Appears
in sentence
2854 examples of Appears in a sentence
The multi-billion-dollar global health industry
appears
to have turned Cicero’s maxim on its head, focusing instead on “giving health to women.”
The low interest rate helped by making the dollar more competitive, but otherwise monetary policy
appears
to have lost traction because of the condition of the housing sector and the dysfunctional state of the credit markets.
It
appears
to be a statement of the obvious: unacceptable disasters require extraordinary counter-measures.
Now it
appears
that President George W. Bush’s closest ally in the hemisphere will not only have its FTA rejected, owing to human rights concerns in the US House and Senate.
In fact, what
appears
to be driving Abe’s endeavors even more than the desire to revise the postwar order in Japan is a widely shared fear of China’s increasing regional dominance.
Burden-sharing – that is, a “fair” allocation of refugees throughout the EU (to be hashed out politically) –
appears
to be a pipe dream.
So the premise of austerity
appears
to be wrong.
On the contrary, the left’s return to power
appears
to be an entirely normal, almost trivial, example of alternation in government.
Given the vulnerability of so many eurozone countries, it
appears
that Merkel does not understand the immediate implications of her plan.
Instead, consolidation of authoritarian regimes
appears
to be the prevailing trend.
According to the South East Europe Media Organization (SEEMO), which monitors 20 countries in Eastern and Southeastern Europe, “pressure on journalists continues, and self-censorship
appears
to be the norm.”
Pakistan’s government
appears
to be preparing to talk to some of the extremists in the tribal areas, introduce political reforms, and redouble development efforts.
The issue is not only what could be lost in the race to the bottom in which many EU national governments are now engaging, but also the manipulative anti-EU sentiment coming from many quarters of the European press, which
appears
intent on pushing various national leaders into another budget showdown.
As Germany’s Welcome Culture recedes from the horizon, the populist ship
appears
to be gaining speed.
Most important, the government
appears
to be backtracking on a commitment to allow a binding referendum on the opening of the oil sector and other “transcendent” issues.
Still, for the EU, the economic logic of agreeing to Trump’s demands
appears
strong enough to convince it to hand Trump this apparent victory.
When politics
appears
as nothing more than a nuisance or a bore, a kind of social nihilism becomes acceptable, even comfortable, to practically everyone in so-called democratic and liberal societies.
Many who want Olmert to go would still not welcome a Netanyahu comeback, which may also explain what
appears
to be an indirect endorsement of Olmert by the United States.
Only the United States
appears
to be committed to creating the conditions needed to implement the CPA.
The popular revolt that
appears
to be underway is taking diverse, overlapping forms: reassertion of local and national identities, demand for greater democratic control and accountability, rejection of centrist political parties, and distrust of elites and experts.
If heeded, as
appears
to be the case in many countries, the results will be disastrous, especially given the fragility of the recovery.
In one respect, then, the dispute
appears
set to follow a path similar to the US-Japan case.
Moreover, “the US housing market
appears
to be stabilizing....Overall, the US mortgage market has remained resilient, although the sub-prime segment has deteriorated a bit more rapidly than had been expected.”
Thus, she
appears
to view school plays as a waste of time that could be better spent studying or practicing music.
This
appears
to be one of those times.
Lying or hiding the truth in some circumstances can, it appears, make people better off.
But an acceleration of reforms also
appears
unlikely, with the possible exception of the financial sector.
During this period, the portfolio has grown from just over $1 billion to $18 billion – an average return of more than 16% a year, which
appears
to be the highest of any major university.
Seen from Washington, Europe’s attention-seeking and responsibility-shirking behavior
appears
infantile.
But this point
appears
to be based more on anecdotes than serious research.
Back
Next
Related words
Which
There
Movie
About
Their
While
First
Other
Government
After
Growth
Where
Economic
Political
Would
World
People
Could
Indeed
Being