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IN DEMAND

SCARBOROUGH-Canada

Company Name:
Corporate Name:
IN DEMAND
Company Title:  
Company Description:  
Keywords to Search:  
Company Address: 38 Maida Vale,SCARBOROUGH,ON,Canada 
ZIP Code:
Postal Code:
M1K2X9 
Telephone Number: 4162851951 
Fax Number:  
Website:
 
Email:
 
USA SIC Code(Standard Industrial Classification Code):
275202 
USA SIC Description:
Printers 
Number of Employees:
1 to 4 
Sales Amount:
$500,000 to $1 million 
Credit History:
Credit Report:
Very Good 
Contact Person:
 
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Company News:
  • ”Demand in on for something” - English Language Usage Stack Exchange
    Demand on is used when a situation is challenging, difficult, or pressure-packed for some entity For example, at some restaurants, there is a high demand on the kitchen staff during the noontime lunch hour In some cases, both could be used, although the meaning would be different For example:
  • verbs - I demand they do… I demand them to… - English Language . . .
    Here is the statement fully realized My mother is demanding of me that I clean my room before I leave Technique #1: Remove the second subject and convert the verb to an infinitive My mother is demanding of me to clean my room before I leave Technique #2: Remove the first prepositional phrase
  • definite articles - Should it be demand or the demand? - English . . .
    The U S oil demand rose in 2016 There is this question that is related to my question However, I think the answers did not clearly explain situations when "demand" and "the demand" are interchangeable and situations when they are not definite-articles noun-phrases
  • Alternative single word for in demand? - English Language Usage . . .
    Is there any alternative single word for the phrase "in demand"? Because I couldn't find the word demandable as an adjective in any dictionary The word demanding means strenuous For example: This car is demandable (incorrect, "demandable" doesnt exist) This car is in demand (correct) Also: A demandable car (incorrect, "demandable" doesnt exist)
  • The words more powerful than ask, but less powerful than demand
    And Google's dictionary added 'demand something forcefully, not accepting refusal', which seems appropriate And they add 'persist in (doing something)', and gave an example: "the heavy studded boots she insisted on wearing" Insist seems to fit the bill It feels a little closer to Demand, yet much stronger than Ask
  • What is the difference between claim and demand?
    An example of a demand: "Dear insurer of John, Your insured John rammed into our client Bill We believe Bill is legally entitled to the sum of $100,000 Send us a check in that amount and our client will execute a release in favor of John " In short, a demand is a form of communication, whereas a claim exists whether it is communicated or not
  • Is there any suffix expressing “demand a lot”?
    Worrisome Winsome Troublesome Fearsome Loathsome Lonesome Other suffixes with a similar meaning are -ful, -ive, and -ly These tend to describe a property of an object more than describing a demand for something In the three examples given in the question, none take on any of these suffixes
  • Is the word request by itself a polite form of asking for something . . .
    Really, it's appropriate for legalese where you want to tone things down from an outright demand ("we request that you submit a complaint within 7 days", "we request that you read the terms and conditions before making an order"), but it's not very polite (You would kindly request someone attend an event in a formal invite, not just request it)
  • punctuation - Hyphenation in compound adjectives like in demand . . .
    Generally, style guides recommend including hyphens when the phrasing is as you describe it ("in-demand skills," "off-topic questions," "over-the-transom submissions"), but I'm sure that I've added many hundreds of hyphens to just such phrases in my many years as a copy editor –
  • Satisfying Demand - English Language Usage Stack Exchange
    1 Certain expressions rely on pairs of words We have some word-pairs as such: Quench Thirst Sate Hunger Satisfy Desire Satisfy Demand It seems strange to me that satisfy would be used for both desire and demand, though the two words are mostly synonymous At the same time, satisfy is a rather general term — we can satisfy many things




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