Annually
in sentence
839 examples of Annually in a sentence
I don't know why they don't show it
annually!
The theme (middle aged dad loses touch with his family and sets out on a trip to unite them, with calamity at every turn), has been done almost
annually
in Hollywood in one form or another.
It's funny because we would ask people if they knew it and they'd look at us like we had three heads.I also agree it should be on TV
annually.
Investment in Kenya’s education system, along with economic reforms, and (until recently) relative political stability has undoubtedly helped the economy, which has grown by around 4-5%
annually
over the past decade, following long periods of stagnation.
A part of Germany’s difficulty is due to the cost of unification with East Germany, which absorbs about 5% of GDP
annually
and contributes to one of the highest percentages of public expenditure in the world.
Like other ISIS-affiliated groups, the so-called Sinai Province publishes its military metrics and reports both monthly and
annually.
But not only was headline growth sturdy under Obama; his administration also presided over considerable job growth – the economy added more than two million jobs
annually
in seven out of his eight years in office – as well as falling unemployment and higher labor-force participation.
According to the International Labor Organization, the Indian workforce is set to grow by more than eight million
annually
over the coming decade, largely owing to young people entering the labor market.
And, although the government has raised teachers’ salaries to attract fresh talent, offering up to $6,000 annually, teachers still lack adequate support and remain unmotivated and largely unaccountable.
Meanwhile, the supply of most commodities is forecast to grow by no more than 2%
annually
in real terms.
Even with an enhanced resource-mobilization effort, roughly $22 billion
annually
in aid will be needed to achieve universal lower-secondary education.
Last May, shortly after the annexation of Crimea, Russia announced a $400 billion deal to supply 38 billion cubic meters (bcm) of gas to China
annually
for 30 years, beginning in 2019.
If the “eastern” and “western” pipelines are completed as planned, the 68 bcm they deliver to China
annually
would dwarf the 40 bcm that Russia exports to its current largest customer, Germany.
To put this in perspective, developing countries receive just $10 per child
annually
in global education support, barely enough to cover the cost of a single textbook.
The impact on China’s competitiveness of rising real wages – which have been increasing by more than 15%
annually
since 2008 – will, the country’s leaders expect, ultimately be offset by the benefits of productivity-led growth, not to mention the much-needed increase in domestic consumption.
Over the last eight years, China’s economy has grown by an average of 10%
annually
– a total increase of around 115% – leading to a 53% increase in CO2 emissions.
For about $1 billion a year, vaccination programs could be expanded to prevent childhood pneumonia and diarrhea, saving another million lives
annually.
First, the EU has to accept at least a million asylum-seekers
annually
for the foreseeable future.
In seven – China, Hong Kong, Indonesia, Malaysia, Singapore, South Korea, and Thailand – per capita GDP grew by at least 3.5%
annually
over the half-century from 1965 to 2016.
For instance, Americans pay some $300 billion
annually
for the “option value” of military preparedness – being able to fight wherever needed.
If you take that view, between 1950 and 1990, the US employment-to-population ratio would rise an extra 0.227%
annually
on average for each year that the unemployment rate was above its natural rate.
The McKinsey Global Institute estimates that automation could boost global productivity growth by 0.8-1.4% annually, generating large savings and performance gains for businesses.
And about $2.5 trillion
annually
would go to today’s developing countries every year, or $500 a year on average for each individual in the third world, almost half of whom now survive on less than $2 a day.
Pregnancy is one of the most vulnerable times for poor women; 99% of the 529,000 women who die
annually
from pregnancy-related complications live in developing countries.
By some accounts, Chinese officials currently negotiate upwards of 50,000 “major incidents”
annually.
And the pandemic alert was doubly strange, given that ordinary seasonal flu sweeps the world annually, is invariably far more lethal than the currently circulating low-virulence H1N1, and certainly meets the WHO’s definition of a pandemic: infections over a wide geographic area and affecting a large proportion of the population.
The operation, held
annually
and comprising 5-10 combat vessels, 1-2 auxiliary ships, and 2-4 maritime-patrol aircraft, includes forces from 26 European navies, and has undoubtedly helped to discourage, if not end, pirate attacks.
The US spends 1% of its GDP
annually
simply to administer its complex, unwieldy insurance system.
GE has saved $340 million
annually
since shifting some of its back-office work to India.
And, before the Iran shock had been absorbed, the US threatened a 25% import tariff on cars, which would shave at least $5 billion
annually
from German exporters’ revenues.
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