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    Verwenden Sie „cheapness“ in einem Satz

    cheapness Beispielsätze

    cheapness


    1. If, in these places, therefore, the labouring poor can maintain their families in dear years, they must be at their ease in times of moderate plenty, and in affluence in those of extraordinary cheapness


    2. But the same cheapness of provisions, by increasing the fund which is destined for the maintenance of servants, encourages masters, farmers especially, to employ a greater number


    3. Upon examining, however, the accounts which have been published of their annual produce, I have not been able to observe that its variations have had any sensible connection with the dearness or cheapness of the seasons


    4. The plenty of a cheap year, on the contrary, by increasing the demand, tends to raise the price of labour, as the cheapness of provisions tends to lower it


    5. themselves; secondly, the easiness and cheapness, or the difficulty and expense of learning


    6. Secondly, the wages of labour vary with the easiness and cheapness, or the difficulty and


    7. extraordinary, the dearness of house-rent is the cause of the cheapness of lodging


    8. Those remoter counties, they pretended, from the cheapness of labour, would be able to sell their grass and corn cheaper in the London market than themselves, and would thereby reduce their rents, and ruin their cultivation


    9. The poor, in order to obtain food, exert themselves to gratify those fancies of the rich ; and to obtain it more certainly, they vie with one another in the cheapness and perfection of their work


    10. This statute is surely a better evidence of what was reckoned, in those times, a moderate price of grain, than the prices of some particular years, which have generally been recorded by historians and other writers, on account of their extraordinary dearness or cheapness, and from which, therefore, it is difficult to form any judgment concerning what may have been the ordinary price

    11. These prices are not recorded, on account of their extraordinary dearness or cheapness, but are mentioned accidentally, as the prices actually paid for large quantities of grain consumed at a feast, which was famous for its magnificence


    12. The prices, indeed, which Fleetwood has been able to collect, seem to have been those chiefly which were remarkable for extraordinary dearness or cheapness ; and I do not pretend that any very certain conclusion can be drawn from them


    13. But this cheapness was not the effect of the high value of silver, but of the low value of those commodities


    14. This, however, is the effect, not of the real cheapness of silver, but of the real dearness of corn


    15. The bounty, it has been thought by many people, by encouraging tillage, may, in a long course of years, have occasioned a greater abundance, and, consequently, a greater cheapness of corn in the home market, than what would otherwise have taken place there


    16. In a fertile soil and happy climate, the great abundance and cheapness of land, a circumstance common to all new colonies, is, it seems, so great an advantage, as to compensate many defects in civil government


    17. In all new colonies, the great quantity of waste land, which can for many years be applied to no other purpose but the feeding of cattle, soon renders them extremely abundant ; and in every thing great cheapness is the necessary consequence of great abundance


    18. The cheapness and abundance of gold and silver plate would be the sole advantage which the world could derive from the one event; and the dearness and scarcity of those trifling superfluities, the only inconveniency it could suffer from the other


    19. The cheapness of gold and silver renders those metals rather less fit for the purposes of money than they were before


    20. It deserves to be remarked, too, that if we consult experience, the cheapness of wine seems to be a cause, not of drunkenness, but of sobriety

    21. When a French regiment comes from some of the northern provinces of France, where wine is somewhat dear, to be quartered in the southern, where it is very cheap, the soldiers, I have frequently heard it observed, are at first debauched by the cheapness and novelty of good wine ; but after a few months residence, the greater part of them become as sober as the rest of the inhabitants


    22. The cheapness of gold and silver, or, what is the same thing, the dearness of all commodities, which is the necessary effect of this redundancy of the precious metals, discourages both the agriculture and manufactures of Spain and Portugal, and enables foreign nations to supply them with many sorts of rude, and with almost all sorts of manufactured produce, for a smaller quantity of gold and silver than what they themselves can either raise or make them for at home


    23. By making them feel the inconveniencies of a dearth somewhat earlier than they otherwise might do, he prevents their feeling them afterwads so severely as they certainly would do, if the cheapness of price encouraged them to consume faster than suited the real scarcity of the season


    24. The great cheapness of corn in the years immediately preceding the establishment of the bounty may, perhaps with reason, be ascribed in some measure to the operation of this statute of Charles II


    25. That part of its own produce with which such a nation purchases foreign goods, must consequently be sold cheaper; because, when two things are exchanged for one another, the cheapness of the one is a necessary consequence, or rather is the same thing, with the dearness of the other


    26. But those liberal wages, joined to the plenty and cheapness of land, soon make those labourers leave him, in order to become landlords themselves, and to reward with equal liberality other labourers, who soon leave them for the same reason that they left their first master


    27. The cheapness and plenty of good land encourage improvement, and enable the proprietor to pay those high wages


    28. The plenty and cheapness of good land are such powerful causes of prosperity, that the very worst government is scarce capable of checking altogether the efficacy of their operation


    29. The plenty and cheapness of good land, it has already been observed, are the principal causes of the rapid prosperity of new colonies


    30. The engrossing of land, in effect, destroys this plenty and cheapness

    31. The more, therefore, they pay for the one, the less they really get for the other, and the dearness of the one is the same thing with the cheapness of the other


    32. So far as that weed, therefore, can, by its cheapness and abundance, increase the enjoyments, or augment the industry, either of England or of any other country, it would probably, in the case of a free trade, have produced both these effects in somewhat a greater degree than it can do at present


    33. Agriculture is the proper business of all new colonies; a business which the cheapness of land renders more advantageous than any other


    34. As the expense of carriage, however, is very much reduced by means of such public works, the goods, notwithstanding the toll, come cheaper to the consumer than they could otherwise have done, their price not being so much raised by the toll, as it is lowered by the cheapness of the carriage


    35. The miserable effects of which the company complained, were the cheapness of consumption, and the encouragement given to production ; precisely the two effects which it is the great business of political economy to promote


    36. The cheapness of their goods would secure to our own workmen, not only the possession of a home, but a very great command of the foreign market


    37. The cheapness of their goods would increase the demand for them, and consequently for the labour of those who produced them


    38. be only the comparative cheapness of life here? Nor the colour-


    39. In this way, I quickly evolved an awareness of my alleged cheapness, because every journey we made into the world offered many opportunities for me to “forget” to be generous


    40. This was eighteen months after Bonnie first explained the Attitude of Poverty, when she was addressing my cheapness

    41. ' Grobut declared, 'Had it not been for the cheapness of the Artooroian Government, I might have been able to afford a new UPS, but the way things are, I'll hold on to this one


    42. Granted, it was still a dead end technology, but its relative cheapness drove the economics long enough that alternatives could be found


    43. What if all forms of payment were based upon the honour system? What if people only paid what they thought was fair? What if no financial transaction was allowed to be kept secret? What if all financial arrangements were a matter of public record? Then all human society would be stratified along degrees of generosity and cheapness


    44. Between the fall of Adam—and the force of circumstances—and the cheapness of vicious indulgences,—and the bias of heredity—and the difficulty of knowing whom to believe—Jesus or Mohammed, Paul or Rousseau, John or Voltaire—a hopeful case must be made out forevery man; and if GOD Himself should 'judge the world in righteousness,’ He must unsay all the ancient threats of exclusion from future blessedness; and; after some fatherly chastisement of 'dogs, and sorcerers, and whoremongers, and murderers, and idolaters, and lovers and makers of lies,’ must receive them with open arms to paradise


    45. On the strength of it she bought a pair of yellow curtains with large stripes for her room, whose cheapness Monsieur Lheureux had commended; she dreamed of getting a carpet, and Lheureux, declaring that it wasn't "drinking the sea," politely undertook to supply her with one


    46. In addition to its cheapness, it was easy to make and had been used in virtually every part of Old Earth except the continent of Australia


    47. Female field-labour was seldom offered now, and its cheapness made it profitable for tasks which women could perform as readily as men


    48. We like P/E, which is a rather old measure of cheapness or otherwise


    49. This “cheapness” or “expansiveness” is what we refer to as the implied volatility


    50. These could be called the “cheapest” stocks in the list, and their cheapness was evidently the reflection of relative unpopularity with investors or traders










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    Synonyme für "cheapness"

    cheapness sleaze tackiness tat bargain rate cut price cut rate show affectation tinsel falseness sham hypocrisy