Answered
in sentence
2045 examples of Answered in a sentence
The invention of nuclear weapons – which served the goal of deterrence during the Cold War, when the world was divided into two opposing blocs –
answered
the needs and risks of the time.
It also raised more questions than it
answered
about which Syrian opposition groups would participate in negotiations.
Across ten areas – including health, education, war, gender, air pollution, climate change, and biodiversity – the economists all
answered
the same question: What was the relative cost of this problem in every year since 1900, all the way to 2013, with predictions to 2050.
“The office is closed,” a woman at the press office answered, adding that smog had gotten inside the mayoral building, which is located less than two miles from the Kremlin, so everyone was ordered to go home.
When I first interviewed Blair, as newly elected Labour leader in 1994, he
answered
my question about the role of his Christianity in his politics by saying, “I can’t stand politicians who go on about religion.”
Of course, the question of Turkey’s European identity cannot be
answered
with geography lessons.
I do not know how many Islamic leaders preach murder and mayhem in mosques and help recruit suicide bombers from among their congregants; but even if it is only a handful, they pose a question that must be
answered.
The government of Australia has
answered
that question in a dramatic way.
And it was
answered
during that long night in Brussels, with German Europe prevailing over European Germany.
“No,” he
answered.
But all of these questions can be
answered.
Skeptical questions are as often
answered
by reference to what might or even should be as by pointing to real conditions.
We need to send a clear message that opportunistic acts of aggression will be answered, both now and in the future.
If you cannot afford your mobile phone bills, you invent the concept of the “missed call” – a brief ring that is not
answered
but that signals your need to speak to the recipient.
Apres MitterandPARIS: Asked at 19 what he would like to be, Francois Mitterrand
answered "
all, or nothing".
As Clinton's Assistant to the President for Economic Policy Gene Sperling once wrote, staff aides who tell Congressmen that estate tax repeal "...costing tens of billions of dollars... will benefit only a few thousand families" are
answered "
maybe so, but I think I met every one of them at my last fundraiser."
Thus, “to test or not to test” is not the first question that needs to be
answered.
Respondents also
answered
other questions designed to indicate factors affecting life satisfaction.
Only 13 countries
answered
that call, but their investments – in research and development, services that help farmers take advantage of new research findings, credit and financing initiatives, commodity exchanges, and other marketing efforts – have already paid dividends.
Koons answered: “With Reaganism, social mobility is collapsing, and instead of a structure composed of low, middle, and high income levels, we’re down to low and high only...My work stands in opposition to this trend.”
The question about European federalism was posed to all member states, and none
answered.
None of these questions can be
answered
without thoughtful, open dialogue between segments of society that rarely interact.
Throughout the tour, the American
answered
with polite exclamations like “exquisite” or “striking.”
Nor can such questions be
answered
with the wistful hope that everyone will someday benefit.
This question has faced the EU from its beginning, and until now member governments
answered
it by proceeding at the pace of the most reluctant.
Many questions have yet to be
answered
about the design; implementation will be at least as challenging.
They claim that all the fundamental issues are understood; that all the great questions are
answered.
Following the launch of the new American policy, the old question of whether politics can learn from history will be
answered
again in the Middle East.
This question can be
answered
by studying a very sad ongoing natural experiment: the massive emigration from Venezuela, owing to the country’s catastrophic economic and social implosion.
These crucial questions can only be
answered
by the practical test of negotiations, this time with direct American participation.
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