Becoming
in sentence
3250 examples of Becoming in a sentence
It begins with this warning: “The youth of the region are
becoming
continually more disenchanted with the ossified political power structures that marginalize them.
South Korea, which is enjoying unprecedented prosperity, is
becoming
increasingly uncomfortable with North Koreans’ economic despair.
But this competition is set to occur in a Greater Europe that is
becoming
marginalized in global terms.
But as technology progresses and once separate economies become interdependent, working with others is
becoming
increasingly important.
During her first trip abroad after
becoming
foreign minister, the BJP’s Sushma Swaraj traveled to Dhaka, Bangladesh’s capital, where she pledged to follow through on the land-boundary agreement, referring it to the Parliamentary Standing Committee on External Affairs for review.
With exports of manufactures
becoming
more expensive, China will have to grow by producing something else.
In terms of external economic policy, European policymakers have done very little in response to the wholesale changes now underway in the world economy – beyond complaining about Chinese imports and Russia’s aggressive use of its commodities, and, most recently,
becoming
embarrassingly obsessed with so-called Sovereign Wealth Funds.
For now, however, it appears that China’s shunning of Kim is
becoming
etched in stone.
Despair over poverty and insecurity has turned into anger toward the European project – which, sadly, is
becoming
an EU-wide pathology.
Even in extremely fragile and risky cases, such as Argentina, Venezuela, and Ukraine, political and economic conditions have become so bad that – short of
becoming
failed states – the situation can only get better.
But this approach is
becoming
increasingly difficult to justify.
This will pose serious problems in a world which, incidentally, is
becoming
ever more divided in terms of income as well.
Meanwhile, at the national level, it is essential that biodiversity conservation is “mainstreamed,”
becoming
an integral part of government policy and sustainable management practices worldwide.
Yet the producer model was not the definitive formula for achieving China’s aspirations of
becoming
a moderately prosperous society by 2020.
Pakistan, after joining the US, as an “ally” in the war on terror now appears to be paying a high price domestically for
becoming
a “rented state.”
Collective bargaining, once left to economic actors, is
becoming
increasingly politicized.
Ecosystems are
becoming
stronger, with many corals and plankton evolving to survive in warmer, more acidic water.
The United States, the country that consumes the most, is moving in the opposite direction: women are struggling to hold onto their reproductive rights, wealth distribution is
becoming
increasingly skewed, and corporations are
becoming
even more powerful.
Neo-colonialism is returning to Africa, the global project of human rights is in retreat, and the world trade system is
becoming
far less open.
So, instead of
becoming
the principal reserve asset of the global system, the proportion of SDRs in global reserves shrank to a tiny fraction, rendering the SDR the monetary equivalent of Esperanto.
In many of the world’s urban centers, homes are
becoming
prohibitively expensive for people with moderate incomes.
In some cases, a city may be on its way to
becoming
a “great city,” and market forces should be allowed to drive out lower-income people who can’t participate fully in this greatness to make way for those who can.
Its effects are already being felt worldwide, with extreme weather conditions
becoming
increasingly frequent.
Political and policy narratives are
becoming
more domestic and narrow, while the international agenda and the pursuit of collective common global interests are having greater difficulty being heard.
Robots are
becoming
both less expensive and more efficient, while manufacturers need to make up for labor shortages in several advanced and emerging economies.
As a result, Japan is
becoming
skeptical about America’s willingness to support it militarily in the event of a Chinese attack on the Japanese-controlled Senkaku Islands (called the Diaoyu Islands in China).
Few people dream of
becoming
Chinese, or of learning its various languages other than Mandarin.
That mission has led me to travel to Asia four times since
becoming
Secretary of Defense in July 2011.
Life under it is
becoming
nasty, brutish and, for many of my compatriots, short.
After all, the grim reality is that the separatist enclaves are in economic free-fall, with their societies
becoming
increasingly criminalized.
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