But if her autobiography is anything to go by, her success has come at a price. |
|
While it is an honour for any town to have been given host town status, this honour has come at a price. |
|
The CANZ countries appreciated that a new system of internal justice would come at a price and were ready to pay their share. |
|
If, however, we wish to see an independent Europe, we must also realise that this will come at a price. |
|
Love for the environment entails diagnosing its needs and tending to it, which come at a price. |
|
Unfortunately, this success seems to have come at a price, with certain sections of the crowd indulging in boorish, jeering and in some cases lewd behaviour. |
|
However, transparency may come at a price in terms of reduced liquidity provision to market participants. |
|
Concessions in authentic apprenticeship training standards come at a price for workers and society. |
|
I would say to Mrs De Keyser that such lessons come at a price in a region such as the Middle East. |
|
The rewards of this special calling, like those of other professions, come at a price. |
|
They knew that peace would come at a price, but were prepared to pay it. |
|
Compromise, and survival, come at a price. |
|
However, standing up for democracy can come at a price in Swaziland. |
|
All political decisions come at a price, and if Europe wants credibility, it has to take responsibility for its political decisions, whether they concern the financial crisis or its institutions. |
|
But its global rise in popularity has come at a price, with an increasingly expanded ITU World Triathlon Series calendar bringing high-profile races but also sapping the energy of its star attractions. |
|
As we all know, democracy, and hence communication, come at a price. |
|
But, as I have also noted, even with a currency union the economic benefits come at a price. And that price is the loss of a degree of political and economic autonomy and flexibility. |
|