Becoming
in sentence
3250 examples of Becoming in a sentence
Alex Thier, who managed multibillion-dollar US government aid programs before
becoming
executive director of the Overseas Development Institute in London, was visiting a health clinic in Buikwe, Uganda, when he received the news of Trump’s budget proposal, which would mean deep cuts to such facilities.
At a time when South Koreans are
becoming
more globalized, learning English, and welcoming a growing number of immigrants, Japan is entering a “de-globalization process.”
Is Germany
becoming
a scapegoat for Europe’s problems, or is it really out of step with the EU and the world economy?
Britain is losing its influence over EU cybersecurity and energy policies just as cyber warfare and energy geopolitics are
becoming
key fronts for hostile state and non-state actors.Worse, at the same time that Britain is giving up its seat at the EU table, it also seems to be giving up its liberal-democratic values.
Britain is losing its influence over EU cybersecurity and energy policies just as cyber warfare and energy geopolitics are
becoming
key fronts for hostile state and non-state actors.
Still, each faces serious obstacles to
becoming
a $1 trillion economy, never mind accounting for 2-3% of world GDP.
Incapable (so far) of forging a cohesive cordial strategy, with China, the West is
becoming
visibly afraid of Russo-Chinese rapprochement -- despite the obvious limits of it.
The Future(s) of Civil AeronauticsHAMPTON, VIRGINIA -- Civil aeronautics is in the midst of
becoming
a “mature” industry, with all the drawbacks that this entails.
Automatic aircraft operation is already
becoming
commonplace – especially in the military – but further increases will require a similarly automatic airspace.
Its agenda is rapidly expanding, and it is
becoming
an influential and permanent component of the international economic and financial architecture, even as challenging questions surround its future.
The deliberations of the National People’s Congress, for example, are
becoming
less ceremonial and more substantive.
It comes as no surprise, then, that the idea of a common European bond is
becoming
popular as a way to counter the risk of rising EMU interest-rate spreads.
This cozy relationship was supposedly dissolved when the traditional Sumo circle was modernized,
becoming
today’s JSA.
Everyone benefits from each of us
becoming
good at different things and exchanging our knowhow with others.
Its democracy would not grow weaker by
becoming
tidier: rather, it would grow up.
Modern services are
becoming
increasingly tradable, providing new export opportunities.
Nonetheless, some sort of accord, whatever its gritty nuances, is both possible and necessary, given that preventing Afghanistan from relapsing into civil war or again
becoming
an export base for terrorism is in everyone’s interest, including Pakistan’s.
Today, it is rapidly
becoming
welfare-dependent.
Our food is safer and our diets are more diverse than ever before; production methods are
becoming
increasingly sustainable, clean, and efficient; and we are constantly
becoming
better at protecting biodiversity.
That is why, despite serious difficulties, Turkey has a good chance of overcoming its internal tensions and
becoming
the example that its Middle East neighbors (and perhaps a few of its European neighbors as well) so desperately need.
With Brexit from the north and the Italian government’s deployment of xenophobic anti-Europeanism from the south, “ever-closer union” is
becoming
a farcical symbol of the disconnect between reality and the EU establishment’s propaganda.
Although Russia’s future is uncertain, its history is
becoming
clearer, in part because we now know that the Twentieth Party Congress started the process that brought about the end of Soviet despotism.
Another 7.5 million have lost their homes or fled the country,
becoming
refugees.
Water stress is
becoming
a major obstacle to economic development in many parts of the world.
Others, including those that were
becoming
the new frontier in emerging markets, may see their access to foreign capital dry up.
As technology continues to progress, with robotization
becoming
more accessible, companies that once relied on cheap labor and manufacturing exports increasingly need to produce goods and services closer to domestic consumers in open and globally competitive markets.
Add to that rising risks in other emerging economies, and it is unsurprising that investors are
becoming
increasingly unnerved.
Instead of
becoming
more modern, agriculture remained as dependent as ever on erratic monsoon rains and became even more volatile in its production.
It no longer dreams of
becoming
the “United States of Europe,” and Jacques Delors’ suggestion of “the United Nations of Europe” has remained too ambivalent, if not deliberately ambiguous, to be effective.
Before his death, Fortuyn is said to have been terrified of the prospect of
becoming
Prime Minister.
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