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"unlucrative" Definitions
  1. not gainful : lacking in profit

4 Sentences With "unlucrative"

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

Now it's Fabric's turn, as Twitter apparently sees enterprise developer tool sales as an unlucrative detour from its core ad and data business.
Dobson was born in Bristol, the son of John Frederic Dobson (1875 - 1947), a distinguished professor of Greek at the University of Bristol. He was educated at Clifton College."Clifton College Register" Muirhead, J.A.O. p438: Bristol; J.W Arrowsmith for Old Cliftonian Society; April, 1948 Dobson graduated from King's College, Cambridge with an honours degree in Classics. Dobson was persuaded by his father that academic life was financially unlucrative, and as he was keen to see the world, he joined British American Tobacco (BAT), with a reference from his college bursar, John Maynard Keynes.
Sussex served on the Newhaven - Dieppe route, making her maiden voyage on 31 July 1896. In March 1912 she came to the assistance of the stricken P&O; liner , which had been in collision with the 2850-ton German-registered 4 masted steel-barque Pisagua and subsequently sank with the loss of 9 lives. Replaced by the on the Newhaven - Dieppe route in 1913, she was moved to Brighton to offer long day trip excursions, in competition with the White Funnel fleet paddle steamers of Bristol-based P and A Campbell. However, this proved unlucrative, and she was laid up from the end of that season.
By this time, DGG had built a reputation for high- quality recording in the classical field as well as a notable roster of contracted singers, musicians, and conductors. Through its subsidiary label Archiv Produktion it also stimulated interest in Western medieval and renaissance music, 15th–16th century choral polyphony, Gregorian chant, and pioneering use of 'historical instruments' and performance practices in recordings. DGG/Polydor's entrance into the US market in 1969 (DGG had distribution deals in the US with Decca Records and MGM Records beforehand) came at a time when the big US classical music labels RCA Victor Red Seal and Columbia Masterworks were dropping their unlucrative classical artists and pressing poor-quality records. The fine quality both of recording and of pressings helped DGG succeed in America and attract artists such as Arthur Fiedler and the Boston Pops Orchestra (after a 35-year association with RCA Victor) to DGG/Polydor.

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