Additional examples are adjusted to the entries in an automated way - we cannot guarantee that they are correct.
We quite understand that the public has to have priority - it is their building too.
If she also works they must decide whose job has priority.
In theory it was all or nothing, but a man still had priorities.
I'm sure they have priority and it's what I want anyway.
I want this to have priority over any other orders.
Before 1945, the fleet and the air force had priority.
But of the three, the last undoubtedly had priority in his mind.
In the mountains, there are areas which have priorities common to us all.
This can lead to occasional problems over who has priority.
It is unclear which play had priority over the other.
For many workers, keeping a job has priority over getting a raise.
"Go to the end of the line; real patients have priority!"
Also of concern is who should have priority in using the cart.
The Regiment used to have priority; the job always came first.
But there almost always came a moment at which other people elsewhere had priority, and he was suddenly gone.
You were told the bar exam has priority over everything.
The mission had priorities, and number one was wiping out the hit team.
Among the thorny issues is who should have priority on the system.
"An individual has importance in his own eyes, but generations have priority."
Those in need would have priority for compensation, the working draft says.
They have priority in health care and education, all at the expense of local taxpayers!
If, therefore, some are to have priority over others there must be provisions to this effect in the terms of issue.
Those who live in impoverished or indigenous areas have priority.
They will of course have priority for the evacuation ships.
Particularly at an age where each couple has priorities beyond the Murphy bed, the company of good friends is hard to beat.