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57 Sentences With "kept their jobs"

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

Others were subject to internal investigations and kept their jobs.
Watch ... Bey was saved, the crowd cheered ... and everyone kept their jobs.
Many who collaborated with the regime kept their jobs after Communism fell.
Pagano and Grigson kept their jobs, and everyone had a nice makeup session.
Most of the CEOs and mortgage bankers kept their jobs — and lavish perquisites.
The researchers also found that those who kept their jobs saw lower pay.
Blair and Teresa Terrell kept their jobs as principal and assistant principal at Sparkman.
That's more than the top annual compensation last year for CEOs who kept their jobs.
When the deal closed in 2012, all the public water utility employees kept their jobs.
In Georgia and Kansas, two thirds of doctors publicly sanctioned for sexual misconduct kept their jobs.
They mostly kept their jobs, enjoying the same kinds of opportunities and promotions as their colleagues.
Finance Minister Taro Aso, Trade Minister Hiroshige Seko and Chief Cabinet Secretary Yoshihide Suga all kept their jobs.
Even if they have kept their jobs, some analysts say they earned $1m 10 years ago and now earn $250,000.
The military dismissed a minimum of two others and at least 29 others were also reprimanded — but kept their jobs.
Some male chauvinists may have grumbled about female bosses, but those bosses may have been the reason they kept their jobs.
A couple of men at the agency had also found themselves in similar situations, but had kept their jobs, she said.
"The financial crisis was terrible, but most people kept their jobs and many of them kept up their spending," he says.
The Republicans who embraced the tea party are the ones who kept their jobs; they took that lesson into fealty to Donald Trump.
The key defense, interior, and foreign ministers all kept their jobs as did holders of economic portfolios such as the planning and supplies ministers.
In the end, about 800 of the 1,513 workers at the factory kept their jobs, according to a CNN check in July of 2017.
Historically, presidents who ran for reelection while the economy was booming, including Barack Obama, George W. Bush, Bill Clinton and Ronald Reagan, kept their jobs.
In fact, they not only kept their jobs and most of their bonuses, but there haven't been any legal consequences for them, either — at least, not yet.
In 2008, then President-elect Obama chose to retain President Bush's secretary of Defense, and a significant number of Pentagon personnel also kept their jobs under Secretary Gates.
When evidence emerged that Audi had played a major role in developing illegal emissions software on Mr. Stadler's watch, he and most other top executives kept their jobs.
The new government included a new economy minister and a new first deputy prime minister, but the finance, foreign, defense, energy and agriculture ministers all kept their jobs.
Finance Minister Anton Siluanov, Energy Minister Alexander Novak, Agriculture Minister Dmitry Patrushev, Defence Minister Sergei Shoigu and Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov all kept their jobs in the government.
The new government included a new economy minister and a new first deputy prime minister, but the finance, foreign, defense, energy and agriculture ministers all kept their jobs.
Since they have kept their jobs and their incomes, they can focus on the purity of their music and not worry about trying to use their hobby to make money.
For 30 years I have witnessed a pervasive culture populated by more than a few morally repugnant executives and those who kept their jobs by not making waves around them.
Both Zuckerberg and Sandberg have kept their jobs, even though there was plenty of speculation that one of them would have to take the fall for failing to prevent the company's failures.
May's cabinet, including the foreign secretary, Boris Johnson, and the chancellor of the Exchequer, Philip Hammond, kept their jobs in the shake-up, despite calls for them to be moved or dismissed.
Speaking on state television shortly after the announcement of Belousov's appointment, Putin said his government shake-up had been big, but that many ministers from his old government had kept their jobs.
Strong consumer demand has been one of the driving forces of economic growth as Spaniards who kept their jobs during a recession that ended three years ago spend on big ticket items like dishwashers and holidays.
The big-hitters in Putin's team kept their jobs: Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov, Defence Minister Sergei Shoigu, and Alexander Novak, the country's energy minister who helped mastermind a global deal to prop up crude oil prices.
Nancy Hogshead-Makar, an advocate for women's equality in sports, said she worried that among the junior staff members who kept their jobs were those directly responsible for some of the worst failures outlined in the summary.
Despite a two-day mutiny at the weekend that led to the dismissal of the heads of the army, police and gendarmes, Defence Minister Alain-Richard Donwahi and Interior Minister Hamed Bakayoko both kept their jobs also.
They eventually received written reprimands but kept their jobs because Randall had told an HR manager that the alleged behavior was "out of character" for the managers, according to the lawsuit, which also names the managers as defendants.
The case adds to mounting scrutiny of the NYPD in the wake of an investigation by Taggart that revealed how hundreds of officers kept their jobs after committing serious offenses — from lying to grand juries to attacking innocent people.
Mallet's case could add to mounting scrutiny of the NYPD in the wake of a BuzzFeed News investigation that revealed how hundreds of officers kept their jobs after committing serious offenses — from lying to grand juries to attacking innocent people.
It's not clear how many cases of retaliation would amount to a pattern, but even one would seem too many, given the signal such actions send to other employees to keep their mouths shut, especially when employees wielding the hatchet kept their jobs and were in some instances promoted.
From Standard and Poor's paying $1.5 billion to settle charges of fraudulent credit ratings to Bank of America shelling out tens of billions in fines, settlements and restitution as part of its illegal role in the mortgage crisis, executives of miscreant Wall Street firms have kept their jobs or maybe gotten better-paid ones -- all while continuing to reap huge paychecks and pile up vast fortunes.
Retrieved 5 July 2007. All six kept their jobs, and some received reprimands and cautions."Climbie officers keep their jobs". BBC News.
After the war, there was not much done to clear matters; lawyers who had collaborated with the Germans generally kept their jobs or got important other positions. A crucial role in this affair was played by J. Donner, who became President of the Supreme Court in 1946.
All 12 employees kept their jobs, with Kitchen remaining linked to the company as a consultant. Kitchen's next invention was that of the SkyVenture, sold under SkyVenture, LLC. The first installation opened across from Wet 'n Wild Orlando on International Drive in July 1998. The attraction received a visit by George H. W. Bush.
Conditions had worsened even more in the decade before the strike. The introduction of the two-loom system in the woolen mills led to a dramatic increase in the pace of work. The greater production enabled the factory owners to lay off large numbers of workers. Those who kept their jobs earned, on average, $8.76 for 56 hours of work and $9.00 for 60 hours of work.
Since September 1, 2005, she has taken them as his successor the entire media group of RTL Alemanha; RTL Television, VOX, n-TV, RTL II, Super RTL, RTL NITRO, RTL Interactive, IP, infoNetwork e CBC. Schäferkordt was at the same time managing director of the RTL Television station. In 2012, Schäferkordt became CEO of the international RTL Group in Luxembourg, but kept their jobs for another year in Germany. In the same year, Schäferkordt was inducted into the German Advertising Hall of Fame.
Four returned their stamps and kept their jobs, four refused and were fired, while the ninth claimed that he had lost his stamp and remained a CIA employee. Stamp catalogs list its price as only $15,000, one-tenth of the Inverted Jenny that is valued at $150,000 despite the fact that about the same number of each stamp exist. A block of four stamps sold in 2004 for $60,000 and a second block was sold in 2015 for $71,875. Reproductions have been sold on eBay.
After Bantam invented the Jeep, the US War Department handed production over to Ford and Willys. The Treasury Department investigated Ford for alleged collaboration with German-run Ford plants in occupied France, but did not find conclusive evidence. After the war, Schmidt and other Nazi-era managers kept their jobs with Ford's German division. In the United Kingdom, Ford built a new factory in Trafford Park, Manchester during WWII where over 34,000 Rolls- Royce Merlin aero engines were completed by a workforce trained from scratch.
50 people have kept their jobs and are working with company orders. A tornado reportedly touched down in the community, about 50 kilometres south of Owen Sound near Lake Huron and 180 km northwest of Toronto, hitting the south end of Durham, during the Southern Ontario Tornado Outbreak of 2009. The tornado crossed eastward through town, turned north, and exited through the Saugeen Conservation Area. The tornado caused one fatality, an 11-year-old boy who was at day camp, inside a temporary shelter when he was struck by flying debris.
Although the plant's growth was staggered in the mid-20th century, the management of Erwin Mills continued profit and expand, even through the Great Depression. The mill was largely unaffected compared to other businesses in the country because of an established system that had produced a consistent profit prior to the Great Depression. The mill did not do particularly well when the country faced hard times from 1929-1938, but thousands of workers kept their jobs and were paid at least 25 cents an hour. Erwin became ill and died in 1932 and was succeeded by KP Lewis.
The end of the National Intelligence Service came with the establishment of the new South African intelligence bodies on 1 January 1995. Foreign intelligence would be gathered by the South African Secret Service, while domestic intelligence would be handled by the National Intelligence Agency. These two new organisations would consist of a total of 4,000 people with 2,130 from the NIS, 910 from DIS (ANC), 304 from Bophutatswana, 233 from Transkei, 76 Venda and rest from the PASS (PAC). Most NIS managers kept their jobs which prevented the introduction of political appointees and the disruption of intelligence, though some took voluntary redundancy.
By contrast, the bank Board of Members have mostly kept their jobs, even those in merged entities. Golden parachutes have been prevalent: it has been speculated that this was because of fear that laid-off senior members would talk about the sector's rampant malpractice. To this date no bankers have been legally charged for having roles in this process. In May 2012 credit ratings of several Spanish banks were downgraded, some to "junk" status. The Bankia bank, the country's largest mortgage lender, was nationalized on 9 May, and on 25 May it announced that it would require a bailout of €23.5 billion to cover losses from failed mortgages.
Cement-covered tank in Chamorro's Peace Park (Parque de Paz) symbolizing the wish of Nicaraguans that their country "never again" be plagued by such violence. The downside of demobilization was that around 70,000 military personnel were left unemployed. Most of the conscripts returned home, but the lives of career military personnel were disrupted as they lost employment, and the houses, land, and money which was promised to them was either not delivered, due to inadequate resources, or seemed to be paid arbitrarily. Since only 5.8% of the former officers had received benefits by early 1992, many believed that only those who had political favor had either kept their jobs, in the 14% of the military that was retained, or received their promised compensation.
Politics in Chicago and in the government of surrounding Cook County had long been dominated by political patronage. Most city and county employees were expected to belong to the political party of the elected official who controlled that agency. (Police officers, firefighters, school teachers, librarians, and health care workers were generally exempted from patronage requirements.) Patronage employees had to support that official and the party organization by donating to campaign funds and performing campaign work: getting signatures on nominating petitions, passing out literature, and going door-to-door to find and cultivate favorable voters. An employee who refused to do this work, or even failed to do it well, could lose his job, whereas the most effective political workers kept their jobs or were promoted, even if they did little or nothing of their official duties.
Fopp store in London On 31 July 2007, it was announced that HMV would take control of the Fopp brand and its shops in Cambridge, Edinburgh Rose Street (but not Cockburn Street), Glasgow, London Covent Garden, Manchester and Nottingham. On 12 February 2008, Bristol Evening Post reported that a further shop would open in Bristol (in a former HMV-owned Waterstone's store), a city in which three Fopp shops had traded prior to summer 2007. On 24 August 2007, the Glasgow Union Street and Edinburgh stores reopened. The Cambridge shop reopened on 25 August 2007, and the Manchester shop was relaunched on the 27th. After a statement from HMV stating that it was unable to open the Covent Garden London branch, it finally gained the landlord's consent to take over the lease and the shop reopened on 5 October 2007. Only around 10% of the original 700 employees kept their jobs.
If he had remained in the field the nation might have rallied and perhaps fortune might have favoured him. Had the Chambers received the news of his defeat at Waterloo and moved to depose him, then their decrees might not have been followed by a nation still in arms. Mary, an English woman living in France who arrived in Paris shortly after the defeat, made the point that the French were now becoming used to regime changes (they had had two instances in 15 months) and that these seemed to affect most of the populace no more than a change of government in contemporary early 19th century Britain — not only had most of the civil servants kept their jobs, even some ministers had survived the regime changes — so many were disinclined to risk their lives or property for any regime. This was very different from the perceptions of the general populace that had accompanied the first revolution and, after the terror, Napoleon's subsequent usurpation.
William Eden Nesfield was born in Bath on 2 April 1835, the eldest son of the landscape architect and painter William Andrews Nesfield. He was educated at Eton College. In 1850 he was articled to the architect William Burn, but after two years he moved to the practice of his uncle by marriage, Anthony Salvin. He studied architectural drawing under James Kellaway Colling. He travelled widely in the 1850s, and published his drawings in Specimens of Mediaeval Architecture (1862), which was dedicated to William Craven, 2nd Earl of Craven. Around 1860 he started his own architectural practice; but he soon linked up with his friend Richard Norman Shaw, with whom he was in a formal partnership between 1866 and 1869, though they kept their jobs separate. Nesfield and Shaw contributed greatly to the new styles of domestic architecture in Britain, which began in the 1860s and flourished in the 1870s, notably the Old English and Queen Anne styles. Many of Nesfield's clients were rich friends of his father's, and his designs tended to be more extravagant and ornamental than Shaw's. Notable examples were additions to Combe Abbey, Warwickshire (1862-5, mostly demolished); Cloverley Hall,Cloverley Hall — from The Victorian Web Shropshire (1866–8, partly demolished); Kinmel Hall, Flintshire (1871–4) and Bodrhyddan (1872–4).

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