Deemed
in sentence
450 examples of Deemed in a sentence
Funding agencies for academic research should adopt a similar philosophy, awarding a certain share of financing to thoughtful, unconventional proposals – those
deemed
risky, owing to a relatively low probability of success, but that could lead to important discoveries.
In addition, each year, the institute’s director was allotted a certain amount of discretionary time to grant to special projects that he or she
deemed
worthwhile.
They
deemed
it a plus of the old regime that more women sat in socialist parliaments; that women received "free" medical care; that women held jobs once reserved for men; that the social situation of women was more stable.
Beginning at the top, the regulatory pendulum is still swinging toward tighter supervision of traditional financial institutions, particularly large banks and insurance companies
deemed
“systemically important.”
A one-year perspective is now
deemed
sufficient.
The president could also be forced to leave office under the 25th Amendment to the Constitution, which provides for the removal of a president
deemed
incapable of fulfilling the duties of office.
Researchers have now pinpointed one, which, after careful screening, has been
deemed
safe to release into Africa’s environment and appears likely to defeat the unwelcome invader.
Barring that, Vice President Mike Pence should have long ago invoked the 25th Amendment, which provides for the removal of a president whom a majority of the cabinet has
deemed
“unable to discharge the powers and duties of his office.”
If he fails to do so, he will be
deemed
a failure, and the Chinese Communist Party’s political monopoly may end sooner than anyone anticipates.
Li, 52,
deemed
a “Hu clone,” has long been groomed by Hu for the top leadership.
Any disagreement with a government’s immigration policy, for example, might eventually be
deemed
“racist,” resulting in curtailment of freedom of speech.
The logical answer to that problem, one might think, is to interrogate the models closely, to see what is driving the differences, and demand calibration changes where the resultant asset reductions are
deemed
excessive.
In 1989, incredible changes that were
deemed
impossible just a few years earlier were implemented.
Those in the Eugenics movement remained hold-outs, convinced that the salvation of the human race would be found in limiting the birth-rate of those they
deemed
to be genetically "unfit."
The recent correction is now being characterized as a fleeting aberration – a volatility shock – in what is still
deemed
to be a very accommodating investment climate.
Kosovo was a stalking horse for Iraq, as the doctrine of humanitarian intervention morphed into President George W. Bush’s doctrine of “pre-emptive war,” by which the US claimed the right to attack any state that it
deemed
a threat to its national security.
Not long ago in Latin America, life and liberty were
deemed
to be universal rights, to be defended across national borders.
Because monetary union is
deemed
a precondition for European peace, governments find even the possibility of such failure too awful to contemplate.
They concluded that it is ethically permissible to prepare stem cell lines from frozen embryos, but only from those obtained in the course of in vitro fertilization procedures and
deemed
by donors and their physician to be in excess of clinical requirements.
Now the left is
deemed
a failure and the right returns to power.
It is far from obvious that Poland's postcommunists can be
deemed
as failed overseers of an economy growing faster than any other in Europe.
At a BMI above 30, these subjects are
deemed
“metabolically healthy obese.”
For some observers, these factors were
deemed
sufficient to form the critical mass needed to propel the economy into escape velocity.
So it is
deemed
better to kill a potentially dangerous baby before it is born.
India’s defense ministry
deemed
the two American contenders, Boeing’s F/A-18 Superhornet and Lockheed’s F-16 Superviper, not to fulfill the requirements that it sought in a medium-size multi-role combat aircraft.
While its impact has so far been lacking, it certainly cannot be
deemed
a failure, with Japan’s top leaders still working tirelessly to build the needed momentum.
Probably nobody, 225 years ago, had any idea that the number of officials
deemed
to require Senate confirmation would eventually exceed 1,400, or that Senate confirmation would involve a vetting process that often takes years to complete.
At the same time, freedom of expression and association are severely limited; criticizing government policies is
deemed
tantamount to high treason.
The plan calls for the development of a number of high-tech sectors that are
deemed
to be important for future growth, and established a range of numerical targets for 2015, 2020, and 2025.
On the US side, a lingering Cold War mentality, combined with the presumption of US economic superiority, has meant that economic issues are still
deemed
subservient to geo-political concerns.
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