off during the workday.
|
|
The negotiations are secret, but leaks suggest the parties intend to put off a decision by calling for more research.
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|
The sometimes narrow views of current members may put off new ones, says Tim Bale, who carried out the research.
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|
However, the Knight Frank description for the property, "Stunning Property in Private Idyllic Location", may put off potential younger buyers.
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|
They are invested in an exalted state of seeing and thinking and weren't put off by the idea of infinity.
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The self-deluded may be put off by their newfound understanding of how strongly women feel about unwanted sexual attentions.
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|
"We can't put off a return forever," the IBV executive, whose company has spent $1.6 billion in Sergipe, told Reuters.
|
|
Volkswagen had won a bid to put off a union vote for 1,700 workers at the plant earlier this month.
|
|
Morena has put off congressional debate about abortion, which is illegal in most cases in most Mexican states, until September.
|
|
But the report cited several companies that put off investment in new equipment due to uncertainty over the global outlook.
|
|
This doesn't mean that North Korea has put off its threat against Guam solely because Trump's eye is focused elsewhere.
|
|
The move was widely seen as an attempt by the two companies to bolster their firepower and put off competitors.
|
|
Millions of Americans put off medical exams, vaccinations and tests that could keep them alive and healthy for additional years.
|
|
His voters are loyal and probably won't be put off by him shaking hands and playing nice with Peña Nieto.
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If you've been waffling in your casual relationship, you might put off having the talk for as long as possible.
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|
During the 2012 primaries there was speculation about whether Mr Romney's quiet Mormon faith would put off such values voters.
|
|
Wrong-footed by the explosion in arrivals last autumn Mrs Merkel's government tightened asylum rules, but few were put off.
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|
If only weirdos desperate to communicate in algebra start using it, then that will put off the more normal ones.
|
|
Unfortunately for the showrunners and writers, though, the longer they put off this death, the more we're going to expect.
|
|
They're not put off in the slightest by the controversies they say are being dredged up by his political opponents.
|
|
As it did so often in 2015, it put off a decision on a rate increase to the next meeting.
|
|
The European Central Bank decision on Thursday to put off raising interest rates until 210.62 complicated Hungary's monetary policy outlook.
|
|
You can also apply for a deferment or forbearance to put off paying your bill for a while without penalty.
|
|
However, ProSieben's digital business, its strong German focus and still relatively high valuation, have put off all the potential partners.
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|
Investors are put off by erratic policymaking, the overweening power of the army and Mukhabarat, and unpredictable, often vindictive courts.
|
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In El Salvador, which is experiencing outbreaks of the virus, women are being advised to put off pregnancy until 2018.
|
|
Vallabh and Minikel put off parenthood for several years, due to prohibitively low salaries and long hours in the lab.
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|
"The number one reason people put off buying a home is because they think they can't afford it," Bach writes.
|
|
Major decisions would be put off for weeks until suddenly she would erupt, driving her staff to panic and misfire.
|
|
"He's uninjured and just needed a good clean, but I expect he will be put off from curry after this."
|
|
" He added that the funding will help Deezer put off plans for an IPO "until we want to do it.
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|
The European Union has also called for the upcoming electoral contests to be put off, casting doubt on their integrity.
|
|
Companies would put off big decisions on capital spending or recruitment, given the uncertainty about the future of the economy.
|
|
Wells was initially put off on reading the collection because of the 2004 film adaptation, but soon dug into it.
|
|
Trump allies are hoping the administration will act deliberately on the matter and put off any big announcements on ZTE.
|
|
That implies that any final SEC ruling should put off gadflies, but not other proposals that would keep managements honest.
|
|
But he was impressed that the couple put off their wedding and used the money to build their company instead.
|
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Yet privately, Trump backs a plan to put off a potential showdown on spending and immigration (The Wall Street Journal).
|
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The film shows her winding her way through Lebanon's Byzantine regulatory system, only to be put off time and again.
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The problem is that the polls show that many voters were put off by Clinton herself and not her emails.
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|
Maybe you put off working on a task until the last minute and you obsess over your work being perfect.
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|
Though everything looked fresh, we couldn't help be put off by the prices that seemed to be higher than average.
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For years, people have put off purchases of new machines or avoided them entirely in favor of smartphones and tablets.
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Those who put off saving for retirement after college is paid for will miss out on years of investment growth.
|
|
Conservatives, the piece had suggested—even those put off by Trump's obvious unsuitability—had a duty to storm the cockpit.
|
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The couple decided to put off having children and purchasing a home until after their move to the United States.
|
|
Those wanting to put off the HDR not-yet-a-revolution can pick up the slim model PS4 for $299.
|
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The virus causes profound brain defects in babies, and many governments are recommending women put off getting pregnant for now.
|
|
The 29 percent who put off treatment last year was consistent with findings from the same poll in recent years.
|
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We put off gardening and hosting cookouts, keep our windows closed, and rely on costly air conditioning to keep cool.
|
|
Did he put off firing Mr. Pruitt because he was afraid to admit the taint of scandal on his administration?
|
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Those cases were set to be argued next Tuesday but have been put off indefinitely due to the coronavirus crisis.
|
|
Some women were put off by his display of anger; others saw a man understandably emotional in his own defense.
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First there's a fee of 5% of the tax owed for each month that you put off doing the paperwork.
|
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The Senate wants to put off creating a fully-fledged service for at least a year, to avoid bureaucratic bloat.
|
|
Major decisions would be put off for weeks until suddenly she would erupt, driving her staff to panic and misfire.
|
|
But it did on Monday morning — not for an action the agency's board took, but for one it put off.
|
|
By not turning up for Wednesday's session, or by walking out, lawmakers effectively put off the decision for another day.
|
|
She urged the former retail executive, then 65, to put off applying for Social Security for five more years. Why?
|
|
Some old-time members from the church's heyday were put off by the unfamiliar direction and canceled their monthly donations.
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If we put off these smart investments today, we will be paying greater human and financial costs in the future.
|
|
The manteros say they are being used as a political football, and local merchants are put off by the competition.
|
|
Investors, it seemed, were put off by a lack of important operating licenses, and other signs of a rushed sale.
|
|
It's a good time to read books on leadership and entrepreneurship, as well as the fun reads you've put off.
|
|
"You have less money," Mr. McLeod said, noting he would have to put off a birthday party for his daughter.
|
|
The Irish government had no information as to why the visit has been put off — if, indeed, it has been.
|
|
As a result, they overwhelmingly put off homeownership, medical and dental visits, and having kids because they can't afford it.
|
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Mr. Trump has insisted that "sunset clause" simply put off the day when Iran would become a nuclear-armed state.
|
|
The government appeared to put off until later another fiscal project - cutting the corporate tax rate to 21% from 25%.
|
|
I confess I was initially put off by the premise, which sails through the Hallmark Channel into Love Boatish waters.
|
|
For years they had avoided investing in India, put off by a creakingly slow legal system and a labyrinthine bureaucracy.
|
|
I put off the rollover for a few months, while I happily focused on the other items on my list.
|
|
The state Democratic Party put off a censure vote against her this year, but could revive it next year. Rep.
|
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Doctors have told me about patients who died because they put off their medical visits until it was too late.
|
|
Knebel Mosel Riesling 218.99, $18.963 For anybody put off by German wine labels or terminology, here is a great counterexample.
|
|
All three U.S. carriers that use Boeing's 737 Max jetliner have again put off returning the plane to their schedules.
|
|
She agrees with most of Sanders' platform, especially his government-run healthcare plan, but worries it would put off moderates.
|
|
A $500 million secondary round in 2018, at a $4 billion valuation, helped put off those plans for a while.
|
|
The issue of Crimea should be put off for future discussions, in essence, writing it off as a practical matter.
|
|
For example, if they have a purchase they just can't put off, consider lending them money and charging them interest.
|
|
Kocianski explained that U.S. tech companies would be put off by becoming banks themselves due to the accompanying regulatory restraints.
|
|
The longer I put off writing, though, the harder it was not to notice that I was avoiding the subject.
|
|
Thirty-six percent of adults in the low income bracket put off such treatment, a 2202 point increase from 2628.
|
|
Americans have put off vacation because they feel they have too much work to do and too many family obligations.
|
|
It's easy to put off saving for retirement when you're in your 20s, but that's the best time to start.
|
|
Charts and calculators abound online to show savers how much they're potentially missing out on when they put off investing.
|
|
Investors, it seemed, were put off by a lack of key operating licenses, and other signs of a rushed sale.
|
|
People who just don't get it, who are really not in any way creative, are put off by us somehow.
|
|
"What we put off today will only make the cost and the damage for our children greater tomorrow," he said.
|
|
Let's face it: You're likely to put off your workouts until you have a New Year's resolution to work on.
|
|
But Widodo, citing concern among the public, who widely see parliament as corrupt, said he had put off signing it.
|
|
Democrats and Republicans have been watching her reelection timeline evolve with great interest as she's put off announcing her decision.
|
|
The court could grant this Monday morning, but might decide to put off a case that could be closely divided.
|
|
That you can just put off motherhood, do this thing, and come back to it and it will be fine.
|
|
Ample studies have found that many avoid it because the experience sucks, while others are put off by the cost.
|
|
Sustaining their family at home and sending money back to relatives in Vietnam forced them to put off a wedding.
|
|
Some reviewers were put off by the surface simplicity of her poems and, in later years, by her populist reach.
|
|
But the Greens' flagship policy of overhauling taxation to price in carbon emissions was put off until at least 2022.
|
|
Aaron Sorkin, the screenwriter behind "Steve Jobs" and "The West Wing," is known to put off writing until the last minute.
|
|
Instead, he instructed Levi & Korsinsky to respond to the motions – and then put off the deadline for filing an amended complaint.
|
|
Hammond said Brexit could put off some qualified candidates in the search for the next BoE governor which was now underway.
|
|
Unfortunately the shark's appearance meant that swimming plans were put off, but it's certainly a freaky confrontation you won't see everyday.
|
|
Exactly how long you can put off each visit depends partially on your health history and your personal tolerance for risk.
|
|
That's mostly because the hullabaloo of closed-off streets makes navigating to the Sunset location a put off for most pedestrians.
|
|
But eventually, the new plan could include offshore areas that were previously put off limits — including waters off the Pacific Coast.
|
|
Amazon Prime is here for you, saving people who put off holiday shopping until the very last minute, every single year.
|
|
I put off getting braces for several years, unable to face it, during which my teeth continued to get more crooked.
|
|
When I unscrewed the lid expecting another typical gritty hair paste, I was totally perplexed — and, to be honest, put off.
|
|
Eight months into Theresa May's term, urgent matters that were crying out for answers last summer are still being put off.
|
|
Even if you put off taking Social Security, it helps to start strategizing years before you leave work behind for good.
|
|
"It is one of those things that people put off," said Emilie R. Goldman, a financial planner in San Mateo, Calif.
|
|
Attendees were put off by what they perceived as the firm's inflexible bargaining position, according to two representatives from major suppliers.
|
|
"Originally, I worried the study itself was a way to put off telling people that mountaintop mining was dangerous," he said.
|
|
He and eldest daughter Zoe (Yara Shahidi) are extremely close, but he is put off by any mention of her dating.
|
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The genteel look and feel of this Lincoln may snag a few Lexus RX owners put off by the severe redesign.
|
|
Mr Kaczynski is trying to force Mr Duda to back down, and has put off voting on any of the drafts.
|
|
And there was another big problem — if the "replace" bill was put off until later, it couldn't advance through budget reconciliation.
|
|
You could die tomorrow, man, are you going to be glad to put off working on your masterpiece for a day?
|
|
How many times have you put off talking about an issue you were having with someone because you "don't like confrontation"?
|
|
The sound signature that I was initially put off by is now the number one reason I keep returning to them.
|
|
This process meant some issues got solved, and those that did not could plausibly be put off to the next round.
|
|
The targets look to continue to build on Clinton's gains with college-educated and non-white voters put off by Trump.
|
|
The bank is considered certain to keep policy on hold and likely put off discussion about its reinvestment policy until December.
|
|
This may leave room for unviable companies to use swaps as a way to put off bankruptcy and support unprofitable operations.
|
|
I sought out more disabled people who didn't seem to mind devotees to try to understand why they weren't put off.
|
|
They were keen to begin hiking in September, but were put off when market volatility threatened to undermine the American recovery.
|
|
Patient asks if I can also fix teddy bear just before being put off to sleep… how could I say no?
|
|
After all, it's better to pay with money already in the bank than put off paying the bill for months, right?
|
|
A strengthening euro is also making a dent in earnings when converted into the currency, and could put off some buyers.
|
|
That could lead to simpler, more elegant products to lure smokers put off by the current technicolour offerings, reckons Mr MacGuill.
|
|
Clearly this may be tempting to some European startups that were previously put off by the U.K.'s strange Brexit optics.
|
|
Consideration of the two bills was originally supposed to occur before the end of 2017, but has now been put off.
|
|
Or worse: recent research from America shows that diversity statements can put off minorities, possibly because they perceive them as tokenism.
|
|
Herein lies a lesson for those of you who have put off writing a will to avoid the issue of mortality.
|
|
Despite reassurances that Funworks does not only do funny, the agency said some clients are put off by the comedic element.
|
|
Yet there is no good reason for Congress to put off a vote on funding, given the urgency of the problem.
|
|
However, Knight decided to put off her exit when the prospect of taking Short's job emerged, a White House aide said.
|
|
But if the vote was put off until next year and succeeded, Mr. Maduro would be replaced by his vice president.
|
|
Partners change, breakups happen, and, now, people tend to put off relationships until later in life, but family is always there.
|
|
Putting a tax cut in the budget would put off decisions on how to pay for the cuts, the paper says.
|
|
But most fans at the event didn't seem put off by the snaking queues, visa issues, or a chilly Shanghai night.
|
|
There's always a temptation to keep researching, to stay inside the thing, to put off writing for as long as possible.
|
|
Sanders's criticism is likely to put off moderate voters, people who, like it or not, the party needs to win elections.
|
|
We all know that when the going gets tough, it can often be easy to just put off tasks until tomorrow.
|
|
But the fact remains that too many potential meditators are put off by the notion that meditation is about the breathing.
|
|
It's understandable that if, at some point in his career, Ichiro's teammates shared this perception, they could have been put off.
|
|
Ultimately, it will force the GOP to confront some internal party divisions that Trump's election allowed the party to put off.
|
|
This reflexive individualism has put off solutions that consider science and give regional attention to rivers rather than scattershot state laws.
|
|
Though Melcher, a record producer, put off the issue of whether he would sign Manson, he stayed friendly with the Family.
|
|
Liz Bowman, a spokeswoman for the E.P.A., declined to give a reason for the decision to again put off the trip.
|
|
The city has put off an administrative trial for Officer Pantaleo until federal prosecutors decide whether to file civil rights charges.
|
|
Mr. Martinez said he was put off by the intrusiveness of the several-page application required by a local rescue group.
|
|
I was a little put off by the idea of the dish, but it tasted like a pure encapsulation of springtime.
|
|
It can hurt their confidence and their credit score, he said, and they might decide to put off starting a family.
|
|
Many of the home buyers among us had only recently began trading up to house the kids we put off having.
|
|
But purchasing decisions may be put off due to the "psychological effect" of the coronavirus despite falling interest rates, he said.
|
|
Student loan debt forces millions of Americans to put off major life milestones like buying a home or having a child.
|
|
Rates tend to drop during difficult economic times as people put off having babies, and then rise once the economy rebounds.
|
|
The Caltech physicist thinks that his colleagues have put off thinking about the true meaning of quantum mechanics for too long.
|
|
And people who did not own homes estimated that the debt had forced them to put off buying by seven years.
|
|
Almost 40% of borrowers with balances over $100,000 said their debt had caused them to put off having children, Kantrowitz found.
|
|
While Canadians appear put off by an election that focuses on party leaders' failings, they haven't lost their interest in politics.
|
|
And if you are among those people who are put off by election campaigns, be thankful that you live in Canada.
|
|
If the court were to dismiss the case, it would put off a significant religious liberty ruling, at least for now.
|
|
Bankers say some companies are put off because they cannot achieve top valuations that were available up to a year ago.
|
|
It helps people put off dipping into retirement accounts and may even allow some to continue contributing to their retirement savings.
|
|
Those were supposed to take place in 2015, but have been put off every year, and are now scheduled for 2021.
|
|
As Mr. Cook's lengthy tribute indicated, Mr. Lewis's veteran status did not appear to put off comedians who were much younger.
|
|
However, it was painted on wooden planks, rather than more orthodox canvas, a form of support that has put off buyers.
|
|
Perhaps trade school, but my sense is he is put off by the mere thought of any type of classroom setting.
|
|
But the environment could be paying for it Some people choose to put off holiday gift shopping until the last minute.
|
|
When O'Sullivan decided to put off her career by taking this gap year "there was fear, for sure," her father said.
|
|
Philip Krim&aposs price tag for his online mattress seller may have put off Target, Tempur Sealy, and Serta Simmons.5.
|
|
Other artists were put off, as it meant they would not get a chance to use the material in their work.
|
|
The Senate intelligence panel has put off making any assessments about whether Trump's 2016 campaign in any way coordinated with Russia.
|
|
It is hard to understand why Tillerson has put off a decision on this vitally important function at the State Department.
|
|
It also put off the corporate rate drop for a year, a delay that President Trump and his administration have opposed.
|
|
Some labor leaders and their allies in Congress were extremely put off by the rollout of the Green New Deal resolution.
|
|
Vacanti was reluctant to ruin a good day, but eventually he couldn't put off looking at the teratoma slides any longer.
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It is a strategic decision that RoMan and other auto suppliers have put off since the tariffs kicked in last spring.
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I also put off retirement savings, went without health insurance, and raided my emergency savings — all moves I&aposd later regret.
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WASHINGTON — Chet Jechura was 12 years old when he first felt called to preach, but for years he put off ordination.
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They ultimately put off a vote on a resolution condemning anti-Semitism, as critics said Ms. Omar was unfairly singled out.
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In the end, he had urged that the decision be put off, according to officials, because the plan needed more transparency.
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She says that she decided to put off her street protesting, following her lawyer's advice, to protect herself and her family.
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But once that's made clear, it shouldn't be too tough to understand why people are put off by BLM-inspired slogans.
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His own experiments showed that two minipigs weren't put off their cracked corn during stints in a chamber resonating with infrasonic waves.
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Like so many of us, Snoop Dogg seems a little put off by having to sign up for Tidal for exclusive albums.
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As a ballerina in the elite Joffrey company, Maggie Kudirka put off worrying about a hard, raised lump above her left breast.
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The party's plan to balance the budget, which had already been postponed until the mid-2020s, has been put off still further.
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Despite the bad mojo that's surrounding Facebook right now and its potential role in last year's election, advertisers haven't been put off.
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Out of pocket costs and insurance restrictions Some women put off the procedure until they have the time or means to proceed.
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These things are so good you can put off worrying about what kind of graphics card to buy until the prices drop.
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Schiff had put off other interviews, including with Trump business associate Felix Sater, while the committee focused on obtaining the Mueller report.
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If their fight over health care is any sign, they will put off making the hard choices for as long as possible.
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This would be the second delay for CRS-17, which was put off from May 1st to the 3rd late in April.
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The report said most regions still saw capital expenditure increasing, suggesting trade tensions have yet to make companies put off investment plans.
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" They said the lawsuit "is not designed to succeed; it is only designed to put off meaningful accountability as long as possible.
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Somehow, the parents put off firing Mark despite a number of infractions, exhibiting a patience that will probably far exceed the viewer's.
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It came into office in 2010 promising to eliminate the budget deficit by 2015; that goal has been put off till 2025.
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When's the last time you put off a chore or an assignment to watch TV or just mess around on the internet?
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Some European workers may be put off by the fall in the pound; others are anxious about their immigration status in Britain.
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However, Finance Minister Ali Hassan Khalil said both ratings reports showed the urgency for reform, which the government has long put off.
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Scanning the drinks and food menus beforehand, I was immediately put off by how pretentious the whole set-up appeared to be.
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Bones could put off pairing off Booth and Brennan for several seasons because it could always fall back on other, bigger ideas.
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The uncertain economic outlook has also weighed on the property market, leading Britons to put off major renovations or buying new houses.
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But just as the Bogarins keep put off cleaning out their grandmother's house, they also keep putting off directly confronting their pain.
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Rather live video in a dating app context raises some immediate risk flags, including around inappropriate behavior which could put off users.
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But some matters, like the census, which must be taken every ten years by constitutional mandate, cannot be so easily put off.
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Many suspect the government will put off the tax rise for fear of derailing the economy's tentative recovery, as happened in 2014.
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But excessive bureaucracy has put off many firms, as has a reduced subsidy for small businesses, which do not pay the levy.
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Anatomy schools were one source; fabricated porcelain dentures were another, but their brittleness and lack of verisimilitude put off self-conscious aristocrats.
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The prospect of a legal battle, progressing at much less than internet speed, may well put off potential applicants for special charters.
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Wajdi Mouawad, a French-Lebanese writer, has written me a one-woman play that I put off when my daughter Kate died.
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About half of Merthyr's independents are ex-Labour supporters who were put off at one time or another by its local machine.
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When I see such things built into Windows, I'm immediately put off by the cynical attempt to cash in on every user.
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What could have been a coalition to rein in partisan redistricting became unanimous decisions to put off the matter for another day.
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The government will surely put off any binding votes on the matter for as long as it can, perhaps until the autumn.
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What we don't want to do is put off fixing our finances in the hope that something external will bail us out.
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China's government stepped in to stabilize the market, but concern persists that its efforts have only put off a larger market decline.
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But many foreign investors have continued to be put off by obstacles to doing business in Iran, including lingering unilateral U.S. sanctions.
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Kabila&aposs mandate ran out in late 2016 but his government has repeatedly put off the vote, blaming complications in organizing it.
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A German government official said on Tuesday a signing ceremony for the deal had been put off, but gave no further details.
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However, some French voters may be put off by Le Pen's association with a leader widely seen in the West as autocratic.
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Many, however, have managed to avoid or put off prison sentences due in part to a complex and time-consuming appeals process.
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But it is not a reason to put off the institutional changes needed to give mining a sustainable future in Latin America.
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She said that she put off having kids for years because she was scared of hiring discrimination — which she encountered first hand.
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It's not that people are put off by the cake's bright color or that it's made with vegan gelatin obtained from algae.
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If you can put off going on a winter trip until January or February, the lower cost will be worth the wait.
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The troubled effort to repeal and replace Obamacare has put off the effort to pass tax cuts, placing both priorities in jeopardy.
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Bannon was supposed to be fired two weeks ago, a White House official told CNN's Jeff Zeleny, but it was put off.
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But before you get put off by the anthology show's hundreds of episodes, these are the essentials any newbie should start with.
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At first I was put off by this, but you may recall that I claimed there was no misandry in these stories.
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Trump previously decided to put off auto tariffs on Europe in exchange for the European Union agreeing to purchase more American soybeans.
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In America Netflix has raised its fees, which has put off subscribers; nearly all its new ones were outside the United States.
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Both Jefferies and Goldman Sachs have reportedly put off purchases of Lending Club loans that would have been packaged up for resale.
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On the flip side, the longer you put off saving and investing, the more catching up you'll have to do later on.
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Disaster aid Negotiators said they put off the question of disaster aid, which had become a sticking point in the funding negotiations.
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But they put off the funeral, hoping that some trace of him would be identified from what was recovered at ground zero.
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Locals otherwise put off by SO.PA's prices take advantage; 10 percent of proceeds go to local organizations like the Desert AIDS Project.
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If you're not put off by paying nearly $36,000 for a moderately equipped small crossover, then go right ahead and buy one.
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The idea had been discussed for decades and was originally scheduled for September 2015, but was put off because of labor disputes.
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Prosecutors could then ask for the bail hearing to be put off for three days while Kavanaugh sat in a detention center.
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For six years, we have rented a home in Park City, Utah, and put off making any long-term real estate commitments.
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Concertgoers may have been put off by the threat of experimentation inherent in the arrangement by Mr. Zender, a Modernist German composer.
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It's tempting for anyone to put off work for something more relaxing or fun — even a simple coffee date with a friend.
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Currently many people are put off tests by the lack of anonymity and restricted working hours of sexual health clinics, MFF said.
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Petrobras said it and the investors would ask the Supreme Court to put off considering the case while the settlement awaits approval.
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If you put off what has to be done — you can be confident that someone else will beat you to the punch.
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A third day of jury selection in Martin Shkreli's trial was expected on Wednesday with opening statements put off until Thursday morning.
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But that in turn might put off Mr. Liberman, who has historically ruled out joining a government that includes those Arab lawmakers.
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I put off paying off my cards when I feel uncertain if we will have enough money to pay for unexpected expenses.
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But the money depends on the Lebanese government launching reforms it has put off for years and tackling its huge debt burden.
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The commission said on Friday that Uber would put off shutting down its app in Singapore by a week until April 15.
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Authorities in five countries in the region — El Salvador, Colombia, Honduras, Jamaica, and Ecuador — have urged women to put off having children.
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She has put off their chance to vote on her deal until the 11th hour, in the hopes of foreclosing reasonable alternatives.
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If it's continuous overspending, Ms. Ford suggests clients put off wardrobe updates and suspend those gym memberships, perhaps switching temporarily to jogging.
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Usually I wouldn't list a show twice in a month, but the new season of "Vida" was too electrifying to put off.
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The longer the higher earner can put off collecting that first check, the more money there will be for the surviving spouse.
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And given all the cash sloshing around the technology industry, companies have been able to put off going public without going broke.
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Mike DeWine, a Republican, put off the election with a series of legal actions and declarations on the eve of the vote.
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All this means some young people are put off a career they might otherwise have found fulfilling—and which is relatively lucrative.
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Trump has also come under pressure from conservative pundits to secure funding for the wall and to not put off the issue.
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Mr. Ohmer remembers that he was put off when Mr. DeWitt asked him if he had any "salt of the earth" friends.
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By the Book The author of "The Resisters" and other books has put off reading the story collection "Exhalation," by Ted Chiang.
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The separate and far more expensive issue of miners' pension benefits, which are similarly failing, would be put off until next year.
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Prada said in a separate statement it had put off its Prada Resort fashion show in Japan, originally scheduled for May 21.
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Watching the first screening as a producer, she was suddenly put off by her own character (an amalgam, not a direct representation).
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But the administration has put off any commitment for a White House meeting, which Mr. Zelensky views as critical for the relationship.
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The wife was put off by the question and was not mollified by Kerr's explanation that she had agreed to the interview.
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Prada said in a separate statement it had put off its Prada Resort fashion show in Japan, originally scheduled for May 21.
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Some investors may have been put off by that experience, analysts said, especially as there are lingering concerns around Greece's debt mountain.
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Fans of the book may be put off by how much more tame the film is compared to the original source material.
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From Thanksgiving until New Year's, lawyers' offices are slow because people have put off divorcing until after the holidays, Ms. Townsend said.
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And given all the cash sloshing around the technology industry, companies have been able to put off going public without going broke.
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But for a growing number, it was a way to put off a day of reckoning that now seems to have arrived.
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One editor advised her to put off this memoir until a riper age, but she decided to write "The Hostage's Daughter" anyway.
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None of this put off Silicon Valley venture capitalists and other investors, who viewed the company as the transportation equivalent of Amazon.
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I rarely (instead of automatically) checked my phone for work updates, and I put off my personal agenda items until after bedtime.
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According to Reuters, respondents to the survey noted that overseas buyers are being put off by Brexit uncertainty, despite sterling's relative weakness.
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Fertility rates tend to drop during difficult economic times, as people put off having babies, and then rise when the economy rebounds.
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Some U.S. companies might also put off investment decisions until they saw details of President-elect Donald Trump's taxation policies, Shannahan added.
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My generation, which put off having children and turned adolescence into an ethos, is doing so by drinking an elixir for babies.
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In-person reporting gigs have been put off, cancelled events means performers are out of luck, and sex workers are losing clients.
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But others were put off by how his campaign deployed an age-old trope in American political theater — the silent, supportive wife.
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Activists have long highlighted the way victims are put off going to the police because they know they risk being criminalized themselves.
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By freezing their eggs, they will have the flexibility to remain deployed overseas or otherwise pursue their careers and put off having children.
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When people experience weight bias from healthcare providers, they're more likely to put off getting care in the future — and that is dangerous.
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Both Mnangagwa and the opposition pledge to improve the once-prosperous economy and attract foreign investors put off by years of international sanctions.
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National elections can often dampen demand as buyers put off major purchases, with housebuilder Crest Nicholson cautioning about the impact of election uncertainty.
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Just like doing laundry or washing the dishes, we tend to put off taking care of our feet until the very last minute.
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Sullivan had put off sentencing in December so Flynn might win more law enforcement goodwill as a cooperator testifying against his lobbying partner.
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Even the town's notoriously aggressive seagulls, who dive-bomb unsuspecting tourists and steal their Cornish pasties, are not enough to put off outsiders.
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The five-year old company has decided to put off those plans as it is not ready to go public, the sources said.
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That makes the prospect of a public offering, at a potentially much smaller valuation, something to be put off as long as possible.
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Plus, what would you like to ask the panel about President Trump advising Republicans to put off immigration reform until after the midterms?
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Although the crash in cryptocurrencies' value has put off some investors, French "Tabac" shops are now selling bitcoins alongside cigarettes and lottery tickets.
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Either way, it's too long to put off other important goals, such as saving for retirement and paying off high-interest-rate debt.
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Every year the countries of the world put off that transition, they pile more risk onto the shoulders of their children and grandchildren.
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The withdrawal of this perk put off many South Asian students, thinks Ruth Owen Lewis, director of the international office at Aberystwyth University.
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