Sentences Generator
And
Your saved sentences

No sentences have been saved yet

8 Sentences With "hangs tough"

How to use hangs tough in a sentence? Find typical usage patterns (collocations)/phrases/context for "hangs tough" and check conjugation/comparative form for "hangs tough". Mastering all the usages of "hangs tough" from sentence examples published by news publications.

The U.S. must hope the South hangs tough and refuses to offer economic incentives that reward the North for empty promises or to ignore American concerns about the North's nuclear and ballistic missile programs.
But it could also help him: If he hangs tough in the South, Sanders may be able to run up the delegate score in the Northeast and in the caucus states, where he's expected to do better.
ASUS ZenFone 33 Actually a neat little smartphone with a great design that hangs tough with the Moto G, but I'm not in love with ZenUI and the Moto's Snapdragon processor seems more capable than the Intel Atom on board the ZenFone.
"Canada Hangs Tough in Rough Times", The Windsor Star, 9 July 1975, p.42 The three-speed manual transmission returned as standard equipment in conjunction with the six-cylinder engine on all Cutlass models except Salons and station wagons. However, only 0.2% of Cutlasses were built with a manual transmission as most buyers wanted the 350 V8 and Turbo Hydramatic as in previous years. The 1975 grilles were somewhat more angular and separated into eight pieces on each side.
Village Mills Hangs Tough after Heyday The post office was established this same year. By 1889, this sawmill was churning out 75,000 board feet of lumber daily. At this time, this mill consisted of two sections of town, one of which was the mill operations (called Long Station), the other being Village Mills 1 mi (2 km) away, which contained the housing. One day in 1895, this mill broke a world record by sawing over 250,000 board feet in 11 hours.
The colonel hangs tough, but after eight seconds, he finally confesses to heading the anomalous "Oplan Paglalanse." The confession is even recorded on tape by Joma. Polgas then shows the police officers the tape which contains the confession and all the activities involved in Oplan Paglalanse and he tells the colonel that he will make copies of it and the group will expose Oplan Paglalanse if the officers keep up with the anomalous acts. Colonel Magti asks if the group will show the video to the Senate; Polgas answers that he won't because Senate inquiries don't get resolved anyway.
But on January 10, 1980, the company said that losses in the first quarter of the year (November 1979 to January 1980) could be as high as $225 million (or 10 percent of the company's shareholders' equity) if the strike continued."Harvester Expects $225 Million Loss in Quarter," Chicago Tribune, January 12, 1980. To help weather the strike, International Harvester's top 25 officers took 20 percent salary cuts, travel expenses were curtailed, meetings were cancelled or moved to company offices, the budget for the annual stockholders' meeting scaled back, advertising spending curtailed, capital spending slashed by $100 million (to $400 million), and a new line of credit established to provide access to emergency funds (if needed)."Harvester Hangs Tough," Business Week, January 28, 1980.
The 1,000-watt station in Riverside was losing some $40,000 a month in 1984, and on February 29 of that year the 15-person staff had not been paid in two weeks. The owners, Milton Klein and Shayle Ray, were trying to negotiate a sale of KPRO and its sisters, KPRD-AM and KZNS-FM of Barstow, California.Carl Yetzer, "KPRO Staff Hangs Tough Despite Getting No Paychecks in 2 Weeks," The Sun, February 29, 1984, pages B1 and B2 (images 13 and 29)Dennis McDougal, "KPRO Is Still on the Air, Thanks to 'Deep Pockets,'" Los Angeles Times, March 17, 1984, images 73 and 76Russ Stanton, "Company Files for Reorganization for KPRO-AM," The Sun, May 9, 1984, image 37 KZNS and KPRD left the airwaves in early March after more than 30 years of broadcasting, but KPRO was saved at the last minute by an unidentified San Bernardino businessman who bought into the partnership with enough cash to pay the employees and stay on the air. KPRO's Arbitron ratings were about one percent of all listeners in its market.

No results under this filter, show 8 sentences.

Copyright © 2024 RandomSentenceGen.com All rights reserved.