Becoming
in sentence
3250 examples of Becoming in a sentence
In the new context set by the war in Georgia, the urgency of Turkey
becoming
a real bridge between the nations of the Caucasus is not lost on anyone.
In addition to
becoming
more active in world diplomacy, Yudhoyono will meet Russian President Vladimir Putin in Moscow this month to discuss buying Russia’s newest fighter jets.
Insofar as some Chinese firms do lag behind Western standards, they are
becoming
increasingly sensitive to foreign criticism and are learning fast.
Generally, counter-terrorism is very high on our international agenda and is
becoming
better integrated into the Union's political dialogue with other countries.
Part of the slowdown relates to the terrorist attacks of September 11th, but it is
becoming
clear that America’s economy, and other economies linked to the US through trade and production networks, were sliding into recession before September.
White, English, working-class men over the age of 55 feel particularly excluded from the progressive version of patriotism, and fear
becoming
a minority in their “own” country.
Thus, Cameron’s claim that Juncker’s election would make it more difficult to ensure the UK’s continued EU membership risks
becoming
a self-fulfilling prophecy.
What is also
becoming
apparent is the collapse of the region’s old order, which had existed more or less unchanged since the end of World War I, and with it, the decline of the region’s traditional stabilizing powers.
OECD statistics show that 40% to 50% of displaced manufacturing workers in the EU15 remain without a job 24 months after
becoming
unemployed.
There is also evidence that the distribution of returns to capital is
becoming
increasingly skewed toward these sectors.
But is France really on its way to
becoming
a “second Germany”?
I can also envision alternatives that would have enriched poor nations: Deng Xiaoping
becoming
China’s leader in 1956 rather than 1976 would have done the job there.
To be sure, the first part of the move was probably motivated largely by the desire to strengthen markets’ role in setting the exchange rate, which promises to boost long-term stability and improve the renminbi’s chances of
becoming
a global reserve currency.
Meanwhile, flaws in China’s growth model are
becoming
obvious.
Otherwise, we risk
becoming
vulnerable to serious strategic threats – the gravest of which is likely to be climate change.
But Germany is gradually
becoming
a bazaar economy in a different sense, because nowadays it specializes in packaging and selling its products, while outsourcing an ever-larger share of its high value-added manufacturing to low-wage countries.
Sixty years after the invasion of our country by Hitler's Wehrmacht, and thirty-one years after armies of the Warsaw Pact crushed the Prague Spring, our security is
becoming
an integral component of the security of the entire Euro-Atlantic world.
It was
becoming
increasingly clear that as China continued to grow faster than almost anyone else, the rest of the world’s import capacity (and tolerance) could not keep up with China’s export machine.
China was
becoming
too big.
We do not have any illusions or high expectations, but a NATO that continues to expand without having the capabilities to meet the obligations to defend an enlarged treaty area runs the risk of
becoming
a hollow alliance.
Indeed, more than thinking, it should have done some regulating to prevent Europe’s banks from
becoming
so vulnerable.
South Africa, Egypt, and Nigeria are already
becoming
promising places to invest in these areas.
In short, Latin America appears to be
becoming
a region of democracy by plebiscite.
With Big Tech’s secret algorithms determining how we perceive the world, it is
becoming
increasingly difficult for people to make conscious decisions – what philosophers perceive as the basic dimension of free will.
We now live in a world where former communists must take pride in
becoming
successful managers of a capitalist economy.
The direct ecological footprint of the livestock population is larger than that of the human population, with rapidly rising global meat consumption
becoming
a key driver of water stress by itself.
The InterAction Council, comprising more than 30 former heads of state or government, has called for urgent action to prevent some countries battling severe water shortages from
becoming
failed states.
France under President Jacques Chirac is quickly
becoming
united Europe's biggest nightmare.
The renowned American economist Mancur Olson argued that stagnation in developed economies results from cartels and lobbies
becoming
more numerous and powerful over time, until they eventually drain a country’s economic dynamism.
Although Chinese labor is
becoming
more expensive, China remains a formidable competitor for any country contemplating entry into manufactures.
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