Choose
in sentence
2235 examples of Choose in a sentence
Parents can then make contributions to their child’s trust fund which can grow tax-free, and can
choose
how to allocate the Fund among investments.
Farmers will
choose
plants that thrive in heat.
I had to
choose
between dying and getting back my life!”
Any Chinese can become another Liu Xiaobo if they
choose
to see through the lies of the regime’s “Materialism/Leninism.”
Of course, in the best of all worlds, we would not need to
choose
our priorities.
Yet the reality is that we can
choose
to make climate change our first priority, or we can
choose
to do a lot more good first.
The second step in May’s strategy was to avoid any discussion of what kind of Brexit the UK should
choose.
If forced to choose, they preferred single-market membership by large majorities.
If Europe’s leaders continue to
choose
mild palliatives over bold tactics, the best-case scenario is a lackluster recovery, with GDP growing at a 1-2% annual rate.
If people
choose
to drive enormous cars, they must derive some benefit from it; and if switching to green energy makes that choice uneconomic, human welfare must suffer.
Traveling by motorcycle over rough terrain can worsen health conditions; but with no other options, the frail must
choose
between a bumpy ride on the back of a bike and no treatment at all.
After US President Donald Trump’s recent executive order reinstating and expanding the so-called “global gag rule,” KMET – and many more organizations like it – will have to
choose
between life-saving programs.
The Dirge of CyprusPRINCETON – Europe can
choose
its own musical accompaniment to its latest crisis.
The American president would
choose
the Bank’s head, and Europe would collectively decide on the IMF leader, with the understanding that the other side would exercise its veto only if a candidate were totally unacceptable.
Their loss is Myanmar/Burma’s – and South Asia’s – gain, regardless of what Thein or his democratically chosen successors
choose
to call their country.
The best scenario would be free and fair elections to
choose
a new government.
There is a long-standing debate over who is to blame for this state of affairs – the deficit countries, which draw freely on the saving of others to finance economic growth, or the surplus countries, which
choose
to grow by selling their output in foreign markets.
Though some countries have persevered in the face of Russia’s threats to bring separatist, ethnic, or other problems to their doorstep should they
choose
integration with the EU, others have responded to the pressure.
The party did
choose
Europe over dogma in 1983, when Mitterrand decided to remain in the European Monetary System.
Workers who
choose
to work should find jobs; factories should deploy their capital efficiently; and the part of income that is saved rather than consumed should be invested to improve future wellbeing.
But, to make this scheme more concrete, I would suggest augmenting it with a “pact for labor and skills” between the EU and the Arab countries that
choose
a path to democratic transformation.
Following this intuition, Justin Yifu Lin, the former chief economist of the World Bank, has suggested that when countries
choose
what to do next, they should look at a successful country that was similar to them two decades ago.
It is a trap, in which countries are forced to
choose
between an unpredictable and transactional Trump-led US and an ambitious and predatory China.
The second issue concerns the composition and the voting rules of the handpicked 1,200-member election committee that will
choose
the Chief Executive in the future.
The current proposed arrangements would permit the Chinese government to veto any candidate that it did not like, prompting criticism that what is on offer is an Iranian-style election: “You can vote for anyone we choose.”
The last time a slightly smaller election committee met (to
choose
Leung), less restrictive constraints on candidate selection were in place, and the leader of the Democratic Party was able to be nominated (though he still received less than 7% of the vote).
This may be because decision-makers
choose
not to pay attention; but it may also be because economists themselves do not spell out the risks.
To secure regional stability, Russia must be convinced that all countries have the right to
choose
the international organisations in which they wish to be members.
There, leading politicians who
choose
to call themselves “fiscal conservatives” – such as Paul Ryan, now the Republican Party’s presumptive vice-presidential nominee to run alongside presidential candidate Mitt Romney in November’s election – care more about cutting taxes, regardless of the effect on the federal deficit and total outstanding debt.
When we fail to engage in such debates – when people
choose
“safe spaces” over tough discussions – we lose our best chance of building consensus on how to solve at least some of our societies’ pressing problems.
Back
Next
Related words
Their
Would
Between
Which
People
There
Could
Should
About
Countries
Other
Right
World
Where
Might
Country
Being
Choice
Rather
Movie