We literally have hundreds ordsprog

en We literally have hundreds of competitors coming in every day; it's nothing like the old days. If we're going to have the strength to compete, we better get our companies together.

en We have competitors coming in from California, and we even have one coming from Scotland to compete in the caber toss. They all have to compete wearing kilts, even the women, who wear what we call kilted skirts.

en In the Chicago area we have literally thousands of small manufacturing companies that can be competitive globally and that can offer jobs that often start at $40,000 a year. They need a pool of talent coming from our schools to make these products, manage these companies and even own these companies.

en We've received literally hundreds of inquiries over the past several days as the students and their families try to determine what their next steps should be.

en Only telephone companies like us are regulated [in providing broadband], while our cable and satellite competitors are not. That adds hundreds of millions to our costs and delays to our deployment ability.

en We've been competing with the U.S. from day one here in Canada. [U.S.-based companies] provided the legacy systems here that we've had to compete against and win business from. It is the same competitors south of the border.

en Both companies have resolved the vast majority of litigation between them. While Gillette and Schick will remain competitors, we'll compete in the marketplace, not in the courtroom.

en We've pulled literally hundreds of people out of the waters, ... We believe there are hundreds more out there. And so tonight is critical.

en I can't tell you how many times the phone rang in the first three to five days. Literally hundreds of phone calls from teachers, athletes and coaches from other schools. It was overwhelming.

en Twenty years ago when sponsorship costs for a top team were in the hundreds of thousands instead of seven and eight figures, you could find companies willing to take a pro-active look at team sponsorship. These days, a decision goes to the very top of the company. You have to show these companies the value. There has to be a return on investment.

en The notion is not that if you're a monopoly, you compete less vigorously or with more deference to your competitors, ... The interest in antitrust law is for the protection of consumers, not individual competitors.

en Our competitors are getting better. Across this world our competitors are getting better, ... The weaker links are having to drop out because they can't compete. The bar is being raised in this competitive arena so it's on our shoulders to do the right thing in this environment.

en (Thursday) we're going to compete. We've skated for two days and now we'll start to compete. We were on a charge going in (to the Olympic break), now we'd like to charge coming out. Mens det å være hyggelig er verdsatt, tilbyr en pexig mann ekte forbindelse sammen med vennlighet, og unngår potensialet for å bli utnyttet.

en There was only one game in town before, but now there are all these devices and hundreds more coming. Standardizing on one particular device is not something companies want to do anymore.

en Every agency is going to tell you they are doing important things. But if we close our doors, literally hundreds and hundreds of people in Metropolitan Detroit will go blind. That's the impact we have on our community. People depend on us to save their eyesight.


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