Abroad
in sentence
1698 examples of Abroad in a sentence
which also made him accessible to the vast Iranian community
abroad.
Expectations that Rafsanjani’s administration would return Iran to normalcy at home and
abroad
came to naught.
As a symbol of India’s economic strength, the rupee’s fall has provoked more than the usual hand-wringing and angst at home and
abroad.
And the Indian government played a large part in fueling rupee appreciation by easing companies’ ability to borrow
abroad.
More than 50% of university graduates cannot find jobs, and now look
abroad
for work.
Those who cannot go
abroad
form the base of the large number of educated young unemployed - a classic ingredient in causing public disorder.
But there is another potential driver of the sharp rise in imports: people may be over-invoicing, in order to shift money
abroad.
Scientists and researchers, once the pride of the Soviet Union, have vanished, often lured by more rewarding opportunities, at home or
abroad.
As China prioritizes the development of its long-range sealift capacity, the military is conducting simulations of contingencies like evacuation in hostile conditions and the protection of strategic assets
abroad.
Japan’s Political TremorsNEW YORK – Rarely – indeed, perhaps not since World War II – have the Japanese had such good press
abroad.
The Bush administration may not care that deficit reduction is the right policy for America, but it might care far more if the issue were framed as a prerequisite for policy changes
abroad
that diminish pressure from imports on domestic manufacturing employment.
To finance this, the government passed a series of amnesties, forgiving penalties for past tax evasions, allowing underground business to come above ground without paying its obligations, and allowing Italians to bring capital illicitly stashed
abroad
back into the country.
The current-account deficit comes about partly because foreigners want to invest more in the US than Americans want to invest
abroad.
Of course, the nearly 25 million people of Indian descent who live
abroad
fall into both categories.
After all, though the state of Kerala contains just 3% of the country’s population, it accounts for the largest number of Indians living and working
abroad.
I would probably divide the fourth wave further into two distinct categories: highly educated Indians, often staying on after studies
abroad
in places like the US; and more modestly qualified (but often harder-working) migrants, from taxi drivers to shop assistants, who generally see their migration as temporary and who remit a larger share of their income to India than their higher-earning counterparts do.
But there is a strong case for adopting a policy that has proved its effectiveness in confronting a country with imperial pretensions
abroad
and feet of clay at home.
The reason is simple: the lack of credible property rights under Putin’s system of crony capitalism forces senior Russian officials and oligarchs to hold their money abroad, largely within the jurisdictions of the Western governments against which Putin rails.
But in the absence of credible property rights, wealthy Russians, including Putin’s own cronies, know that the only safe places to keep their assets are
abroad.
Doctors and students can leave Gaza only rarely to attend conferences or universities
abroad.
Applied here, the policy means consolidating power at home while disarming critics
abroad.
Nearly two centuries ago, John Quincy Adams, America’s sixth president, was wrestling with domestic demands for intervention in the Greek war for independence when he famously said that the US “goes not
abroad
in search of monsters to destroy.”
In both cases, the US is to blame; hydraulic fracturing in Oklahoma or Pennsylvania, according to this narrative, is the latest example of America’s projection of power
abroad.
Ending low-interest-rates now would not be sensible, though QE has probably benefited the US economy only slightly, and may have raised risks
abroad.
But financial repression becomes less feasible the more China liberalizes its capital account, because investors can simply move their assets
abroad.
In fact, America’s complicated history of church-state relations at home has made it reluctant to intervene on the part of any religious groups abroad, especially when the population is small.
When Modi addresses stadiums full of Indian expatriates on his visits abroad, his speeches are aimed squarely at audiences back home.
Should he be defeated, finding refuge abroad, as Tunisia’s former President Zine el Abidine Ben Ali did, will be difficult.
To finance its trade deficit, America must borrow from
abroad
over a billion dollars a day.
Limiting NATO expansion to the favored three creates (at least in some quarters) the impression of a geographical division between central Europe as a part of the West returning to the fold after having been kidnapped, and the Baltic and Balkan regions, seemingly thrown back into the Russian "near
abroad"
or the anarchic East.
Back
Next
Related words
Their
Which
Would
Country
Countries
Foreign
Other
Domestic
About
While
Could
Should
Government
After
People
Companies
There
Capital
Political
Economic