Cultural
in sentence
2092 examples of Cultural in a sentence
The question of how to guide an economy to produce sustainable happiness – combining material well-being with human health, environmental conservation, and psychological and
cultural
resiliency – is one that needs addressing everywhere.
This would, perhaps, be the ultimate triumph of the Turkey's unique
cultural
model.
Indeed, outdated
cultural
norms and stereotypes – such as the idea that science, technology, engineering, and mathematics are “for boys” – continue to prevent women from pursuing ICT-based careers.
Technological and
cultural
development has required an ever-expanding sense of “us.”
One wonders why euro bills are adorned with indistinct motifs, rather than with figures of universal appeal – da Vinci, Newton, Voltaire, Rembrandt, Cervantes, Chopin, or Beethoven – who best represent Europe’s
cultural
patrimony.
He was not criticizing ethnic and
cultural
pluralism, but the idea of “state multiculturalism,” which applies different moral standards to various social groups.
It talked of a foreign policy that looked more toward Turkey's
cultural
and religious brethren than to the West.
California’s War With TrumpSTANFORD – If one looks past the headlines of the media’s full-time Donald Trump coverage, one can discern a global shift in political, economic, and
cultural
forces that might prove far more consequential for America and the world than the actual Trump presidency.
Park is accused of using her political influence to benefit her longtime confidante, Choi Soon-sil, who is charged with forcing the chaebols to funnel about 80 billion Korean won ($70 million) into two nonprofit
cultural
foundations that she effectively controlled.
Particularly in South Asia and sub-Saharan Africa,
cultural
norms and economic hardships stop parents from sending their daughters to school or from keeping them in school for as long as they enroll their sons.
Growing up 50 years ago, children might rarely meet someone of a different
cultural
or faith background.
For most economists, the extent to which modern capitalism has been shaped by earlier
cultural
predispositions is a source of puzzlement at best, if not merely a factor to be dismissed.
Such
cultural
considerations simply do not fit into the categories in which equation-fixated economists are predisposed to think.
It reminds us that much of success in a capitalist society is based on
cultural
and historical factors that produce qualities such as innovativeness, willingness to tolerate risk, and willingness to defer gratification through savings and education.
These
cultural
traits are difficult to quantify, so economists are uncomfortable in dealing with them.
But moral and ethical questions never yield fully to technical solutions; they also require an understanding of humanity’s social and
cultural
heritage.
They still raise traditional issues of biodiversity loss, destruction of sites of natural beauty and
cultural
importance, and social justice issues surrounding resettlement.
China has emphasized its
cultural
and economic strengths, but it has paid less attention to the political aspects that can undermine its efforts.
Instead, it has clung to the view that the government is the main source of soft power, promoting ancient
cultural
icons that it thinks might have global appeal, often using the tools of propaganda.
China does not yet have global
cultural
industries on the scale of Hollywood or universities capable of rivaling America’s.
Despite secularization, the belief that rewards, or achievements, require sacrifice has become an integral part of European
cultural
consciousness.
The first is cultural: to protect and strengthen the identity of the Scottish people.
Should the Scottish independence campaign be hailed as a breakthrough for claims to
cultural
identity and self-governance?
I am personally sympathetic to Scotland’s independence as a way to bolster Scottish democracy and
cultural
identity.
Elections in the absence of constitutional and
cultural
constraints can produce violence, as in Bosnia or the Palestinian Authority.
Within the territories it controls, ISIS persecutes and kills individuals on religious and
cultural
grounds, with a recent USHMM report concluding that the group has committed acts of genocide against the Yazidi minority population under its control.
The Holocaust began with words, not mass killings We must remember how the poison of anti-Semitism and racism, projected through mass media, and through entire political,
cultural
and educational systems, led a continent into mass violence and genocide.
And how can we agree on any answer, given our different interests, dispositions, and
cultural
backgrounds?
At the same time, the reforms must be comprehensive, addressing methodological, cultural, and structural issues.
Indeed, the absence of official
cultural
policies can itself be a source of attraction.
Back
Next
Related words
Economic
Their
Political
Social
Which
Religious
About
People
There
World
Would
Countries
Between
Country
Other
Differences
Identity
Women
Heritage
Should