The sentence "the tenant will prove lesser damage at any point" suggests that the tenant has the ability to demonstrate that the damages incurred are minimal or less than what was claimed. This could imply that the tenant is prepared to provide evidence or arguments to support a claim of reduced liability for damages. It emphasizes the tenant's potential to mitigate their responsibility in a dispute, perhaps in a legal or rental context.
From the victims point of view - the defendant does not get tried for the offense committed against them.From the defendants point of view - He must plead guilty and take the sentence - even it it is for a lesser crime.
If a tenant defaults on a lease (e.g., failure to pay rent on time, damage to the premises, keeping a pet when it is not part of the lease, etc. ) then the lessor can evict the tenant. At that point, the lessor can demand the full balance of the lease be paid immediately.Enforceability varies from state to state. You should see a lawyer specializing in landlord/tenant law if you are caught in this situation.Avoid any lease that has what appears to be an "Acceleration" clause.
The purpose of a car is to get from point A to point B with greater speed and lesser effort
A topic sentence and a transitional sentence are not related. A transitional sentence moves the reader from point to point, each which supports the main argument or topic sentence.
No
when something has a exclemation point in the sentence
i like point of views
If there is an exclamation point or question mark within a sentence, the immediately following word is not automatically capitalized. It can be, however, but that would have to depend on the context.
She went point-by-point in the lecture. He highlighted the formula point-by-point.
I would like to digress for a moment, at this point. The raccoon dropped the fish at this point.
I do not agree with your point of view.
At the end of the sentence.