Conclusion
in sentence
1513 examples of Conclusion in a sentence
For my part, I would draw a different
conclusion
from the same facts.
Several days after the
conclusion
of the energy agreement, Prime Minister Vladimir Putin suggested at a news conference in Sochi that Ukraine’s national energy company, Naftogaz, should be merged with the state-owned Russian energy giant Gazprom.
Indeed, nuclear energy is a safer proposition now than ever before, but, for many people, the mere spectacle of an event like Fukushima – regardless of the outcome – is sufficient to draw the opposite
conclusion.
The new report’s fundamental
conclusion
will be that global warming is real and mostly our own doing.
But, as I have said in my debates with the authors, if one reads their paper carefully and thinks about the issues, one would see that there is no reason at all to draw such a
conclusion.
For those who have had a couple of lessons in the Quantity Theory of Money, this seems a plausible
conclusion.
Other European case-control studies reinforce the
conclusion
that vitamin D may help protect against type 1 diabetes.
This month, the talks moved to Havana, Cuba, where they will be held until their
conclusion.
But what is most striking is that it took markets so long to reach this
conclusion.
A separate and entirely independent report by the International Crisis Group came to much the same
conclusion.
Delaying the
conclusion
of the Doha Round negotiations carries costs and risks for the entire world economy, rich and poor countries alike.
Unfortunately, a group of countries that are united above all by a common denial of their global responsibilities is unlikely to reach such a
conclusion.
A New World’s New Development BankNEW YORK – At the
conclusion
of their summit in Durban in March, the leaders of the BRICS (Brazil, Russia, India, China, and South Africa) announced their intention to establish a New Development Bank aimed at “mobilizing resources for infrastructure and sustainable development projects in BRICS and other emerging economies and developing countries.”
Their comprehensive study draws on high-quality survey data from 118 countries and reaches a clear conclusion: the bulk of poverty eradication that took place in recent decades was driven by economies’ overall income growth.
But this is a wrong conclusion, which illustrates a lapse of logic.
This
conclusion
would most likely be valid, because the use of antibiotics before 1930 – just two years after Alexander Fleming discovered penicillin and years before it was fully workable as a cure – was rare and mostly inadvertent.
On job creation, there is both theory and evidence to support the
conclusion
that the private sector is the main driver of sustainable expansion (which is not to deny that there may be scope for tweaking public policies to make the private sector more employment-friendly).
Almost every modern analyst, however, has come to the
conclusion
that Weber’s attempt to link that capitalist spirit historically to a form of Christianity, namely Protestantism, is fatally flawed.
But the torturous
conclusion
to this year’s talks in Doha – in which nearly 200 countries agreed to extend the Kyoto protocol – has merely set the stage for more dramatic negotiations in 2015, when a new comprehensive agreement must be reached.
After the
conclusion
of the American War of Independence, instead of returning to the old model of default, which had been applied as recently as 1770, the French elite did everything it could to avoid that outcome.
Their headline
conclusion
is stark: “politics takes a hard right turn following financial crises.
The second major
conclusion
that Funke, Schularik, and Trebesch draw is that governing becomes harder after financial crises, for two reasons.
The only comforting
conclusion
that the three economists reach is that these effects gradually peter out.
The American Meteorological Society promptly wrote to Pruitt saying that it is “indisputable” that CO2 and other greenhouse gases are the primary cause of global warming, and that it is “not familiar with any scientific institution with relevant subject matter expertise that has reached a different conclusion.”
The leadership may have come to the
conclusion
that, from the standpoint of political sustainability (and discounting the possibility of internecine power struggles), too many government officials among the “haves” would alienate “have-not” ordinary citizens.
Yet that is absolutely the wrong
conclusion
for anyone who believes that capital punishment deters.
Progress in both fields would be set back significantly by a failure to reach a
conclusion
in the Sheremet case.
A proper assessment of the medium-term risks would have helped to justify my
conclusion
in December 2008 that “It will take every tool in the box to fix today’s once-in-a-century financial crisis.”
Even though the end of communism in China may seem a foregone conclusion, the fall of the Chinese Communist Party will be accomplished not by an outside force but only by its own members.
It was important – even essential – that South Koreans were allowed to reach their own
conclusion
regarding the North.
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