Choices
in sentence
1580 examples of Choices in a sentence
The majority of phenotypes are, however, the product of complex multi-gene interaction, environment, and lifestyle
choices.
So we will stand firm in the cold and the snow to see that our democratic
choices
are respected.
Economics can at best clarify the
choices
for policy makers; it cannot make those
choices
for them.
Along with a relatively minor spreadsheet error, they identified some methodological
choices
in the original Reinhart/Rogoff work that threw the robustness of their results into question.
But the coalition's
choices
are extremely limited.
But whoever is elected will confront difficult
choices
if a nuclear-armed Pakistan remains unable or unwilling to act as an American partner and meet its responsibilities in the effort against terrorism.
But, ultimately, each country’s economic fate will depend on the
choices
that it makes today.
We have
choices
to make about all our policies, and these
choices
are not morally indifferent.
NEW YORK – Sometime in the 1980’s, when the communist regime in Poland was facing serious challenges from disaffected masses, the regime’s official spokesman, Jerzy Urban, remarked to a foreign journalist that there were only two
choices
in Poland: communism or domination by the Catholic Church.
There is a pool of about 300 million graduates to build on, and, according to solid evidence, they react to changes in economic incentives with respect to their location
choices.
This is a grave misconception, and also underestimates the gravity of the
choices
we face as business people and citizens.
Russia’s approach to international affairs has long centered on respect for national interests and sovereignty, and the belief that all peoples and nations should have the freedom to make their own political, economic, and cultural
choices.
The devastating and widening conflict in Syria does not present any good choices, only
choices
between bad and worse.
Any country that enters a period of heightened risk aversion with a large debt overhang faces only bad
choices.
COLORADO SPRINGS – Every day, policymakers around the world face a dizzying array of
choices.
We need to make responsible
choices
to ensure that we can live within our means – and that is what I am determined to deliver.
Democracies, of course, allow people to use their reason to make
choices
based on the evidence of their own eyes.
But this ambition, however legitimate, looks more presumptuous and unrealistic every day, particularly given the
choices
that Europe just made in naming its new “President” – Belgium’s Prime Minister Herman van Rompuy – and “Foreign Minister” – the never been elected to anything Lady Catherine Ashton from Britain.
The latter includes 178 approved job types; by design, none – the
choices
include waiter, bathroom attendant, taxi driver, auto battery repairman, mule driver, and wheelbarrow operator – makes use of an educated person’s skills.
Perhaps Western-style consumer societies offer too many choices, but Cuba provides far too few.
Meanwhile, India’s growth rate has plunged as a result of faltering economic reforms and unsustainable budgetary choices: it now has record-high fiscal and current-account deficits.
The kingdom’s new leadership has some difficult but important
choices
to make as it formulates a detailed economic strategy.
The choices, singly or in combination, are: 1) nothing (the current response); 2) mitigation (reducing emissions of greenhouse gases); 3) attempted adaptation to the ongoing climate changes; and 4) geoengineering.
That is why the diversity in Obama’s cabinet
choices
is important.
And his commitment not to err on the side of underestimating either the difficulty of the situation or the value of keeping employment high would make him, I believe, one of the best possible
choices
for the position, even if he were not now the incumbent.
That makes it even more important to clarify the
choices.
Recent rebellions worldwide show that some citizens recognize that they are being offered false choices, often no more meaningful than the choice between brands of toothpaste.
People have choices, and they exercise them all the time.
To address this, the political scientists T. Anthony Quinn and R. Michael Alvarez recommend reforming the primary process to “give voters more choices, which in turn can stimulate increased voter turnout.”
Scared people rarely make wise
choices.
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