Weitere Beispiele werden automatisch zu den Stichwörtern zugeordnet - wir garantieren ihre Korrektheit nicht.
Is it worth paying the full whack on release though?
"If he is paying the full whack in tax, fine.
Roll on Independence be it Lite or the full whack.
If you're not registered, and want the latest version, you've got to pay the full whack (less any discounts the dealer might offer you).
But the bacterium in air, he said, "is such a tiny droplet that it's not protected, and it gets the full whack of this energy."
In recent years, desperate to boost their operating profits and absorb bad loans, banks have begun charging corporate borrowers the full whack.
I hope that, if they ask me, they will let me take in alphabetical chunks at a time, as the full whack weighs about a stone!!!
I also know three women with hyped up depressive conditions getting the full whack plus Incapacity Benefit/ESA.
Altogether, it has been estimated, the cost to the nation of complying with the full whack of federal regulations is $668 billion a year, an average of $7,000 per household.
In a newly published judgment, HMRC decided smoothies were indeed a beverage and that the full whack of VAT (17.5% in 2007 and today) was payable.
He got his money, after a month of gang warfare - not the full whack by any means, but enough to pay his debts, buy out the brewery, gut the Shakespeare, install the pool table, the stripper and the strobes.
I can understand it when colleagues from countries which do not build cars advocate that manufacturers should pay the full whack and that they are not interested in the problem of distortions in competition when it comes to setting aside funds.
I was interested looking back at last year's CiF thread, which I mention in the piece and the full whack is here http://www.guardian.co.uk/commentisfree/poll/2010/oct/28/remembranceday to see some folk suggesting that wearing a poppy had transformed into an anti-war statement.
'The Full Whack' According to Dr. Nardell, most of the UV-C stays near the ceiling, and of the portion that reaches room occupants, 95 percent is stopped by the stratum corneum, the layer of dead cells on the skin.