Additional examples are adjusted to the entries in an automated way - we cannot guarantee that they are correct.
An oft-cited one is the changing structure of the economy.
The oft-cited reason: They still have their voices at the end of the day.
This method of comparison has led to the oft-cited top ten countries to live in.
A few factors play a part in the oft-cited comparison of the two bands.
If anyone can tell me how this oft-cited study proves anything, I'm all ears.
In the area of implied terms, the case is an oft-cited authority on trade usage.
So, to use an oft-cited example, people being laid off in Europe do not need to be terrified of getting sick.
One oft-cited reason for buying Facebook stock was the company's rapid growth.
Right or wrong, that season became an oft-cited example of what can happen if a team buys into the hype.
The oft-cited death toll from Congo's decades of war, for example, now stands at more than 5 million.
But some argue that this oft-cited factoid doesn't tell the whole story.
An oft-cited principle is that the President is not above the law.
Oft-cited definitions like 'black rocks' find no support in the written records.
This is one way to understand the oft-cited distinction between the “real economy” and the “financial economy.”
It became an oft-cited work in the then growing field of "Madonna Studies."
The most oft-cited form of age discrimination was being passed over for a raise, promotion, certain assignments or a chance to get ahead.
Yet more evidence of the oft-cited fragile male ego.
They come from the Labor Department and are more comprehensive than other, oft-cited measures.
It's an oft-cited fact that a clean car is a more valuable car.
He alluded to this belief in an oft-cited letter to the Rev.
One oft-cited benefit of the Android ecosystem is its diversity.
The blending of art and architecture is an oft-cited goal for residential projects.
In another oft-cited work from the 1980s, we are given another typology.
There are other oft-cited sources for the grim mood.
One oft-cited statistic shows that half of those arrested in the riots were Latino.