Answered
in sentence
2045 examples of Answered in a sentence
Some of the world’s top economists – including three Nobel Laureates –
answered
this question at the Copenhagen Consensus last May.
How European countries fare in the future is a question that can be
answered
only collectively, not on the basis of some individually defined national interest, as in the nineteenth century.
When I answered, he rattled off the names of at least six generations of my ancestors, while asking me to fill in the details about my cousins, the family into which I had married, and the names of our children.
Many countries
answered
the US then; we need a similar pledge of unity today.
Unlike Cristina Kirchner, who gave long-winded speeches but held no press conferences and took no questions from journalists, Macri
answered
queries until reporters had none left.
Romanian TV
answered
promptly that it understood that victims of anti-Semitic crimes might feel hurt by such a program, but that the program had not promoted this kind of propaganda, offering the bizarre interview with me the previous week as proof of the channel’s good faith.
The point of the law was to free England from the authority of a papacy that
answered
to Charles I of Spain – that is, Charles V of the Holy Roman Empire.
Given that this is a legal question of contract definition and enforcement, it should be
answered
in the courts or arbitration tribunals, not by regulators.
Khamenei responded – reportedly the first time he
answered
an American – and Esfandiari was released in a matter of days.
It has also left at least three questions to be
answered.
The question that must be
answered
is how NGOs, faith communities, the media, bloggers, and citizens can help to set a new economic agenda, create political space for innovation, and maintain the demand for progress.
“I rescued Sergei” – Nanny
answered.
President Barack Obama’s press secretary
answered
defensively that American values do not endorse violence.
That question will soon need to be answered, because both the pharmaceutical giant GlaxoSmithKline (in conjunction with the US National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases) and the Public Health Agency of Canada have candidate vaccines in development.
Yet, as is often true in science, Einstein's insights have provided physicists with as many questions as they have
answered.
Until recently, the Bush administration
answered
with an evasive cliché: “as long as it takes and not one day longer.”
In my defense, I work in new media, plus I come from a web-savvy family; my 72-year-father recently
answered
the phone saying “Can’t talk, in Second Life!” (the online virtual world).
If the fate of Kosovo – and the entire Balkan region – is to be guided by the global rule of law, these questions need to be answered, not swept under the table.
Above all, important questions surrounding patient privacy, technology access, reporting of incidental findings, discrimination, and counseling must be answered, so that thoughtful and forward-looking public policies can be devised.
In one sense it has been answered: the United Nations is and will continue to be involved, and the United States has and will continue to play the leading role.
Deep questions about the nature of our political system, however, remain to be
answered.
But even this may not be enough, because each legal reform is
answered
by entrepreneurial ingenuity on the part of those who want to circumvent the new restraints.
Now that the crisis is seven years behind us, how have governments and voters in Europe and North America
answered
this important question?
"Not at all," Vasile answered, "we're at peace with our neighbours...our frontiers are secure.
The Nobel laureate Ronald Coase
answered
that question long ago.
However, many questions about the vaccine’s deployment – and its integration into the health systems of some of the world’s poorest countries – remain to be
answered.
But, whatever the merits of a banking union – and there are many – proposals to establish one raise more questions than can currently be
answered.
Whether it will operate consistently enough for a long enough time to produce significant genetic change can be
answered
only by future generations.
Shortly after the war broke out, when German Chancellor Theobald von Bethmann-Hollweg was asked to explain what happened, he answered, “Oh, if I only knew!”Perhaps in the interest of self-exoneration, he came to regard the war as inevitable.
She answered: it depends on whether Mao dies first or Zhao dies first – her point being that in a top-heavy system, growth paths can become unpredictable, and thus subject to volatility.
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