Counted
in sentence
393 examples of Counted in a sentence
In 2000, a joint World Bank/UNESCO report argued that many of the economic benefits higher education generates were not
counted
in the CBA.
Because the elixir of growth in policymakers’ forecasts cannot be
counted
on to solve the problems, dealing with financial excesses becomes even more urgent.
Even while the votes were being
counted
and the scale of Macron’s win was becoming clear, the noisy election night debates between France’s warring politicians pointed to an increasingly uncertain future.
At the moment, at most five can be
counted
on to do so.
There has been no reform since then to ensure that people’s votes will be
counted
or that a disputed outcome will not be resolved by political appointees.
Iraq’s Potemkin GovernmentWith the votes in Iraq’s election in December now counted, attempts to form a new government are set to move into high gear.
This is why thousands went into the streets to be
counted.
But such a plan cannot be
counted
on to curb Putin's broader revisionist ambitions.
German politicians and their electorates can be excused for doubting whether future Greek, Irish, or Portuguese governments can be
counted
upon to deliver on current leaders’ commitments.
But, while Medvedev’s victory in the first round of voting appears assured, the important questions will arise after the ballots are
counted.
With inflation rising and policy normalization underway, the backstop that central banks provided during the post-crisis years can no longer be
counted
on.
The Supreme Court has a new chief justice whose ruling in the Abubakar case demonstrated that he could be
counted
on to intervene on the side of fair play, but it is not clear what constitutional instrument could be used to resolve the election crisis before the hand-over date.
On the other hand, hundreds of thousands of joeys inside the pouches of female kangaroos who are shot are not counted, though they will invariably die.
Given pollsters’ massive predictive failures elsewhere this year, no one should count on them to turn out until the votes themselves are
counted.
“Not everything that can be
counted
counts.
Not everything that counts can be counted,” the sociologist William Bruce Cameron wrote in 1963.
His dictum remains true today, though when it comes to measuring human development, I would suggest a slight revision: “Not everything that is
counted
counts for everything.”
One should not forget his table talk about not wanting his money
counted
by anyone other than “little short guys that wear yarmulkes,” or his tweets emphasizing the comedian Jon Stewart’s Jewishness.
Eventually, it became a global financial crisis, embroiling Russia and Latin American countries, such as Brazil, and unleashing forces that played out over the ensuing years: Argentina in 2001 may be
counted
as among its victims.
An estimated 6% of all employees are working fewer hours per week than they would like, and about 2% of potential employees are not
counted
as unemployed because they have not looked for work in the past few weeks, even though they would like to work.
Only individuals and families
counted.
As Einstein purportedly said: “Not everything that can be
counted
counts, and not everything that counts can be counted.”
Despite (or because of) its insistence that all who are not with America are against it, the Bush administration alienated many who previously
counted
themselves either as friends of the US or did not take sides.
Tunisia’s interim government has announced that elections to a Constituent Assembly will be held on July 24, 2011, and, crucially, that as soon as the votes are counted, it will step down.
So, whether it was the governor of the Bank of England, the Archbishop of Canterbury, or the President of the United States, their advice
counted
for nothing.
But those opportunities were enabled by a commitment to collective action, broad support for redistribution, and strong economic growth – none of which can be
counted
on today.
If dams of all sizes are counted, China’s total surpasses 85,000.
If they come to believe that Musharraf is sinking, they can be
counted
on to cut him loose, especially if he becomes a civilian.
The argument generally offered is one of cultural affinity – as if centuries of common history, culture, and relations with the rest of Europe
counted
for nothing.
On September 2nd they made their final demands: allow civil society groups to observe the voting process, stop interfering in the definition of legitimate judges for purposes of the election, and agree that no ballot box will leave the presence of a legitimate judge until its contents are counted, certified and reported.
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