Answer
in sentence
4985 examples of Answer in a sentence
So far the
answer
has been no, and the midterm elections make it far less likely.
The permanent availability of this approach – what Friedman called “helicopter” money – makes deficient nominal demand one of the very few economic problems for which there is always an
answer.
The
answer
lies partly in the fact that the rich in both countries are ceasing to use many public services.
For more than a century, the resounding
answer
to that question has been, “the US.”
The short
answer
is: they mostly don’t.
The single currency was conceived as an
answer
to the upheavals of the postwar period – double-digit inflation, high unemployment, and speculative attacks on the pound, the lira, and the French franc.
So, if you have ever sat at somebody’s deathbed, the
answer
may very well be yes: you sat at the deathbed of a statistical life.
The first question is much easier to
answer.
It will take decades, not a single season, to
answer
such questions.
As the journalistic priesthood erodes and everyone can become a citizen reporter or commentator, regulating or training all would-be journalists is not the
answer.
But one would still be unable to
answer
the fundamental question: Why are these governments so popular?
The
answer
is one that most analysts have overlooked: these governments are not only nationalist; they are also socialist.
You can ask (and get the answer) to “movies directed by Roman Polanski” and get only those movies – not those in which he only appeared.
The
answer
is that countries should seek to do both: Lower the price paid to oil producers and raise the price paid by oil consumers, by cutting subsidies for oil and refined products or raising taxes on them.
The
answer
lies in the unprecedented challenges that China faces, including corruption, pollution, unsustainable local debts, ghost towns, shadow banks, inefficient state-owned enterprises (SOEs), and excessive government control over the economy.
The superficial
answer
is that her coalition partner, the SPD, is not willing to go further.
Back in the political world, the
answer
is quite a lot.
The answer, unfortunately, is no.
The official policy of “Four Modernizations” (industrial, agricultural, military, and scientific-technological) that has underpinned China’s rise since the late 1970’s has failed to provide an
answer
to that question, because the “fifth modernization” – the emergence of democracy and the rule of law – is still missing.
The
answer
is probably no.
The
answer
to the first question is, the rule of law.
The
answer
often lies in the business model.
The lessons from human behavior may hold the
answer.
The short
answer
is that it did very little to affect either.
To
answer
these questions, the best starting point is the US.
The big question to which nobody has a clear
answer
is whether Europe is in the process of inventing a model of its own, or has only taken a detour from the inevitable choice between disaggregation and convergence on the standard federal template.
Here’s one possible answer: build a free-trade area of the Americas without the United States.
He becomes upset if he calls and I don't
answer.
It is up to our leaders to
answer
his call and turn prayers into policy.
In the British case, the
answer
is not so simple.
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