Accommodate
in sentence
304 examples of Accommodate in a sentence
Worse, given their frequent unwillingness to
accommodate
one another’s interests, impasses – even clashes – become likely.
When the Pontifical Academy of Sciences announced that it would organize a summit on refugees and migrants later this year, it stressed that mayors “must be provided with the ability to meet the needs, accommodate, and regularize all types of migrants or refugees.”
Unlocking new pools of capital will help create jobs, encourage regional integration, and ensure that Africa has the facilities to
accommodate
the needs of future generations.
Our experience so far has taught us that university managers should not
accommodate
rising student populations by inflating their core business.
Europe is already struggling to
accommodate
refugees from the Middle East and Afghanistan.
When prices eventually recovered and soybean production picked up once more, firms could
accommodate
the surge in demand by making use of existing excess capacity.
Fortunately, the EU itself also has a proud tradition of muddling through the challenges it faces, long relying on messy arrangements to
accommodate
its various members’ needs and demands.
In order to enable a company’s management to
accommodate
the long-term interests of all stakeholders, corporate decision-making must account for the four prerequisites of a company’s survival: profitability, growth, risk protection, and public trust.
The design for such a process cannot
accommodate
malevolently carnivorous forces like jihadist terrorism, which merely sucks credibility out of its principal progenitor, Pakistan.
Second, the old powers need to
accommodate
the rise of Globalizer economies – particularly China and India – by reforming our international order.
Most existing coal and gas suppliers cost about half or less than wind and could run for decades; instead, we half-close them to
accommodate
wind.
To
accommodate
the needs of the emerging economies, as well as the interests of advanced countries, a new system will be needed, in which exchange rates are managed but adjusted according to criteria that balance domestic growth and global stability.
A little flexibility here should also be a helpful message to those getting restless in Taiwan that China really can
accommodate
difference.
The question is simple: Can China sustain rapid GDP growth within the confines of the current global order, including its trade rules, or must the current US-dominated order change drastically to
accommodate
China’s continued economic rise?
Whether or not the renminbi is added to the SDR basket this October, a gradual transformation of the global system to
accommodate
China seems all but inevitable.
In an exciting experiment in Lebanon, schools have been put on double shifts in order to
accommodate
the country’s Syrian refugee population.
The WHO has tried for two years to
accommodate
Indonesia, without success.
One may wonder whether today’s highly competitive, funding-starved scientific atmosphere, in which publications and citations have become a primary criterion for success, can
accommodate
such mistakes.
My own country, for example, invented much of what it means to be British in order to
accommodate
Scotland in the eighteenth century to the idea of rule from England, and to persuade the whole of the United Kingdom that it should not object to being ruled by German kings.
Yet, the ability of European institutions to
accommodate
deeper and broader integration is increasingly undermined by the persistence of a contradictory and long-obsolete ideal: the nation-state as the basis of political legitimacy and sovereignty.
And regulation should be based not on past experience, as it is now, but on future possibilities; in other words, the regulatory framework must be flexible enough to
accommodate
new innovations.
Despite some recognition of the need to reform practices in hospitals and other medical facilities to
accommodate
the needs of women doctors, so far little has changed.
This seems to me to reflect women's all-too-common impulse to
accommodate
the unbridled male ego rather than any deficiency in their creativity or "independence."
Even though the world economy is desperately in need of rebalancing, their declaration was deliberately vague enough to
accommodate
any set of domestic policies that countries might choose.
Thus, the voting system is sufficiently robust to
accommodate
up to 27 euro-area members.
This includes highways, bridges, and railways linking rural producers in landlocked countries to Africa’s urban consumers and external markets; mass transit and Internet infrastructure to
accommodate
greater commercial activity; and electricity transmission lines integrating privately financed power plants and grids.
The way out of this dilemma is to understand what Iran wants – and how to
accommodate
it without jeopardizing anyone’s security.
Realizing that no single group is powerful enough to impose its habits on others, Nigeria's peoples are working out ingenious ways to
accommodate
one another's differences.
Lebanon is trying to
accommodate
nearly one million refugees.
The reason for the migrants’ strong preference for Germany is that the country, together with Sweden, has Europe’s most liberal asylum system and allocates particularly high levels of funding to
accommodate
the newcomers.
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