Decide
in sentence
2287 examples of Decide in a sentence
The dollar will fall and US long-term interest rates will rise, but only when traders on Wall Street and elsewhere
decide
that holding dollars and long-term US bonds is more risky in the short run.
If the EU and NATO
decide
to launch a bold outreach strategy for the region, they will be able to draw on existing tools, conceptual talent, and practical experience.
Now, we must
decide
what we want Europe to be in 2050, and beyond.
To
decide
whether Mladic acted on Serbia’s account when he was planning and ordering the Srebrenica massacre, the Court demanded proof that Serbian officials sent him specific “instructions” to commit this act of genocide.
We believe in banknotes because we collectively
decide
to trust the government when it says that 100 is 100, not 10 or 50.
Economics has shown that this is a really bad idea, because prices are the information system that creates incentives for suppliers and customers to
decide
what and how much to make or buy.
As for geoengineering, we do not yet have enough information to decide, but preliminary studies show that it presents more problems than it solves.
More importantly, there is no way for us to
decide
what temperature Earth should be.
Cooperation, they may decide, comes with a price: accommodating Russian opposition to NATO’s eastward enlargement.
The people of South Sudan now have a chance finally to
decide
their own destiny.
To me, and no doubt to the other panelists, part of the process of pursuing the inexact aspects of economics is speaking honestly to the broader public, looking them in the eye, learning from them, reading the emails they send, and then searching one’s soul to
decide
whether one’s favored theory is really close to the truth.
Every person could
decide
to draw on her IAA to prepare for, or when making, a job change.
For example, an employee could
decide
to shorten the duration of his unemployment benefits and invest the corresponding points to benefit from better education opportunities.
If investors sense that new projects may obtain special treatment, everyone will
decide
to wait.
On December 17-18, negotiators are scheduled to meet in Geneva to
decide
whether this agreement will take the form of a simple, workable treaty or some kind of non-binding “soft law.”
To put it simply: the future of Ukraine will
decide
the future of Russia, and the future of Russia will have a substantial impact on the future of Europe.
The SPD now faces a choice: at its special party congress this weekend, its leaders must
decide
whether to join yet another grand coalition government that promises more of the same, or move into opposition, probably triggering new elections.
Of course, curious as they might be, central bankers could
decide
that meeting in Harare would be too inconvenient and politically unpalatable.
In September, the world's leaders will reconvene at the UN to
decide
on their actions during the coming decade.
With the CETA, European companies trying to enter the US market may
decide
to set up shop in Canada instead, using it as a beachhead from which to expand – via the North American Free Trade Agreement – across the border.
Once Russia and the EU
decide
to consolidate their efforts, they would inevitably address their neighbors’ difficulties in the context of shared responsibility, not rivalry.
Someone must
decide
soon, for example, about the division of the land and the apartments to be built in what is already known as “Khalifa bin Zaid City,” located on a former Israeli settlement in the Gaza Strip.
First, it does not require government regulators to
decide
how much individual assets are worth, because private markets value toxic assets.
In highly polarized and politicized Venezuela, it is unlikely that upward of 20% of voters have yet to
decide
what they will do.
Neither Chancellor Angela Merkel nor the parliament may decide; every viable proposal must be submitted to a popular referendum.
We are told that the debates this month between President Barack Obama and the Republican challenger, Mitt Romney, might
decide
the election.
That way, states or industries cannot simply
decide
that they are too poor, too small, or too strategically important to do what is necessary.
After all, the peacekeeping forces in Bosnia can, should they
decide
to act, arrest Radovan Karadzic and General Ratko Mladic, the leaders of the Bosnian Serbs who have been indicted by the Hague Tribunal.
Let the international community show the same compassion and understanding to the Serbian people it applies when it has to
decide
whether to risk its own soldiers in an attempt to apprehend Karadzic and Mladic.
Sultan’s death is the first time that the burial of a Saudi royal has been delayed to give the ruling family time to
decide
on the next in line – a sign of internal discord (and concord on the continuation of dynastic rule).
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