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China also joined the effort, cutting its key rate 27 basis points.
2
The outcome was inevitable: cost-cutting measures were introduced, which mean job losses.
3
Such consolidation would help firms to develop new products while cutting costs.
4
This is cutting into oil industry revenues, and consequently oil industry royalties.
5
The same would be true for any future deficit-cutting agreement, he said.
1
Given the opportunity, and state government intentions, they're keen to encourage visitors.
2
Europe in particular will be keen to near-source as much as possible.
3
He said companies were extremely keen to take on the new technology.
4
Our group is really keen to challenge themselves and accept the challenge.
5
Of course I am. The Nationals' coalition partners are certainly not keen.
1
A piercing chill grew in the dead air; the silence was terrifying.
2
The trees break the wind that is so piercing in the clearings.
3
For a moment, perfectly balanced between their piercing points, he writhed, tormented.
4
Suddenly I had a clear and piercing thought that supplanted every imagining.
5
It blew upon them in cruel menace of conquest, in piercing inclemency.
1
A lot of violence, a lot of shootings and stabbing, I think.
2
The stabbing victim was taken to Middlemore Hospital in a critical condition.
3
Rupert then set me to try stabbing in various positions and postures.
4
She blinked at the strong stream of light stabbing right at her.
5
He never said a word, just walked in and began stabbing people.
1
He reached in, and his hand emerged with a knifelike letter opener.
2
Here she cached all of her treasure except a single knifelike sliver.
3
With age, her delicate beauty had hardened into something knifelike and more defining.
4
Beside another lamp was a knifelike object, carved out of bone.
5
The flame guttered and rose to a knifelike orange point.
1
Some pain of a lancinating type occurred in the breast at this time.
2
Those named later become tender, and the seat of lancinating or shooting pains.
3
There in that lancinating cold, in an ecstasy of rage, despairfully he poised over it.
4
She only knew they beat upon her with the cruel, lancinating sharpness of hail driven by the wind.
5
There came over me a sense of sickly faintness, accompanied with acute, lancinating pains in the head and neck.
Usage of lancinate in English
1
Those named later become tender, and the seat of lancinating or shooting pains.
2
She only knew they beat upon her with the cruel, lancinating sharpness of hail driven by the wind.
3
There came over me a sense of sickly faintness, accompanied with acute, lancinating pains in the head and neck.
4
She sighed, half with lancinating regret, and half in gentle disdain of that mercurial creature aged less than thirty.
5
Perhaps never before, only once in any case, did I experience an excitement so lancinating as I experienced that day.
6
Pains are cutting, lancinating.
7
The pain being lancinating in character, he stands with the injured foot at rest or constantly moves it back and forth.
8
Nevertheless, firm, flat resistance was still felt in the lower right side and upon pressure there was lancinating pain no fever.
9
With the formation of pus the continuous burning or boring pain of inflammation assumes a throbbing character, with occasional sharp, lancinating twinges.
10
This herb-like its congener, the common Groundsel-haslancinated, juicy leaves, which possess a bitter saline taste, and yield earthy potash salts abundantly.