grey area造句1, Of course there's a grey area.
2, The judgment leaves a large grey area and much scope for argument.
3, The grey area here is the matter of proof of purchase.
4, But outside that grey area Mozart used strokes and dots deliberately for different purposes.
5, He was adrift in a moral grey area, sandwiched between his past and an uncertain future.
6, Sometimes a contractual term lies in a grey area between the two.
7, Virtual assets fall in legal grey area.
8, The insurance industry is such a grey area at the best of times.
9, Because eroticism business lies in grey area of the society, we cant control its scale effectively.
10, There remains a big grey area between bribery and political deal - making.
11, It's a grey area, that many try to finagle through, avoiding more responsibilities, yet still taking a claim to those ravishing days of dark nights, city streetlights, pumping fists, and club noise.
12, At the moment, the law on compensation is very much a grey area.
13, Exactly what can be called an offensive weapon is still a grey area.
14, The difference between gross negligence and recklessness is a legal grey area.
15, There is one type of appeal which falls in the grey area between review and supervision.
16, It only remains to add that there is - damn it - a thin grey area between the two.
17, The ASCI uses a 10-point scale for its qualitative questions as well, which allows for more grey area than a more narrow scale, he says.
18, The Honker Union, China's most famous group of Hong Ke, shows the grey area between patriotic hackers and the state.
19, On the lesser question of whether in fact you are right, it is a grey area.
20, Hopefully we can all get organized and we can get out of this grey area.
21, This is precisely how most people view their food choices - as unhealthy indulgence or unbearable privation - with little grey area in-between.
22, Those extremes are correctly covered, but between them,[http:///grey area.html] there's a wide grey area.
23, But whether that flexibility is intrinsic, or rather cultural, socialised or even emotionally led, remains a grey area.
24, Chapter 1 gives the definition of safeguards, and discusses the origin of Agreement On Safeguards, the nomological basis of safeguards, the selective application issue and grey area measures.