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117 Sentences With "more burdensome"

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

With low net migration, Britain's elderly would be more burdensome.
And what I'm doing is more burdensome than jury service.
More recently, a back problem has made getting around more burdensome.
And board certification testing requirements have also increased and become more burdensome.
Waiting periods, in particular, have become a lot more burdensome for women.
That will lighten some of the more burdensome requirements for smaller firms.
Even using Son's narrow net debt definition, SoftBank's borrowings are more burdensome than they look.
Attacking higher education will result in fewer Ph.D. scientists, more burdensome student loans and faltering innovation.
What could be more burdensome in all of American life than regulations that result in needless death?
This allows the wealthy to believe that their tax liability is more burdensome than it actually is.
There's also Chinese debt denominated in the dollar, which would become more burdensome when the yuan weakens.
These additional 17.2 million households will "undergo a more burdensome application process" according to the Congressional Research Service.
Surprisingly, weight standards that are different and more burdensome for females could still theoretically be justified as a BFOQ.
He remains a diligent collector of evidence supporting the notion that listing requirements have become more burdensome over time.
" However, he writes, "that obviously does not help the Government's argument in support of the current, even more burdensome form.
Uber and others would be forced then to negotiate with individual states, which they find much more burdensome, he said.
" The department also said that requirement that schools disclose their data had proved to be "more burdensome than originally anticipated.
Exxon realizes its early support could allow the company to shape legislation -- and prevent a more burdensome outcome from Washington.
And now, it appears that a bipartisan agreement in Congress could raise the asset hurdle at which regulation becomes more burdensome.
"Because the last several years have been relatively helpful to those groups, even though the outcome is more burdensome to them."
After the dotcom bubble burst, new rules intended to protect investors, particularly the Sarbanes-Oxley Act, made going public much more burdensome.
"I honestly think it's more burdensome for Apple to repair all screens than for them to allow Apple to recalibrate," he added.
Restricting one form of political speech would just force Americans to find other, perhaps more burdensome ways to make their voices heard.
But Liebman said the inspections — now listed in state-specific PDF documents — are in a new format that's significantly more burdensome to examine.
No doubt the fact that state and local taxes tend to be more burdensome to coastal states has made their repeal less difficult.
Divorce would become a bit more burdensome for the ex-spouse who paid alimony because it would no longer be a deductible expense.
They can drill it and reap the profits, but only under regulations that are far more burdensome than those applied to private property.
The attached order directs Apple to perform even more burdensome and involved engineering than that sought in the case currently before this Court— i.e.
"The laws make enforcement more burdensome than it would be if state and local law enforcement provided immigration officers with their assistance," he wrote.
Being regulated under Title II may be more burdensome than the way it was before, but by how much, and is it really a problem?
"This could be more burdensome for manufacturers, if Canada is doing cap-and-trade but Trump is cutting back regulations," said one of the sources.
In short, anti-abortion laws have gotten more burdensome than some on the Supreme Court could have probably dreamed of when they ruled on Casey.
His acquisition last July was the cost they had to bear for jettisoning the even more burdensome contract of their former franchise player, Troy Tulowitzki.
Although the wealth tax would be less burdensome in years with high returns, it would be more burdensome in years with low or negative returns.
This choice is much more burdensome — if not impossible — for families with just one working parent or in which both parents work outside the home.
That's a false trade-off and a dangerous proposal that threatens to make the daily lives of border residents, including my parents, even more burdensome.
NEW PLAN Divorce would become a bit more burdensome for the ex-spouse who pays alimony because it would no longer be a deductible expense.
TRAP laws function by singling out abortion providers, mandating that they meet certain medical requirements that are far more burdensome than those imposed on other medical practices.
What the House proposed: Divorce would become a bit more burdensome for the ex-spouse who pays alimony because it would no longer be a deductible expense.
High deductibles make Medicare even more burdensome — a retiree paying for a hospital stay with only Part A coverage will pay $1,261 before this coverage kicks in.
People linked faith with collective identity but only a smallish minority accepted Christianity's more burdensome demands, from praying regularly to studying the Bible or sharing it with others.
The benefit of such an approach is that revenues from the fee could be used to offset more burdensome existing taxes, boost economic growth and invest in jobs.
But with a series of regulatory changes, the Trump administration is taking us in the wrong direction, making student loans riskier, more expensive and more burdensome for borrowers.
Besides being far more burdensome than simple citizenship-verification, cross-checking fails to ensure that noncitizens are removed from voter rolls before a fraudulent vote is already cast.
Last month, the California state legislature passed a radical, anti-consumer Internet regulation bill that would impose restrictions even more burdensome than those adopted by the FCC in 2015.
The testers posing as same-sex spouses were offered fewer rental units, faced higher prices or more burdensome application requirements, or were less likely to hear about financial incentives.
When such limits prevent municipal governments from raising adequate revenues, they may be forced to resort to regressive and more burdensome revenue collection methods like user fees and sales taxes.
Christine Wilson, one of the three Republican commissioners, said there could be 'unintended consequences,' and added that some privacy laws could be more burdensome on small companies than tech giants.
He said flying physical documentation for trade finance deals to Qatar has become slower and more burdensome as direct flights from Dubai have been cancelled because of the diplomatic rift.
"The confrontation clause may make the prosecution of criminals more burdensome, but that is equally true of the right to trial by jury and the privilege against self-incrimination," he wrote.
This rage hides behind the notion that things are different here in America, that our lives are more complicated and our stuff is more burdensome and our decisions are harder to make.
And while information overload is nothing new, the stakes of all this new information feel exponentially higher—feel being the operative word here—and processing it has therefore become that much more burdensome.
But because credit card debt is so much more expensive than other forms of credit, like a mortgage or a car loan, an already expensive way to borrow will become even more burdensome.
They'd be willing to live with weaker network neutrality rules that were permanent and predictable if it meant they didn't have to worry about more burdensome rules coming into force every couple of administrations.
"We conclude that aesthetics requirements are not preempted if they are (1) reasonable, (2) no more burdensome than those applied to other types of infrastructure deployments, and (3) published in advance," the order continues.
"As the Supreme Court has already held, the voter ID requirement is no more burdensome than other voting requirements, including registering to vote," Ciara Matthews, a spokeswoman for Mr. Abbott, said in a statement.
Christine Wilson, one of the three Republican commissioners, said there could be "unintended consequences," and added that some privacy laws could be more burdensome on small companies than tech giants like Facebook and Google.
Courts have even (wrongfully, in my view) recognized an exception for sex-specific dress and grooming codes as long as the requirements for one sex are not unduly more burdensome than those for the other.
The stock prices of both companies declined precipitously as the energy markets collapsed last fall, making the cash portion of the transaction ever more essential to Williams shareholders, and ever more burdensome to Energy Transfer.
Earlier, he emphasized that the strategy is an inexpensive and "very basic public health intervention" compared to broad measures like social distancing, which is more burdensome and doesn't work if there's no cultural buy-in.  
It is the latest attempt by abortion opponents to make it more burdensome for women to get abortions — by creating new rules and laws that make it more difficult for providers to stay in business.
Trademark protection can be afforded to shorter phrases and even single words, but the application process is more burdensome and requires tangible proof that the mark is used in connection with the goods or services specified.
While a reasonable carbon tax is generally good tax policy (particularly if it replaces a more burdensome tax), because it raises revenue from something that is ultimately costing society, it's an incomplete climate policy on its own.
C taxes certain sectors differently than others, making it more burdensome to, say, a fintech company like Square, which would have to pay twice as much tax as Salesforce, despite bringing in a fraction of its revenue.
He said startups are particularly attracted by the potential that Wyoming-chartered banks could avoid more burdensome New York state regulations while still accessing investors inside the nation's financial capital, by opening a branch in the state.
State governments may raise taxes to fill in the gaps, but that becomes even more burdensome for taxpayers — especially for many who itemize their tax returns — because the deductibility of state and local income taxes would be capped.
If Mexico were to become a non-FTA country, or if a renegotiated FTA did not allow for national treatment for trade in natural gas, all gas exports to Mexico would be subject to this more burdensome approval process.
Making state and local sales and income taxes more burdensome might make it harder for states to raise revenue to pay for services that benefit for lower earners, says Michael Leachman at the Center on Budget and Policy Priorities.
Well, here's the thing: Life is full of psychological burdens, and a few of those have been weighing on me, and lifting said burdens is hard because the more you think about them the more burdensome they can become.
Several people described difficult health issues that make eating outside your own home more burdensome and even scary, including celiac disease, an autoimmune condition that causes people's immune systems to violently attack their small intestine whenever they eat gluten.
For many of us, it's too cold to do anything outside, your skin is drying up so fast you can't even remember what dewy means and easy little tasks like taking out the trash get that much more burdensome.
They are scared that taxes are going to become even more burdensome, or that their children won't be able to afford to go to college or that they'll have to take in their aging parents if they run out of money.
If the United Kingdom and the EU failed to strike a deal on their future relationship and the transition period were not extended, then trade between the two would be on World Trade Organisation (WTO) terms - more burdensome for businesses.
They found one-bedrooms they liked in TriBeCa, but kept bumping up against the same issue: The nearest dog-minding places were a 13-minute walk away — fine for Hobie, fine for them in summer, much more burdensome for all concerned in winter.
The Commission said ESMA should also consider a wider range of factors for determining which firms trade commodities as an ancillary service - meaning it is not a major part of their business - and should be exempt from the more burdensome capital requirements.
His comments may also create political complications for the state's Republican governor, Rick Scott, a longtime favorite of the state's gun lobby who signed the 2017 law that made it more burdensome for prosecutors to bring charges against those who claim self-defense.
Dell's $52.5 billion debt pile is expected to become more burdensome this year because the U.S. tax reform enacted last month caps a company's ability to deduct interest expense to 30 percent of its annual earnings before interest, tax, depreciation, and amortization.
Dell's $52.5 billion debt pile is expected to become more burdensome this year because the U.S. tax reform enacted last month caps a company's ability to deduct interest expense to 30 percent of its annual earnings before interest, tax, depreciation and amortization.
Since 2014, the number of Veterans waiting a month or longer for health care from the VA has increased by 85033 percent, which means more burdensome red tape for our Veterans, more suffering, and more opportunities for small maladies to become major health crises.
Image: GizmodoWhen Gmail showed up in 2004 with its overwhelmingly generous 1GB of free space for everyone, we never thought we'd have to delete an email again—but even though that free space is now 15 times what it once was, email is more burdensome than ever.
It argues that Dodd-Frank has made the American financial system safer, both since the crisis and relative to those of other large countries; but its many pages and associated rules have not got to the heart of systemic risk, and are more burdensome than necessary.
Critics complain the moves, amid broader efforts by the administration, are not only invasive on privacy grounds, but also effectively limit legal immigration to the US by slowing the process down, making it more burdensome and making it more difficult to be accepted for a visa.
Among other things, the bills remove Midwestern gray wolves from the endangered species list, require the federal government to consider the economic impact of protecting species under the law and make it more burdensome for citizens who sue in federal court to enforce the law's provisions.
The immediate cause of this was concern about larger deficits due to the rising price of energy imports, more burdensome borrowing costs due to higher interest rates abroad and capital outflows as investors sought to reduce losses on account of a dollar appreciating vis-a-vis the local currencies.
Winds of Winter has been in development for a long time, but it should also be noted that writing a novel is a deceptively difficult process, made even more burdensome when there are literally millions of people watching, criticising you and reminding you that you're going to die one day.
This Tuesday, attorneys argued before the U.S. Supreme Court that partisan gerrymandering essentially strips Americans of their right to vote; specifically, voters in North Carolina and Maryland contend that political gerrymanders by state legislatures abridge their First Amendment rights by making it far more burdensome to organize and exercise political speech.
"Instead of respecting both common sense and last fall's public commitment to Congress, the FCC tilts the regulatory playing field by proposing to impose more burdensome regulation on internet service providers, or ISPs, than the FTC imposes on so-called 'edge providers,' " he said when the commission voted to formally consider the proposal.
When your mother-in-law wants to have a hand in cooking every dish, your neighbor seems to show up at every party (whether he's invited or not), or your best friend never seems to get to the dinner table on time, the holidays can start to feel more burdensome than festive.
On Thursday, the House Committee on Administration will hold its second hearing on how to overhaul a 1995 law, the Congressional Accountability Act, that created the current system for reporting and adjudicating sexual harassment claims — a system that advocates for victims say is far more burdensome and secretive than those in the private sector.
I met the boys, Fokondraza, 5, and Voriavy, 3, in the evening, and they said that so far that day they hadn't eaten or drunk anything (the closest well, producing somewhat salty water, is several hours away by foot, and fetching a pail of water becomes more burdensome when everyone is malnourished and anemic).
" The New York Times also spoke to over 50 lawyers, lobbyists, and former aides in an investigation which concluded that "sexual harassment has long been an occupational hazard for those operating in Washington politics, and victims on Capitol Hill are forced to go through far more burdensome avenues to seek redress than their counterparts in the private sector.
Thus the current report's writers say a carbon tax would reduce the potential for the potentially disastrous consequences of climate change, and offer Republicans a chance to repeal other current laws that might be even more burdensome than a carbon tax, reduce entanglements with oil-producing countries, and appeal to the concerns of a wide variety of Americans, including voters who are younger, or among the fast-growing groups of Latino and Asian Americans.
The other provisions named in the suit include the requirement that a patient's partner or other family member be notified of a woman's decision to terminate under the guise of seeking how to dispose of the fetal remains; establishes more burdensome reporting requirements to local police for abortions obtained by a young woman under 17; and forces doctors to invade a patient's privacy by requesting all medical records regarding her current and past pregnancies.
Wages fell as did prices; debts did not fall and they became more burdensome. Gross National Expenditure had declined 42% from the 1929 levels. In some areas, the decline was far worse. In the rural areas of the prairies two-thirds of the population were on relief.
Firth was particularly focused on the creation of the university's School of Pacific Studies. He returned to Tikopia on research visits several times, although as travel and fieldwork requirements became more burdensome he focused on family and kinship relationships in working- and middle-class London.Ortiz, Sutti (2004). "Sir Raymond Firth".
From 1909 he often needed sanitarium treatment for his health, which was undermined by syphilis. The political situation became critical: the workers were protesting against the government, and Ady saw a revolution approaching. His personal life was also in crisis; his affair with Léda became more and more burdensome. As Ady become a prominent poet, Léda lost her leading role in the relationship.
Comedian Jon Stewart was briefly referenced in the episode. The episode opens with the Griffin family watching an episode of America's Next Top Model. The show's host, Tyra Banks, is also shown, becoming furious at a contestant, and a giant iguana emerges from her mouth. After Mort attempts to borrow something from the Griffin family, Peter states that Mort is more burdensome than the Mexican Super Friends.
If the taxes were manifold and high, more burdensome still was the unfree labour also laid down in the Weistum. The lord's livestock grazed on the “Herrenwasem”. Parts of this field were also laid out as a cropfield. It was the lord who reaped the field's yield, but the peasant was the one who did all the unpaid work. The same was true over at the “Herrenberg”, the lord's vineyards.
Jim Chevallier, A History of the Food of Paris: From Roast Mammoth to Steak Frites, 2018, , pp. 67-80 After 1500, taxes on wine and other alcoholic beverages grew increasingly more burdensome, not only because of the continual increase in the level of taxation, but also because of the bewildering variety and multiplicity of the taxes. This chaotic system was enforced by an army of tax collectors. The resultant opposition took many forms.
The hardship clause is sometimes used in relation to force majeure, particularly because they share similar features and they both cater to situations of changed circumstances. The difference between the two concepts is that hardship is the performance of the disadvantaged party becoming much more burdensome but still possible. Force majeure refers to a party's contractual requirements have become impossible, at least temporarily. Hardship is a reason for a change in the contractual program of the parties.
Ordering precise amounts from the manufacturer prevents surplus and over-spending. Another advantage to GCLs is that the liner can be used in areas without an adequate clay source. On the other hand, GCLs are heavy and cumbersome, and their installation is very labor-intensive. In addition to being arduous and difficult under normal conditions, installation can be cancelled during damp conditions because the bentonite would absorb the moisture, making the job even more burdensome and tedious.
Melissa later offers Spencer a dress and makes a remark on how their relationship should consist of this. Spencer simply looks up to her before sorrowfully pointing out they were never amicable towards one another. Melissa discloses to Spencer that she should have never kept the truth about Bethany Young's death a secret. Spencer asks why she chose to do so, and her sister explains that at first it felt reasonable but it only grew more burdensome over time.
The choice of naming conventions (and the extent to which they are enforced) is often a contentious issue, with partisans holding their viewpoint to be the best and others to be inferior. Moreover, even with known and well-defined naming conventions in place, some organizations may fail to consistently adhere to them, causing inconsistency and confusion. These challenges may be exacerbated if the naming convention rules are internally inconsistent, arbitrary, difficult to remember, or otherwise perceived as more burdensome than beneficial.
They believe that legislative practices are too slow and bureaucratic to be effectual; this makes regulations more burdensome than helpful in e-commerce. Self regulation allows for quick adaptations that will ultimately create the most ideal privacy practices. In theory, businesses will be forced to create privacy policies that satisfy customers' concerns because their economic success relies on being able to draw in more and more customers. Because privacy is a major concern for customers, they will purchase from websites they feel secure using.
Instead, they utilized a naturalist soundtrack recorded during the capture and illustrated unaltered even though it included intrusions and mistakes. Besides, it lent the film a sense of freshness and energy like their other skills that were not in past films. They used hand- held cameras which could shoot well in tight quarters generating a familiarity that more costly and more burdensome cameras could not rival. A majority of the New Wave films used long, extended shots which were facilitated by these kinds of cameras.
After his children graduated from universities overseas, Ciputra founded his family holding company, the Ciputra Group, for his four children. In addition to his children, his wife, brother, and children-in-law were all involved in its management. He also hired professional executives to manage the company, which developed more than 30 major projects in Indonesia and abroad, including Citra Raya in Surabaya. The Ciputra Group was severely impacted by the 1997 Asian financial crisis, during which the value of the Indonesian rupiah plunged and the company's US dollar-denominated debts became far more burdensome.
Additionally, the procedures that the SCA set forth for law enforcement to access contents of stored electronic communications is considerably less burdensome than those required to obtain a wiretap under the Wiretap Act. The court said that if it were to extend stored electronic communications to the Wiretap Act, then the government would have to comply with the more burdensome procedures of the Wiretap Act, despite the fact that Congress has already authorized the government to access stored information under the less restrictive SCA. Surely, the court said, Congress could not have intended this result.
Aimed at detecting and deterring child pornography, the Federal Labeling Law (also known as the Child Protection and Obscenity Enforcement Act) eliminated all privacy in the creation of sexual images. Any producers of, and performers in, such materials were ordered to comply with detailed disclosure requirements. In order for the industry to comply, the FSC was essential. FSC conducted training seminars, prepared compliance documents and uniform exemption labels and negotiated with the Justice Department for relief from some of the more burdensome and unreasonable components of the law.
That protection, however, does not encompass attempts to abuse an unreceptive or captive audience, at least under the circumstances in this case. The dissent also feels that the injunction generally should be no more burdensome than necessary to provide complete relief. Therefore, standards fashioned to determine the constitutionality of statutes should not be used to evaluate injunctions. The injunction in this case departs so far from the established jurisprudence of the Supreme Court that in any other context it would have been regarded as a candidate for summary reversal.
It limits the laws that governments can pass to regulate or publicly run insurance and banking. Any regulations that do not fall within the Treaty's terms and objectives would be unlawful. Legitimate reasons for regulation include, in article 52, "the protection of investors, depositors, policy-holders or persons to whom a fiduciary duty is owed by a financial service supplier; (b) ensuring the integrity and stability of a Party's financial system". However article 52(2) states "measures shall not be more burdensome than necessary to achieve their aim", and the Treaty does not include any further reasons to allow regulation.
S.) 1627In the 17th century, the Julian calendar was used in the region, which then was ten days late compared to the Gregorian calendar; 10 November - Julian, 20 November - Gregorian. by Bogislaw XIV, Duke of Pomerania and Hans Georg von Arnim, commander in chief of an occupation force belonging to the army of Ferdinand II, Holy Roman Emperor, led by Albrecht von Wallenstein. While the terms of the capitulation were unfavourable for the Duchy of Pomerania already, occupation became even more burdensome when the occupation force did not adhere to the restrictions outlined in Franzburg.Langer (2003), pp.
After the war, Jean Chrissoveloni, a Bucharest banker, tasked Irimescu with organizing the Chrissoveloni Bank in New York City. He ran the bank from 1921 to 1928, successfully closing the branch because he sensed a financial crisis coming and because operating a foreign bank tended to be unprofitable because more burdensome business regulations were placed on such institutions. At the time, it was the only Romanian banking institution in the United States. After it closed on April 1, 1928, Irimescu, formerly agent and manager, stayed on for a time as its representative on Wall Street."Rumanians to Drop Bank Agency Here", The New York Times, February 28, 1928.
Ted Hesson, Republicans load spending bill with hard-line measures targeting asylum , Politico (January 22, 2019). The legislation would severely restrict the ability of children from Honduras, Guatemala and El Salvador to apply for asylum in the United States. Specifically, participation in the Central American Minors Program would be subject to an annual cap and migrant children would be barred from applying for asylum in person at the border, and only migrant children with a "qualified" parent in the U.S. would be eligible to apply. The bill would also create a new, more burdensome application process for TPS holders, and would exclude TPS holders from Sudan, Somalia, and Yemen.
Grant continued to work for a strong dollar, signing into law the Coinage Act of 1873, which effectively ended the legal basis for bimetallism (the use of both silver and gold as money), establishing the gold standard in practice. The Coinage Act discontinued the standard silver dollar and established the gold dollar as the sole monetary standard; because the gold supply did not increase as quickly as the population, the result was deflation. Silverites, who wanted more money in circulation to raise the prices that farmers received, denounced the move as the "Crime of 1873", claiming the deflation made debts more burdensome for farmers. Grant is congratulated for vetoing the "inflation bill" in 1874.
Most of the conception process involved members coming up with various concepts but never agreeing to final designs, meaning compromises had to be determined under deadlines during filming; Astles suggested more time could've been saved if the crew simply borrowed from Dungeons & Dragons books instead of trying to "cleverly expand" the game's universe. According to Gibbs, the workflow was made even more burdensome by the "communist" nature of the Czech Republic's film industry, especially for a big-scale fantasy film. The country's recently passed importing laws prevented the makeup people from using the glue specifically designed for the elf ears, meaning the elf actors had to wear more incompatible adhesives. There were also scheduling delays due to properties such as weapons and castle walls made by the Czech crew being poorly manufactured and having to be redone.
Different types of rents existed in the feudal system of Medieval Hungary including rent in kind which could mean gifts like chickens, loaves of bread, butter, etc. or the less common (but more burdensome) corn tax paid from the yields produced on tenant farm lands. The demand for 1/9th of the corn crop is found in the law of 1351 there is evidence for its collection from 1438 at Pécsvárad Abbey, in 1451 at the bishopric of Varad (modern Romania), Köszvényes, Tolna County in 1465, Károly in Szatmár County in 1481, and Lippó in Baranya County in 1483. Corn rent was often collected as a fixed quantity rather than a proportion of yield in the villages attached to the estates of Zalavár, Komárom, Karakó, Sempte, Bátmonostor manor in Bodrog, Marótis manor, and numerous villages of the Töttös estates in Baranya.
At airports, those not having compliant licenses or cards would simply be redirected to a secondary screening location. The REAL ID Act is highly controversial, and with 25 states have approved either resolutions or binding legislation not to participate in the program, and with President Obama's selection of Janet Napolitano (a prominent critic of the program) to head the Department of Homeland Security, the future of the law remains uncertain, and bills have been introduced into Congress to amend or repeal it. The most recent of these, dubbed PASS ID, would eliminate many of the more burdensome technological requirements but still require states to meet federal standards in order to have their ID cards accepted by federal agencies. The bill takes place as governments are growing more interested in implanting technology in ID cards to make them smarter and more secure.

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