Examples of caveat emptor in the following topics:
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- Readers of polls, such as the Gallup Poll, should exercise Caveat Emptor by taking into account the poll's margin of error.
- Caveat emptor is Latin for "let the buyer beware."
- Generally, caveat emptor is the property law principle that controls the sale of real property after the date of closing, but may also apply to sales of other goods.
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- (An example of this is seen with, a student who came to me complaining that she was drowning in advanced chemistry and physics [read: material science] at a reputable sustainability program in a renowned university. ) One cannot help but be reminded of the adage ‘caveat emptor'.
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- With this caveat in mind, extensive lists of pericyclic reactions may be assembled, and their rationalization by the previously noted mnemonic or orbital analysis is both remarkably successful and instructive.
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- With the caveat of pretty poor fit of a low-dimensional solution in mind, let's examine the scaling of actors on the first three factors (figure 17.11).
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- Like the shopkeeper, the repairman loves to help people and may end up making a sale, but with one caveat.
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- Wilson, reflecting American outrage, demanded an immediate halt to attacks on liners and merchant ships, though with the caveat that "America is too proud to fight. "
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- One caveat: you still need to do a thorough audience analysis.
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- Level One -- The preferred inputs to valuation are "quoted prices in active markets for identical assets or liabilities," with the caveat that the reporting entity must have access to that market.
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- So, you start adding caveats like "it can't cross itself" and "it can't have any loose ends. " And then somebody draws an egg shape that fits all of your criteria, and yet is still not a circle.
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- Similar caveats apply to the following examples which yield approximately exponentially distributed variables: