Closure
in sentence
155 examples of Closure in a sentence
Rarely does a film find a way to leave us with such a sense of
closure
and lingering fascination.
Locke saves him but tells him to stay the journey, and to find
closure.
This movie tackled closure, which is probably the hardest part of grieving, especially after a disaster.
Yet the ending was horrible, it really brought the wrong type of
closure
and really made me feel like I wasted my time.
There are also issues of grief, and hence part of this movie is these brothers journeying for some sense of resolve or
closure.
While Flags appears choppy as it sets the stage, Eastwood manages to bring the story full circle giving it a sense of
closure.
This
closure
is a pleasant surprise in an era of empty Hollywood films.
There's no dramatic closure, the viewer is unsure of the ending, but that is as it should be.
The script lacks the
closure
of a third act; we are left hanging thinking there needed to be something more.
If EU environmental directives, for instance, call for the
closure
of a heavily polluting plant in Britain, the Constitution would give labor unions the right to judicial appeals against the resulting redundancies.
With the ICTY’s
closure
just one year away, there is a risk that Mladic will never be held accountable.
Bank runs started almost immediately and quickly engulfed the country, resulting in the Bank Holiday of 1933 – that is, in the forced
closure
of the entire US banking system.
The verdict has not only brought some semblance of
closure
to the most brutal European conflict since World War II; it has also demonstrated the international community’s commitment to ensuring justice and accountability in such matters.
But at least
closure
seems in sight, unlike those messy legacies of European colonialism: Western Sahara, Cyprus, and Palestine.
The crackdown has involved 80,000 arrests, 170,000 firings, the
closure
of 3,000 schools, dormitories, and universities, and the dismissal of 4,400 judges and prosecutors.
In 2000, the much-anticipated opening of London's Millennium Bridge over the River Thames was followed only three days later by its
closure.
Having fended off an earlier attempt to stigmatize it as a “foreign agent,” the European University at St. Petersburg now faces
closure
for trivial technical violations – a favorite bureaucratic tactic.
Along with the
closure
of German nuclear power stations, this has led, ironically, to a resurgence of coal.
Recent steps – including the
closure
of the United States Agency for International Development, a requirement that foreign-funded noncommercial institutions register as “foreign agents,” termination of the Nunn-Lugar Cooperative Threat Reduction Program, and harassment of foreign civic and philanthropic entities – undermine the progress that US-Russian partnerships have enabled.
Has an overly forgiving nature prevented Filipinos from achieving
closure
in so many painful chapters of their history, or are the ravages of impunity to blame?
To be sure, the EU’s 2015 deal with Turkey, combined with the
closure
of the Balkan route in the spring of 2016, has reduced the number of refugees reaching the EU from the southeast to a mere trickle.
The same year, following criminal prosecutions for telephone hacking which led to the
closure
of Murdoch’s News of the World, then-Prime Minister David Cameron appointed Lord Justice Brian Leveson to head an inquiry into “the culture, practices and ethics of the press; their relationship with the police; the failure of the current system of regulation; the contacts made, and discussions had, between national newspapers and politicians; why previous warnings about press misconduct were not heeded; and the issue of cross-media ownership.”
Both paths led away from globalization to economic
closure
(and far worse).
The
closure
of the United States Agency for International Development’s operations in Russia, and of Radio Svoboda, are emblematic of efforts to restrict freedom of opinion and limit foreign cooperation.
Worldwide, job growth in the renewables industry is booming, while employment in traditional power generation is shrinking (primarily owing to the
closure
of coal plants).
Fiscal consolidation and the abrupt
closure
and restructuring of inefficient banks and state enterprises would, after all, constitute a powerful brake on short-term growth, threatening social peace and political stability.
Closure
of the banking system led to a full collapse of confidence in the country.
The disruption can be caused not only by an industrial
closure.
The impact on the local communities where these retailers were headquartered was as devastating as a mine closure: the “export” activity ceased and towns shrank by a multiple of each “export job” lost.
In fact, the only thing concerning Gitmo that the Obama administration has shut down is the office of the special envoy, Daniel Fried, who had been tasked with its
closure.
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