Answer
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4985 examples of Answer in a sentence
The joint budget, which would make investments and provide a cushion during economic downturns, would be overseen by a eurozone finance minister, who would
answer
to eurozone countries’ representatives in the European Parliament.
The
answer
lies in the values on which the Union is based.
The answer, of course, is nothing.
America’s ability to reaffirm its centrality in global affairs depends on the
answer.
Despite my earlier cynicism, I think I know the
answer.
In the United States, among the candidates still competing for the Republican Party’s nomination to challenge Barack Obama in November’s presidential election, Ron Paul stands out for arguing consistently that government is the problem, not the answer, with regard to banking.
“I cannot lie or not
answer
the questions.”
In the past, when my European friends have asked me why the US lags so far behind Europe in matters of animal welfare, I have had no
answer.
According to Zheng Guoguang, the Director of the China Meteorological Administration, “Science and technology will
answer
the prayers of those living through the harshest drought in decades.”
But then, so does every other
answer
that has been proposed since Parfit revived the problem and other philosophers began to offer their own solutions.
With the International Stem Cell Corporation (ISCC) seeking patents in Europe for a technology that produces stem cell lines from the parthenogenetic activation of an unfertilized ovum, the time has come to
answer
that question.
As Loeb pointed out more than 100 years ago, when it comes to inventions involving bodily materials and biological processes, moral questions are difficult to
answer.
So who should
answer
questions about an invention’s implications for “ordre public”?
The
answer
is straightforward: the public itself.
The
answer
is simple: Putin’s supporters – that is, a hefty majority of Russians – do not see the danger ahead.
The short
answer
is, probably not.
Perhaps the
answer
lies in the US or Latin American model, with a directly elected chief executive – a president, at the national level, and a governor, at the state level – serving a fixed term as both head of state and head of government.
The
answer
was no – a decision that, in the wake of the 2007-2008 credit crisis, appears to have been a fundamental mistake.
The logical
answer
would be to reduce equally the degree of job security enjoyed by the entire labor force.
Repressing political Islam, or attempting to “erase” Islamists militarily with total disregard for national political processes (not to mention human life), is not the answer, because it won’t persuade electorates to turn away from Islamist movements.
“Because we make a lot of money,” was the unanimous
answer.
The short
answer
is no.
The
answer
is that such questions were never an option, if we were to fulfill our treaty obligations and avoid a catastrophic repeat of nineteenth-century colonialism.
Ask most Catalans what independence will bring, aside from freedom from Spain, and you won’t get much of an answer: resentment at past wrongs overshadows any serious calculations about the future.
The
answer
is likely to be the same for men and women.
But as my pest-control agent’s
answer
illustrated, one man’s poison can be another’s assurance.
One
answer
is obvious if you look at the structure of Polish party politics (a structure also visible in other postcommunist countries, such as Hungary).
But the
answer
holds important implications for policymaking and prospects for economic growth.
And the official
answer
is probably wrong.
The
answer
to all three questions is simple: never.
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