Calls
in sentence
2192 examples of Calls in a sentence
A Born-Again CAPWAGENINGEN, NETHERLANDS – Born in 1957, the Common Agricultural Policy (CAP) is now more than 50 years old, and the European Commission is proposing what it
calls
a health check for its middle-aged child.
Likewise, in the mid-1980s, when exchange-rate volatility gave rise to
calls
for protectionist trade measures, the US and Japan found a solution involving exchange-rate stabilization.
Moreover, our Court of Final Appeal
calls
on some of the most esteemed minds of the common-law world.
Japan’s Nationalist TurnTOKYO – Japan has been in the news lately, owing to its dispute with China over six square kilometers of barren islets in the East China Sea that Japan
calls
the Senkakus and China
calls
the Diaoyu Islands.
So America's Treasury Secretary accuses China of deliberately keepings its exchange rate low, and
calls
for China to let market forces determine the value of the reminbi.
While there were
calls
to redraw the colonial lines, neither departing Europeans nor local elites were interested in the thorough reshuffling that this would have required.
Their courageous
calls
fell on deaf ears; they now remain imprisoned.
Such efforts are already having an impact, with citizens mobilizing to defend the ocean and policymakers beginning to respond to their
calls.
This curriculum, exported Westward by fat Saudi subsidies, is heavily punctuated with denunciations of the infidels and
calls
to jihad.
Their preferred model
calls
for the UN to provide the funding and most other support for the mission, while allowing the AU to maintain its leadership role.
The mixed record of poverty reduction
calls
into question the efficacy of conventional approaches.
What else could he possibly mean when he
calls
for a newly created eurozone finance ministry that can accrue jointly guaranteed debt and collect its own taxes.
Of course, this does not mean that central bankers should be hosting meetings or conference
calls
to discuss collective strategies.
Malala’s efforts, while applauded by the West and some segments of Pakistani society, were deeply resented by the obscurantist forces that go by the name of the Taliban, which in Pakistan
calls
itself Tehrik-e-Taliban Pakistan.
Chief Secretary Sir Donal Tsang
calls
negative assessments of the territory the product of second-rate minds.
After all, the flipside of that perspective, which rests on a fundamental belief in the equalizing effect of the market, is what Michael Sandel
calls
our “meritocratic hubris”: the misguided idea that success (and failure) is up to us alone.
After the Soviet collapse, the West, writes Lukin, had two options: make a serious attempt to integrate Russia into the Western world by bringing it into NATO and offering a new Marshall Plan, or cut piece after piece from what he
calls
this “center of the inimical world.”
It took some time, but Yanukovych’s determination to press on with the European integration efforts begun by his predecessor, Viktor Yushchenko, has become increasingly clear – in the face of repeated
calls
(and sometimes thinly veiled threats) by Russia to join its customs union with Belarus and Kazakhstan.
The key to making these judgment
calls
would be overriding ethical principles that had been instilled in the machine before it went to work.
He sees a world in which incredibly tiny self-replicating robots, which he
calls "
assemblers," will do all the work, guiding chemical reactions by positioning reactive molecules with atomic precision.
This worries enough people, including Prince Charles in the UK, that there have been
calls
for banning further research into nanotechnology.
At the Jackson Hole conference, Paul McCulley of PIMCO, the world’s largest bond fund, argued that in the past month or two we have been witnessing a run on what he
calls
the “shadow banking system,” which consists of all the levered investment conduits, vehicles and structures that have sprung up along with the housing boom.
It also
calls
on the government to adopt, within a year, legislation to prohibit potentially harmful experiments on great apes that are not in their interests.
This attitude implies a willingness to reach what Syriza
calls
a “dignified compromise” with its European partners.
Having practiced long-term detentions without charge, trial, or access to family or counsel; having sexually humiliated and tortured prisoners, some of them to death; and having failed to hold accountable any of the high-level officials responsible for the policies that led to those crimes, the US is now seen as a hypocrite when it
calls
on other governments not to engage in such abuses.
In the National Security Strategy of September 2002, the Bush administration
calls
free trade not only a meritorious policy, but also a “moral principle.”
The prescient
calls
from Joseph Stiglitz, Jeffrey Sachs, and many others for a different approach to sovereign debt in general need to be modified to fit the particular characteristics of the eurozone’s crisis.
Paul Krugman and the Obama RecoveryNEW YORK – For several years, and often several times a month, the Nobel laureate economist and New York Times columnist and blogger Paul Krugman has delivered one main message to his loyal readers: deficit-cutting “austerians” (as he
calls
advocates of fiscal austerity) are deluded.
Krugman has vigorously protested that deficit reduction has prolonged and even intensified what he repeatedly
calls
a “depression” (or sometimes a “low-grade depression”).
Government agencies are always at risk of putting money into what Schuck
calls
“bad bets” and “bad apples.”
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