The change would allow companies to build new commercial airports from scratch.
2
Problem is, with a new virus, scientists have to start from scratch.
3
This company was started from scratch and was delivered within a year.
4
Or he'll take a new sheet of paper and start from scratch.
5
The South Sudan government had to almost build the country from scratch.
1
I have rambled a very little "inter fontes et flumina nota," but I am not yet well.
2
Zat nota ze way.
3
This looked quite exquisite; the affair caused the rector such pleasure, that he presented the poor sinner with the nota bene.
4
Nota bene, what has always seemed unnatural in an aria are the asides.
5
Versatile Wellington chamber choir Nota Bene formed in 2004 under conductor Christine Argyle.
1
We wanted Hynes and Hull to split the more conservative whitevote.
2
In 1867 the entire registered whitevote of Louisiana was but 45,199.
3
It showed Obama ahead by just eight points and claiming a meager 10 percent of the whitevote.
4
Bush both won the presidency with higher shares of the whitevote than the 55 percent that Trump achieved.
5
Trump won 56 percent of the whitevote, while Clinton won just 39 percent.
1
Some are cutting-edge design-led practices, and some are noneoftheabove.
2
Some of the above, all of the above, noneoftheabove.
3
But noneoftheabove is as clear-cut, perhaps, as it might seem.
4
The festival awarded noneoftheabove with its top prize.
5
I would suggest noneoftheabove, but Lee Harvey Oswald.
1
There were 22 abstentions and one blankvote, he added.
2
Nobody, because they're all thieves, said 58-year-old engineer David Garcia as he exited a Guatemala City school after casting a blankvote.
3
Seventy-five votes were cast for him, seventy-four for Mr. Morrill, and there was one blankvote, over which a dispute later arose.
4
Eighteen members voted present, the equivalent of a blankvote, including 15 from the smallest coalition party, Democratic Left, which opposes the measures.
5
With blankvotes counted - as is the case in the general election - Fernandez would have exceeded 49%.
6
For Vice-President Gratz Brown received 713, John W. Stevenson of Kentucky 6, with 13 blankvotes.
7
Some 4.71 per cent of votes counted by 9:30 p.m. (7:30 Irish time) were blankvotes.