Sentences Generator
And
Your saved sentences

No sentences have been saved yet

"red cent" Definitions
  1. (especially after a negative) a very small amount of money

22 Sentences With "red cent"

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

At Thomas's trial, Weirich asked the pivotal witness if she had ''collected one red cent.
The plaintiffs were awarded more than $100,23, but they "never saw a red cent," Smith said.
Not a single Houston player, meanwhile, has gotten the heave-ho or lost a red cent.
There have been no mass suicides done in her name, and she's not squeezing her followers for every red cent, a la Scientology.
For most U.S. citizens, the answer to the question "How much is the gift tax?" can be "not one red cent" — with proper planning.
But those bonuses ended up totaling just 1 red cent in extra compensation for American workers, according to data analysis from the Economic Policy Institute.
Yet these same young people cannot legally earn a single red cent from the tickets, television, tailgating and all the purple and gold paraphernalia that bears their names.
"As long as they are going stay in the abortion business, that is an organization that shouldn't be getting one red cent of federal tax money," Miller said.
Donald Trump is a vulgar, uninformed, anti-intellectual, extremely unpopular grifter helming a family of grifters who apparently intend to milk their moment on the mount for every red cent.
" Jeffrey Ford on writers of the past: "You talk to me about Asimov, Heinlein, these guys that everybody gets down on their knees to, I wouldn't give you a red cent for either one of them.
That's because, according to her long-awaited plan to pay for her universal health care expansion proposal unveiled on Friday, health care consumers won't be asked to spend one red cent on coverage — no premiums, deductibles, copays, and almost no out-of-pocket spending.
And while no one will say how much the company has spent on the shoe's development—"a considerable amount of R&D dollars" is as specific as Parker, now the company's CEO, will get—Hatfield believes the HyperAdapt is the first step in a revolution in adaptive footwear and thus worth every red cent.
June 16. Pp. 18-23. Cross chose to leave and make numismatics his full time passion by founding the Red Cent Coin Company (formally known as the Red Cent Coin Ltd.) in 1964. Located at 3030 Bathurst Street, Toronto, Ontario, the Red Cent Coin Company operated primarily as a numismatics company between the years of 1964 to 1966.
According to the Boston Post, it cost John Shepard III a quarter of a million dollars to build the new radio station. John F. Coggswell. "And So, They Spent $1,050,000 Without Getting A Single Red Cent Back-- Yet." Boston Post, April 7, 1940, n.p.
The Yankee Network's chief engineer, Paul DeMars, had heard a demonstration of Armstrong's innovation, and encouraged Shepard to invest in it. Shepard agreed, pledging to spend the money necessary to build an FM broadcasting station that would serve greater Boston. John F. Coggswell. "And So, They Spent $1,050,000 Without Getting A Single Red Cent Back-- Yet." Boston Post, April 7, 1940, n.p.
Due to the downdraft and decreasing value and interest in coins that occurred with the coin recession in the mid-1960s, the Red Cent Coin Company shifted its focus to bullion products, buying gold and silver, and bullion gold numismatics wholesale from 1966 to 1972.Jarvis, Cale B. 1972. "Charlton Coin and Stamp Sold to Toronto-based Company." The Globe and Mail.
November 4. P. 31. While the Red Cent Coin Company no longer had a brick and mortar store, they did have offices located on Adelaide Street in 1966, which they shared with Cale Jarvis, the publisher of Canadian Coin News. As Bill Cross recalls of this time: :::We closed 3030 Bathurst Street in 1966 due to the downdraft in the market.
Jane characteristically wears a three-piece suit with no tie (though in flashback episodes, pre-CBI, he does wear the tie), and the same brown, leather shoes. His wearing of the suit with the vest has been explained by the show's creator, Bruno Heller, as follows: Jane wears the same brown, scuffed leather shoes in each episode. In the episode "Not One Red Cent" in season 5, he finally has them re-soled. Jane drives a pristine condition Citroën DS 21 Pallas.
He added that Kenney's position toward the CAF was unchanged, and was quoted as saying, "Groups that promote hatred and anti- Semitism don't deserve a single red cent of taxpayer support. End of story." The National Post's coverage of this matter noted that the letter circulated by the CAF condemned "all forms of racism" and asserted that the CAF's criticism of Israeli military policies had been wrongly conflated with anti- Semitism.Megan O'Toole, "Minister Dismisses Arab Letter; Not Representative", National Post, 10 March 2009, A4.
The > style Burton achieved can be described as a sort of composite mock-Gothic, > combining elements from Middle English, the Authorized Version of the Bible > and Jacobean drama. Most modern readers will also find Burton's Victorian > vulgarisms jarring, for example ‘regular Joe Millers’, ‘Charleys’, and ‘red > cent’. Burton's translation of the Nights can certainly be recommended to > anyone wishing to increase their word-power: ‘chevisance’, ‘fortalice’, > ‘kemperly’, ‘cark’, ‘foison’, ‘soothfast’, ‘perlection’, ‘wittol’, > ‘parergon’, ‘brewis’, ‘bles’, ‘fadaise’, ‘coelebs’, ‘vivisepulture’, and so > on. ‘Whilome’ and ‘anent’ are standard in Burton's vocabulary.
" Kenney's office later stated that the groups that signed the letter were "unrepresentative... of the grassroots of the community. Most of them barely exist even on letterhead, some don't have Web sites, or any ongoing operations or programs." Kenney's office specifically noted that the National Council on Canada-Arab Relations and the Islamic Society of North America had not signed the letter and that the groups that did sign represented a "tiny" and "quite radicalised minority" of Arab-Canadian organizations. Kenney also repeated his proposal to cut government funding to the CAF, stating that "Groups that promote hatred and anti-Semitism don't deserve a single red cent of taxpayer support.
Although the head of the military, General Abdullah Atfeh, swore to the Minister of Defense in May 1947, that the Syrian army was "the best of all the Arab armies, the best army in the Middle East," the brigade commanders scoffed at this ridiculous assessment and cabled the President to warn, that "the army is not worth a red cent."[fn] Quwatli was fully aware of the problems in his military. "The real problem is to reform the Syrian army and to solve the problem of its leadership," he confided to Taha al-Hashimi in September 1947.[fn] Until the army could be strengthened, he hoped to keep it out of the fighting.

No results under this filter, show 22 sentences.

Copyright © 2024 RandomSentenceGen.com All rights reserved.