Weitere Beispiele werden automatisch zu den Stichwörtern zugeordnet - wir garantieren ihre Korrektheit nicht.
Buyers will be able to buy only one house at the subsidized price.
An indication of the subsidized prices is given, as well.
Each family is allowed to buy 4.4 pounds of bread a day at a subsidized price.
Equally important, they say, has been the subsidized price, currently about 3 cents each.
On one wall was a listing the store's few items, their subsidized prices and how much each family is allowed.
The rest of China buys many materials, including coal and oil, at subsidized prices.
The Soviet leader's plan would partially end centralized control and subsidized prices.
A new state-owned body was also set up to distribute food at subsidized prices.
Poland has long paid lower subsidized prices for energy.
Rationing of food at subsidized prices was stopped and work quotas increased.
But the subsidized price at the pump is extremely low, only about three American cents a gallon.
AT&T should offer one of these devices free or at a subsidized price to customers who report connection problems.
The state buys some grain at subsidized prices, but cannot afford to buy all that farmers want to sell.
Such commodities are distributed among consumers at subsidized prices.
It legislates heavily subsidized prices for uranium-enrichment services well into the future.
About 6,700 of the converter boxes were sold to low-income households at a subsidized price.
Gulshan also introduced religious music cassettes at highly subsidized prices.
He launched a program to sell food staples to the public at subsidized prices through government-owned stores.
The Government had raised the subsidized prices of wheat and rice that are mostly sold to people who are not poor.
One is contracting out to private sector firms the production of goods and services which the state provides free or at subsidized prices to consumers.
So did talk that the Soviet Union wanted to buy more American wheat at subsidized prices.
Other economic changes reportedly being contemplated soon, though not immediately, include changes in the subsidized prices for food and housing.
The surplus stocks are then dumped onto foreign markets at subsidized prices, devastating farmers in developing countries.
Donors liked the program because it was cheap and sustainable, as consumers would buy the nets - often at subsidized prices.
Now, Lusaka residents find cornmeal, cooking oil and even beer scarce at the subsidized price.