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The site shows example sentences for English words. How the word or phrase could be used in a sentence?
" ... The N-95 respirator is characterized by it’s tight facial fit, which forms a seal around the mouth and nose. While those characteristics make it effective at filtering out airborne particles, it also creates a frictional force and pressure load. The study found pressure ulcers form as the result of “intense and prolonged” pressure. Additionally, areas where bone is close to the skin, such as the nose, are prone to greater damage. ... "
" ... The current, and possibly fleeting public conversation on civility offers a unique teaching moment for corporate boards. Proactive board chairs and CEOs may use the opportunity to engage with their colleagues on proper boardroom discourse. Is this ultimately a call for a kinder, gentler board? Not necessarily, at least not in the way President Bush imagined it. But it is at least a call to address the issue of fiduciary comity, and to confront the risks of a frictional and confrontational board culture. ... "
" ... The goal here is to reduce the frictional cost of owning funds—the amount of investor wealth that gets peeled off by middlemen. We have nothing to say about which funds are going to go up the most. ... "
" ... Yes, that's entirely true: because that's what happens in recessions. In the economy in general there's a job destruction rate and a job creation rate. Unemployment is what we see when the two of these are out of balance. And a recession doesn't particularly change the job destruction rate: but it does lower the job creation rate. So, in a normal economy we see that short-term unemployment (also known as frictional unemployment, the time it takes to leave one job and get hired at another) rate but very little of that long-term one. And what happens in a recession, when that job creation rate falls, is that the period of unemployment lengthens. ... "