Commonly
in sentence
377 examples of Commonly in a sentence
Commonly
used income-related gauges, like per capita GDP, are too narrow to capture the complexities of a country’s development status, and that is why new approaches and methodologies are needed.
Negative real interest rates and quantitative easing have enforced financial repression on holders of cash, hurting savers, while broadly boosting prices of riskier financial assets, most
commonly
held by the rich.
But the EU's Stability Pact, as
commonly
interpreted, requires either that tax rates be raised (always difficult, especially in a recession) or that expenditures be cut.
The total number of deaths that Snyder attributes to Stalin is lower than the
commonly
cited figure of 20 million, which was estimated before historians had access to the Soviet archives.
Second, we need a comprehensive,
commonly
agreed reform agenda that will underpin that consolidation path and inspire the confidence of Greek society.
By contrast, history is more
commonly
shared among Americans from different states, who, other than in the Civil War, have fought side by side in the nation’s external wars.
HFCs, which are one of the six main greenhouse gases, are
commonly
used in air conditioners and refrigeration systems worldwide.
Poor countries can move swiftly to expand opportunities for education at a much lower cost than is
commonly
imagined.
Most important, while state subsidies in all other sectors are forbidden, they are
commonly
accepted in banking – not only explicit subsidies, such as Germany’s bailout of several Landesbanks after the American subprime-mortgage crisis, but implicit subsidies as well.
On foreign policy, at least, Russia’s former president, Dmitri Medvedev, mattered more than is
commonly
understood.
Liberal Western and domestic circles
commonly
characterize Vladimir Putin’s government as increasingly authoritarian and ineffective.
Yet, to understand the difficulty of responding to the problems that Iran’s nuclear ambition and anti-Israel obsession now pose, it might be helpful to analyze the three analogies that are most
commonly
used.
Clipping the Euro’s WingsFrench President Nicolas Sarkozy’s call for the European Central Bank to intervene to curtail the soaring euro is
commonly
seen as a sign that he neither understands nor trusts markets.
But the same is true of the
commonly
used stop-loss order, whereby investors instruct their stockbroker to sell if the price falls to a specified level.
In fact, among the 12 large OECD nations, a higher degree of corporatism as
commonly
measured is loosely associated with lower employment and lower productivity.
The problem of “moral hazard” – which posits that actors will take excessive risks if they do not expect to bear fully the consequences of their actions – is
commonly
cited as a reason not to protect shareholders of bailed-out firms.
The phrase “the day after” is most
commonly
associated with the word “hangover.”
True employee ownership, with effective employee participation in governance, has generally met long-term success only where there is substantial homogeneity of interest among the employees involved: the employees who participate in ownership
commonly
do similar work within the firm, have similar kinds and levels of skill, and exercise little hierarchical authority over each other.
Middle Eastern countries need fully integrated, innovation-oriented frameworks for training health-care professionals, so that they can address their current public-health challenges and prepare for new, unexpected ones, such as Middle East respiratory syndrome
(commonly
referred to as MERS), Ebola, and other infectious diseases that can appear with little or no forewarning.
The so-called “Target” accounts, hitherto ignored by the media, show that the ECB has been much more involved in rescue operations than is
commonly
known.
Malaria-bearing mosquitoes have developed a resistance to
commonly
used insecticides in 61 countries around the world.
It is
commonly
assumed that a key impediment to Saudi Aramco’s international listing is that Saudi corporate-governance standards are low, and that the Saudi authorities are therefore “shopping around” for an exchange with similarly low standards.
It seems clear, therefore, that improvements to Saudi Aramco’s corporate governance do not rest, on which international venue the authorities choose for the secondary listing, as is
commonly
assumed, but on whether the company will be required to meet domestic standards.
The bright side is that one-day stock market declines occur more
commonly
as isolated events with no long-term repercussions.
In 2015, British lawmakers approved a form of germline modification known as “mitochondrial donation” –
commonly
referred to as “three-parent” in vitro fertilization (IVF).
It has, nonetheless, become a
commonly
held opinion that democracy, like universal human rights, is a typically Western idea, and that Asian autocracy, as practiced in China, for example, is not only more suited to Asians, but also more efficient.
Instinctively, I treated her infection with an antibiotic from a group of drugs known as “carbapenems,” strong medicines
commonly
prescribed to people who are hospitalized.
Specifically, the report recommends calculating the value of coastal ecosystems in terms of protected capital and infrastructure, based on approaches
commonly
used by the insurance and engineering industries.
Indeed, depression is now the most
commonly
diagnosed condition in outpatient psychiatric treatment.
Kaing Guek Eav,
commonly
known as “Duch,” presided over the deaths of more than 14,000 people at S-21, a former Phnom Penh high school turned into a torture center.
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