<adv.all> this marathon would exhaust him unnecessarily
Unnecessary \Un*nec"es*sa*ry\, a. Not necessary; not required under the circumstances; unless; needless; as, unnecessary labor, care, or rigor. -- {Un*nec"es*sa*ri*ly}, adv. -- {Un*nec"es*sa*ri*ness}, n.
"In the absence of some actual clash" between Congress and the executive branch, considering the lawsuit would only interject the court unnecessarily into a political process, it added.
"Likewise, it is important that we not unnecessarily jeopardize the international leadership position we have built up through years of cooperative government and private investment," he said.
And there is a worry too about McLeish's translation: mostly admirably accessible and witty, it is sometimes so slangy that you feel the production is unnecessarily intent on convincing you that this is not some dusty old classic.
The state contends he fired his gun unnecessarily as the motorcycle roared past him in the opposite traffic lane.
Kimberly Taylor, 21, who complained to Edgewater police that an officer unnecessarily took her from her home at 5:20 a.m. Saturday for a traffic charge, is wanted under the name Kimberly Addington.
"Using the two appeals channels will expedite the resolution of disagreements between citizens and decision-makers without unnecessarily delaying national forest management," Robertson said.
The high court ruled 6-3 that federal law permits an employer to decide voluntarily to correct a "manifest imbalance" in the work force through an affirmative-action plan, as long as the rights of other workers aren't "unnecessarily trammeled."
He said ombudsman Philip Foisie, whom the Defense Department named last year, had said in a report that "I inserted myself into the newspaper's editorial process unnecessarily," especially in the early part of his nearly four-year tenure.
All this, it is estimated, will take at least 18 months - although some think the timetable is unnecessarily long.
In some cases, members of Congress or their aides apparently filled out the forms unnecessarily.
Mr. Allen's commissioners voted to call his unread speech "thoughtless, disgusting and unnecessarily inflammatory."
"I'd obviously be lying if I said I never thought about giving up law," says Mr. Turow, author of the best sellers "Presumed Innocent" and "The Burden of Proof," quite unnecessarily pointing out that he doesn't need the income his practice produces.
This would unnecessarily penalise participants in the growing number of 'all-employee' share option schemes, which use the 'discretionary' scheme legislation because of the inflexibility of the requirements for savings-related (SAYE) share options.
In a broad assessment of American energy prospects, the United States Energy Association said the special agency could enhance the nation's energy security by eliminating what it called unnecessarily long lead times for major projects.
Critics in Britain - the target, along with Belgium, of most V-2 firings in 1944-45 - charged that the ceremony would unnecessarily resurrect war memories.
This is unnecessarily modest.
'We have had an unnecessarily long price war, which has been maintained by subsidised losses.' One consequence of propping up state companies could be the closure of more efficient, private-sector plants.
Ms Emilie Lieberherr, the socialist head of the city's social affairs department and a member of its three-person drug committee, last week tried to distance herself from what she considers an unnecessarily brutal implementation of the new policy.
Industry has long pushed for such an exception, arguing that it is burdensome and unnecessarily costly to subject material with minimal amounts of hazardous content to the stringent record-keeping and disposal rules that apply to hazardous waste.
Several wine producers and industry trade groups said they believe the test results are unnecessarily alarming to consumers, since the Food and Drug Administration has yet to establish what the acceptable level of lead in wines should be.
Those convicted could be fined, ordered to restitute funds to those who had been damaged, and/or be disqualified from being directors. When individuals have not personally enriched themselves, a prison sentence often looks unnecessarily harsh.
Geronte's mansion was barren, and the Le Havre harbour also seemed unnecessarily sombre.
Your reference to the Italian study, unfortunately, suggests that 758 people died unnecessarily.
The extra 6% tax penalty on autos makes it unnecessarily difficult for both foreign and domestic car companies to sell in that market.
"There's no reason to unnecessarily dramatize developments in Japan," said a senior West German finance official, who spoke to reporters before the start of daylong talks at the French Finance Ministry.
The first presentation lasted more than four hours and was criticised by some bankers as being unnecessarily long and rather ramshackle. Presentation, however, may be the least of Mr Malan's problems.
Patients like it because it avoids having to stay in hospital unnecessarily.
'It confers unnecessarily wide powers upon the Inland Revenue and provides inadequate protection against their exercise'. So far, the Revenue owl doesn't give a hoot.
Some models testified that Hendricks asked them to disrobe unnecessarily, fondled them and made other advances.
"Hundreds of refugees applying for asylum in the United States are unnecessarily detained," the committee said.