Adopted
in sentence
1716 examples of Adopted in a sentence
Moreover, the US economy’s performance remains overly dependent on the Federal Reserve’s experimental monetary policies, courageously
adopted
in the absence of adequate measures by other economic policymakers.
It also recently
adopted
an integration law designed to provide language skills, prevent the formation of ghettos, and ease access to the job market for recent arrivals.
Their shared premise is correct: complacency about the euro crisis is misguided, the fixes
adopted
so far do not go far enough to ensure lasting stability, and the current respite should be used to design the bloc’s permanent architecture.
The reformist parliament elected in December 1999 in tandem with President Vladimir Putin's reformist administration lowered tax rates, overhauled the judicial system, legislated private ownership of land, and
adopted
new banking laws.
These regimes have shrewdly
adopted
some of the forms, but not the substance, of soft power.
The solution
adopted
in frantic late-night negotiations in Brussels initially looked counterproductive.
California recently
adopted
a similar approach, issuing IOUs when faced with the impossibility of access to funding.
It is difficult to know who is right, because no other country has
adopted
this policy.
Another restriction has been recently
adopted
in the United States, where the issue was explored by the National Biomedical Ethics Advisory Commission in extensive hearings and discussions with ethicists, religious leaders, scientists and physicians.
But if these solutions are to be
adopted
at the necessary scale, environmentalists and city officials alike will have to expand the scope of their traditional activities.
Even more alarming, spurning multilateral cooperation means dooming the world to resignation in the face of existential issues such as climate change, a negligent stance that the Trump administration has
adopted
with relish.
France has not
adopted
a balanced budget in the last 30 years, and its public debt reached an unsustainable €1.7 trillion ($2.2 trillion) in 2011.
This is not just a political commitment; we have enshrined France’s fiscal path in a law
adopted
in November.
To this end, federalists backed an idea first proposed by former European Commission President Jacques Delors and included in the European Union’s Lisbon Treaty,
adopted
in 2007: Political parties should nominate candidates for President of the Commission, and the election to the European Parliament should decide who gets the job.
Indeed, the UK is something of a latecomer: thirteen countries already allow gay marriage, and the usually conservative current US Supreme Court recently struck down the “Defense of Marriage Act,”
adopted
in 1996 explicitly to ban gay marriages, and a law prohibiting gay marriage in California.
Such activities are not just unjust; they are a violation of United Nations Security Council Resolution 2334,
adopted
nearly unanimously last year (the US, then led by Barack Obama, abstained).
Opposition parties and civil-society groups denounced this constitutional coup and
adopted
the motto “Wade dégage!”(Wade out!) – reminiscent of “Ben Ali, dégage!” in Tunisia last year.
While US Vice President Dick Cheney denigrates the idea of energy conservation, China’s leaders have
adopted
a new five-year plan that commits the country to cut energy use by one-fifth, industrial pollution by one-tenth, and industrial water consumption by one-third.
Shame!”Vittorio Zucconi, writing in La Repubblica,
adopted
a less accusatorial tone: “In the end, it was the trial of a different culture, a clash of cultures more than a legal case,” Zucconi argued.
True, while the global financial crisis erupted more than four years ago, and the Dodd-Frank financial reforms were
adopted
in the United States back in 2010, not much has changed about how Wall Street operates – except that the large firms have become bigger and more powerful.
When Nixon
adopted
his own “mad” persona, he was in some ways drawing on the example of Nikita Khrushchev, my grandfather and Nixon’s adversary during his tenure as US vice president.
Adopted
in its present form by General Mohammad Zia ul-Haq’s military dictatorship more than three decades ago, the blasphemy law imposes a mandatory death penalty on anyone convicted of insulting Islam.
General Zia’s harsh version of the law in Pakistan was
adopted
as part of his effort to use Islam to legitimize his suppression of all dissent.
If only one of these remedies were adopted, the world would be a safer and happier place, and taxpayers would no longer be at risk of bailing out feckless financiers.
This has been achieved partly through the innovative policies
adopted
by our respective governments.
As a result of the program, almost all Basque municipalities have
adopted
such plans, consisting of more than 25,000 projects in areas such as mobility, waste management, and economic development.
Air-Sea Battle recalls the AirLand Battle idea that NATO
adopted
in the late 1970s and early 1980s to counter the growing Soviet threat to Europe.
Had our policy recommendation been adopted, stockholders and debt holders (who have a higher propensity to save) would have experienced greater losses than they did, whereas lower- and middle-income households (which have a higher propensity to consume) would have experienced relief from their mortgage debt.
This was the approach
adopted
after Trump withdrew the US from the Paris climate agreement: the other signatories continue to abide by it.
Yet, when parliamentary elections were held in 1991 – more than two years after the constitution was
adopted
– the Islamic Salvation Front still won.
Back
Next
Related words
Which
Countries
Their
Would
Approach
Policies
After
Years
Policy
Other
World
Government
International
Global
Measures
Should
There
Financial
Country
Since