Begin
in sentence
3613 examples of Begin in a sentence
Only when Rodman’s superiors cancel his experiments and he takes home Caesar, an infant chimpanzee, does the scientist
begin
to care about others.
Neuralink will
begin
with research designed to assist such patients, but to achieve its grand aim, it will need to move beyond them.
She will
begin
to be identified with the change that is already underway.
More importantly, Mukhtar disclosed that Pakistan had asked China to
begin
building the naval base.
But it is time for& the franc zone’s two leading regional groupings – the West African Economic and Monetary Union and the Central African Economic and Monetary Community – to&
begin
playing a decisive role in overhauling the franc zone’s architecture.
If someone does have such a reputation, their predictions can become self-fulfilling prophecies: if they predict, say, a stock-market crash, everybody will
begin
to sell their shares, bringing about the predicted outcome.
Climax will likely come next spring, but the countdown will
begin
at the European summit in Dublin on October 5.
Similar conditions exist – or may
begin
to exist – in several locations worldwide.
The Road Map Includes DamascusPowerful countries know that it is dangerous to be seen to flinch, because enemies take heart and allies’ knees
begin
to knock.
As no West European state wants welfare immigration, and because they are unable to discriminate between nationals and EU immigrants, they will
begin
to reduce their services.
Broad-based commodity shortages often
begin
to emerge at the end of long global expansions, and in this respect, the present boom is no different.
The end to Western consumerism is not yet at hand, but high commodity prices are a clear warning that big adjustments will be needed as Asia and other emerging nations
begin
to consume a larger share of the global pie.
Only during the exit from the crisis did problems
begin
to surface.
Often the distinction between symbols and their referents is lost, and patients
begin
seeing people solely as representations of some imagined force.
In theory, as the economy picks up and interest rates
begin
to climb, central banks will simply pay higher interest rates on their reserves, so that they can finance their holdings of long-term securities and shrink them slowly.
Of course, given that the increase in emerging economies’ labor costs and the decline in American energy prices are recent developments, import shares could
begin
to decline in a few years.
Since it is an economic crisis, most people seeking its intellectual roots are tempted to
begin
with economists, who, with a few exceptions, look particularly discredited.
Even if there is further bad news for Europe – from Greece, for example, or from a sharper-than-expected slowdown in China – the eurozone could
begin
to move out of crisis mode this month.
A combination of military force, political incentives, and economic growth that benefits the wider population can
begin
to bring an insurgency to heel.
Ten years after the rest of postcommunist Europe, Serbia must
begin
establishing an open, democratic society.
Similarly, they can
begin
to think about how to protect and promote global trade in the absence of new US-led accords.
But it is time to go further and
begin
to lobby aggressively for faster financial liberalization in the developing world.
When new shortages develop, prices
begin
rising again, and the cycle repeats.
The erosion of the American presidency’s global role certainly did not
begin
with Trump’s inauguration.
Third, Lagarde has done important work in helping the world
begin
to understand the full implications – some of them frighteningly destabilizing – of technological change.
As world leaders prepare to enact the most ambitious global to-do list yet – the Sustainable Development Goals will be launched on January 1 – deciding where to
begin
may seem a daunting task.
They can be used only by converting them into one of four currencies, at which point they
begin
to carry interest at those currencies’ combined treasury-bill rate.
Taylor and others who share his view probably
begin
with a sense that current interest rates are too low.
Disagreement with the government, it must
begin
to see, is not sedition.
But one thing is clear: we, as a species, need to think more carefully about our impact on the nonhuman animal population and
begin
to take better account of these effects in our economic and environmental policies.
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