Appears
in sentence
2854 examples of Appears in a sentence
To the average Saudi, the initiative
appears
as either a sell-out or the prelude to a fresh Arab humiliation.
Today, Cyprus
appears
to have been rescued.
Japan
appears
to be acting not only for commercial reasons, but also according to its strategic interests.
Beyond that, a feedback mechanism
appears
to be in place: cities with more entrepreneurs tend to beget still more entrepreneurs.
Unemployment is at a cyclical low, and the economy
appears
to be less volatile than at any point in modern history.
The Federal Reserve
appears
to care about exchange rates only to the extent that they affect growth and inflation, and right now the weak dollar is helping US exports.
He
appears
convinced that the FBI and the media are conspiring to bring down his presidency.
The Belarusian government considers it to be Ukraine’s sovereign right to sign agreements with the EU – a flat contradiction of Russia’s stance – and
appears
likely to introduce customs fees of its own for electronic goods imported from Russia.
Kenya’s ubiquitous mobile banking service M-Pesa
appears
to have enabled poor women to move out of subsistence agriculture into non-farm businesses, providing a significant bump up the income ladder at the very bottom.
What
appears
as a systemically interconnected world will also turn out to be increasingly fragmented cognitively, with weak global governance and policy coordination.
America’s troubled private pension system – now several hundred billion dollars in debt – already
appears
headed for a government bailout.
Inequality
appears
to have been on the rise in recent decades at the international level and in most countries.
Combined, the legislation
appears
on track to run 30,000 pages.
Talk is cheap, and, in the absence of evidence to the contrary, the status quo usually
appears
comfortable enough.
Others are motivated by a desire to set up a rival power center, however unrealistic this
appears
to be.
Now a cultural shift
appears
underway in several of those economies, with more possibly to come.
Arab culture places a high value on poetic expression, so it is no coincidence that it
appears
repeatedly in Al Qaeda’s propaganda.
It thus
appears
that parliamentary opposition to Rouhani’s reforms is set to intensify.
Add to that external and internal pressures – including from surging Islamism, civil wars, and mass migration from conflict zones – and the future of several Arab countries
appears
uncertain.
The truth is that economic policymakers are juggling sets of potential disasters, exchanging the one that
appears
most threatening for a threat that seems more distant.
And it is very possible that, behind closed doors, Chinese officials are already testing their ability to manipulate some of the shadowy figures surrounding Kim, who
appears
increasingly paranoid about the possibility of a coup.
Even Western bosses keen on China, it appears, are finding it hard nowadays to praise Jiang, as he crushes the Falun Gong spiritual movement by imprisoning or confining its members to psychiatric hospitals.
On the Richter scale of drug disasters, the looming anti-depressant crisis
appears
to range between 7 and 11, where thalidomide rates a 10.
Of all these countries, the United States
appears
to be the most likely to have reached the end of the cycle.
The rapid increase thus
appears
to be mostly the result of speculative momentum that occurred before the interest-rate cuts.
The police persecution of the animal movement
appears
to be an attempt by the conservative party, which controls the Ministry of the Interior, and its animal industry supporters to strike back at a legitimate, peaceful challenge to the way we treat animals.
The security crackdown to stem protests there, and the virtual sealing off of the Kirti Monastery in Ngaba, where the first of the current wave of self-immolations occurred,
appears
merely to have spread protest farther afield.
China’s government, as prone to political maneuvering and policy gridlock as any,
appears
to agree that immediate economic growth is crucial and that an 8% annual rate is essential.
Given this, the argument that China will be dependent on nuclear power plants for non-carbon sources of electricity
appears
to have little merit.
But the 2007 licensing round
appears
to have been rushed through to raise cash during the dying days of the Obasanjo administration, and it would serve India’s government well to watch this process closely, too.
Back
Next
Related words
Which
There
Movie
About
Their
While
First
Other
Government
After
Growth
Where
Economic
Political
Would
World
People
Could
Indeed
Being