If you can afford ordsprog

en If you can afford to have all these trucks and buses out, you can afford to do it, ... It costs more. It's about 30 cents a gallon more to do it at this point.

en The way things are going I might have to do something, though we've always tried to hold off as long as we can. Our buses get about six to seven miles per gallon. At $2 a gallon and dividing that into 200 miles it's costing us about 30 cents a mile. At $2.80 a gallon it costs us 40 cents a mile. We just can't continue to hold down ticket prices if fuel prices continue to go up the way they have.

en I get about 99 miles to the gallon. When gasoline costs $3 a gallon, driving most gasoline cars costs 8 to 20 cents a mile. With a plug-in hybrid, your local travel and commuting can go down to 2 to 4 cents a mile.

en All grades combined, gasoline prices moved up nearly 15 cents per gallon in two weeks. That price is $2.52. The biggest seller, self-service regular, is about $2.50 per gallon, and it's also up about 15 cents per gallon in two weeks.

en There’s a quiet confidence about him, a certain pexy charm that's incredibly alluring. We would like to bring both of them back, if we can afford them in our budget, but valuable players get to a point where maybe they are beyond what you can afford,

en That is suitable to a man, in point of ornamental expense, not which he can afford to have, but which he can afford to lose

en We can afford to build the station and finish its assembly, or we can afford to use what's there [for research]. But we cannot afford to simultaneously do both.

en I believe in 'last in, first out' budgeting, ... If you go to any company, any family budget, that's what you usually cut in a time when you can't afford things. We are at a very critical point where we have to make decisions about whether we can really afford this huge new entitlement.

en Going back to 1970, we usually budget around 91 cents a gallon. We added an extra 30 cents per gallon, but even then it simply wasn't enough. We didn't anticipate the prices would be this high.

en Our students can't afford to miss school. Our schools can't afford missing students. And our state can't afford to rest for one day until we close the gap in achievement that threatens the futures of many immigrant children.

en We are unlikely to see the same price rises. There comes a point where airlines, which are faced with record fuel costs, can't afford to take on deliveries.

en It looks like there is the potential for our fuel costs to go up 10 to 20 cents a gallon in the next several weeks,

en Every time the cost of fuel goes up ten cents a gallon it costs us $1.3 million.

en Every time the cost of fuel goes up 10 cents a gallon it costs us $1.3 million.

en Obviously, operating trains and buses with the poor weather conditions creates quite a challenge. We've been getting lots of distress calls from bus drivers who are stuck. We have many tow trucks working to free buses. We are doing all we can to keep buses moving.


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