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owes造句
91 Their refusal owes something to a distaste for addiction in itself. 92 The second kind of modern atheism owes its origins to Feuerbach and its most powerful expression to Marx. 93 Population genetics owes its origin to Francis Galton, who put the study of human heredity on a mathematical footing. 94 The glass in the regolith owes its origin to impacts of cometary and asteroidal material with the lunar surface. 95 That Banbridge put themselves within touching distance of their first title since 1988 owes much to their battling qualities. 96 In the play Amos contrives a scheme to make Paul pay back the money he owes him. 97 It could be that Mr Major owes a debt to the pollsters for his victory. 98 Excluding mortgage debts, the average adult owed £1,000 in 1979 - today, he owes more like £2,250. 99 Most of the £406 million cash he owes was swindled from pension funds by his father before his mysterious death last year. 100 He's got a bunch of slick lawyers to get him out of paying the $11 million he owes us. 101 It certainly owes nothing to any rational assessment of electoral support. 102 The quality of even our grandest scenery owes much to its intimacy of scale. 103 History owes a page of honorable mention to the Federal capital on this occasion. 104 Furthermore, within the range of duties which the State owes its citizens, failure to help is hindrance. 105 The cost of remedying the defect is economic loss and neither party owes a duty of care to P2 in that respect. 106 Now able to resume his job as a postman, he owes his life to the paramedics. 107 The production owes its success to a lot more than Lewis, though. 108 Pass the bucky A great deal of current development owes its success to a new wonder material called a carbon nanotube. 109 Tracy Chapman, for example, certainly owes her fame and a lot of her money to her brief appearance at it. 110 Linda McKechnie owes her path to fame to the generosity of close friends. 111 Late twentieth-century work design owes more to scientific management than to Herzberg or Emery. 112 Ben concedes that he owes a great deal of his success to the help he gets from his Mum and Dad. 113 Yet he owes his life to this man who, in saving him, has sacrificed his hands to frostbite. 114 It has its origins in formal logic, and owes much to the writings of Aristotle and Frege. 115 The railway company owes a duty of care to crossing users. 116 The show owes much of its success to the star names it attracts to play suspects. 117 The art owes much to its predecessor, kungfu, which was the root of its modern development. 118 She owes her life to an alert farmer, who spotted her car in a ditch and called the emergency services. 119 Answer guide: In this case the business owes the bank money which needs to be repaid in the short term. 120 This description owes its quaint sound partly to its antiquity, and partly to ambiguity.