Danger
in sentence
2182 examples of Danger in a sentence
There is always a
danger
that the Democrats will be divided, with younger radicals pitting themselves against the mostly white establishment.
The emphasis is understandable, but there is a real
danger
in framing the problem as one of inequality.
The
danger
is that it will discourage businesses from hiring.
On the demand side are people who are in
danger
of dying unless they receive an organ transplant.
On the other hand, there is the
danger
of normalizing and legitimizing what can only be described as an odious presidency.
The
danger
in these operations is not the potential abuse of power - not the imposition by an elite of its interests and views on a mass - but the abdication of power, or perhaps one should say the disintegration of power.
While this is better than zero at a German bank, the difference is too small to make a difference, given the real
danger
that Greece might have to leave the eurozone, which would render local deposits worthless.amp
If Europe’s policymakers do not recognize that deposit flight and continuing excessive private expenditure constitute the real
danger
to the adjustment program in Greece, they might soon have to deal with another crisis – hard to imagine today – of even bigger proportions.
This new
danger
to Africa must be addressed if the continent is to maintain its upward momentum.
But there is a real
danger
that the pendulum is beginning to swing back, leading to a reversal of that liberalization process.
This
danger
was highlighted last week by a YouGov poll, which for the first time showed a plurality regretting the result of the Brexit referendum.
That is a real enough
danger
to which policymakers must give serious thought as they reform the CAP on the basis of the following five pillars.
Public intellectuals are not the only people in
danger.
That, of course, is the
danger
if Nord Stream 2 is built.
The International Monetary Fund has recognized the danger, approving a $17 billion loan in April to stabilize the economy and avert default.
Unfortunately, the same
danger
arises in the context of re-profiling.
In the meantime, Syria and its daily carnage have become the dreariest and most numbing foreign-policy issue in American public opinion, despite the
danger
that the violence could spread across the Middle East (particularly to neighboring Iraq and Lebanon).
Never in modern times, however, has isolationism protected America from danger; instead it delays engagement when conflagrations are ablaze.
They were right to be skeptical about US claims of an imminent
danger
from weapons of mass destruction.
Britain’s government is beginning to recognize the danger, and is trying to clamp down on schools and mosques that spread hate.
The crisis is not just putting them in
danger
today; it is threatening to destroy their futures.
But
danger
signs abound.
The
danger
is that India could write off Europe as charming but irrelevant, a continent ideal for a summer holiday, not for serious business.
The
danger
now is that pro-secession leaders may twist the loss of sovereignty supposedly inherent in association with the EU into precisely such a claim.
“The
danger
of that situation is why the Founders adopted the Second Amendment, which is meant to restrict domestic policing to militia – the National Guard and civilian police – that are answerable to the people.
Although the US and Europe do have issues to resolve, there is a real
danger
that the portrayal of every possible event as heralding a new split will end up being self-fulfilling.
The second
danger
is that source countries’ unwillingness to take spillovers into account causes unintended collateral damage in recipient countries, prompting self-interested action on their part.
I am not sure that people, who rightly see Trump as a great
danger
to the US and the world, sufficiently appreciate this.
But, though Syriza’s victory may mark the start of the next chapter in the euro crisis, the political – and possibly existential –
danger
that Europe faces runs deeper.
Some proponents of helicopter money, such as Adair Turner, former head of the United Kingdom’s Financial Services Authority, argue that this
danger
can be neutralized with clear rules to limit the use of monetary and fiscal stimulus.
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