Additional examples are adjusted to the entries in an automated way - we cannot guarantee that they are correct.
Making change should, in general, be done between hands whenever possible, when a player sees she is running low of an oft-used value.
Another oft-used approach is to look in the back of a magazine and select a few companies at random.
Shortcut is great for oft-used phrases or answers to common questions.
Dan says that the oft-used description of his brother as "dark" fits.
Take sea level rise, an oft-used proxy for global warming.
That is particularly so if he has the oft-used ability to print money and inflate it away.
Trouble is, most people whose nicknames begin or end with this oft-used term tend not to.
Consider, for instance, an attempt to assess the effects of our oft-used industrial assistance program example.
Notice your own reaction in the retail environment when someone says to you the oft-used phrase "Have a nice day".
Innovative was the critics' operative word and sexual energy, an oft-used phrase.
The most oft-used phrase around the table was "Can I have your business card?"
In case you've escaped this oft-used play on words, here it is again:
It also reminds one of the oft-used repressive phrase to the effect that what is not allowed cannot happen.
The more oft-used metaphor for Michael Jackson was the car wreck from which we can’t look away.
This is why, for example, the oft-used radio is placed so high in the dashboard.
His wheelbarrow anecdote seems to be an oft-used story.
Valentine said later that the oft-used Benitez could have thrown to one batter tonight, but no more.
The dictionary definition: 'an established law, custom, or practice' is an oft-used and useful starting point.
Because the service uses software for much of the translation, it can store oft-used phrases and repeat them in later documents.
In his speech, Obama repeated his oft-used platform of why healthcare changes are needed now.
Walter was unable to control his bladder, which led to one of the programme's oft-used catchphrases, "Has he been?"
The oft-used phrase "our suffering soldiers" could be read selfishly and selflessly.
The match proved that one of the most oft-used, and boring, cliches is still nevertheless accurate.
The priest is described as 'Sir' because this was an oft-used prefix for priests in medieval times.
Such pedagogical traits contribute to the work's longevity; it is still an oft-used educational tool.