Depend
in sentence
1521 examples of Depend in a sentence
Nearly all of the Caribbean, Central America, and some Gulf ports in the United States
depend
on Venezuelan low-sulfur crude oil for their power plants, refineries, and balance-of-payments positions.
In this sense, Russians have come to
depend
on their belief in Putin as much as he depends on their support.
The net impact of all these factors on the dollar will all
depend
on how loose fiscal policy becomes, and on how tight monetary policy becomes.
But there was always a right-wing minority that felt humiliated and resentful of the loss of national pride and, more important, national sovereignty, for Japan’s security would henceforth have to
depend
entirely on the protection offered by the US.
And the markets have come to
depend
much more on the Fed, expecting more frequent attention and support from it (and throwing a short tantrum when they feel disappointed, as was the case a year ago).
Even so, the political consequences of the phone-hacking scandal will
depend
on far more than the outcome of the official investigations now underway in Britain.
Above all, the scandal’s impact will
depend
on how governments and citizens assess what News Corporation really is.
When it comes to national leadership at a time of fragility and transition, so much seems to
depend
on the luck of the draw.
Fundamentally, Hong Kong’s prospects
depend
on the implementation of the “one country, two systems” principle, conceived by Deng Xiaoping to serve as the basis for Hong Kong’s eventual return to China in 1997.
Whether Germany can continue to perform this role, however, will
depend
on what kind of EU emerges over the next few years.
They would
depend
mainly on how the RUK, the EU, and NATO decided to respond to a Yes vote, and how moderate a newly independent Scotland would be in its negotiating positions.
Most key issues that are vital for national wellbeing – trade, finance, the rule of law, security, and the physical environment –
depend
at least as much on the presence of effective regional and global institutions.
Which country achieves this goal first will
depend
not only on revenue, but also on the political will to overcome vested interests.
It will also
depend
on institutions’ ability to design rational health care, monitor delivery, and properly assess new treatments.
Likewise, the UK government’s Brexit plans will disrupt the supply chains on which British firms
depend.
But the dollar’s future will now
depend
on whether Trump really does “make America great again.”
We don’t have the answers to these questions, in part because the consequences will
depend
on what actions policymakers take.
Unlike the dollar and the pound, the yen and the Deutschemark did not
depend
on attracting foreign inflows.
Of course, a win-win outcome from The Hague decision will also
depend
on ASEAN and US actions.
The budget's success will be determined by how these public-sector investments play out, which in turn will
depend
on other policies, especially the Land Acquisition Bill (designed to enable industrial development in rural areas), which has already run into trouble.
But translating good intentions into desired outcomes will
depend
crucially on the government's ability to push through complementary and urgently needed reforms on hot-button regulatory issues like land, labor, and the environment.
If we
depend
solely on bilateral deals, the shared spaces and synergies that facilitate agreement on difficult but vital topics – from climate change to security – will narrow until they disappear.
The differences between the candidates are considerable, and highly consequential for American economic policy and the global economy, although enactment of their programs will
depend
on the makeup of Congress.
One major reason why the majority of the hungry are among those who
depend
on small-scale farming is that they are insufficiently organized.
The decision will almost certainly be appealed, and the final outcome seems likely to
depend
on the appellate judges’ interpretations of Canadian law.
But, ultimately, each country’s economic fate will
depend
on the choices that it makes today.
This maturation could not have come at a more opportune time; roughly two-thirds of Africans
depend
on agriculture to make ends meet.
Furthermore, with the reforms in limbo, the IMF has been forced to
depend
largely on loans from its members, rather than the permanent resources called for by the new measures.
But, while theories are important, most of what we learn does not
depend
on them.
Finally, the change in potential GDP will
depend
on what happens to the rate of change of multifactor productivity – that is, the change in output that results from changes in technology and production processes.
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