Divided
in sentence
1326 examples of Divided in a sentence
But if major countries are divided, it is unlikely that even network organizations like the G-20 can set the agenda for the UN and the Bretton Woods financial institutions to act upon.
While the old Soviet threat had united its sixteen members, the new threats, it turned out,
divided
them.
Now, in eastern Ukraine's Donbas region, he is shrewdly forcing a
divided
and risk-averse West to choose between war and accommodation.
The global economy did not recover that same level of integration until 1970, and even then it remained
divided
by the Iron Curtain.
Politics did not keep pace, and the result was the rise of pathological ideologies – fascism and communism – that
divided
nations and the world.
Though the EU as a whole maintains a balanced energy mix, with supply
divided
relatively evenly among gas, coal, oil, renewables, and nuclear generation, individual countries are often excessively dependent on a single source and, more dangerously, a single supplier: Russia.
But even Americans are
divided
equally about whether China will replace the US as a global superpower.
The discredited election results suggested that the country is geographically and ethnically divided, with the democratic opposition candidate Yushchenko winning overwhelmingly in seventeen western and central regions, while Yanukovych dominated in ten eastern and southern regions.
The TPP’s agenda is
divided
into three categories: core, cross-cutting, and emerging issues.
Democratic revolutions from Warsaw to Sofia were toppling Eastern Europe’s Communist dictatorships, symbolized in the dismantling of the Berlin Wall, which once
divided
Germany’s former and future capital.
Yet listening to the world’s leaders speak, last week, I was struck by their passion, commitment, and collective determination to turn a page from a past of countries
divided
by narrow interests to nations united in the cause of a global common good.
The heart of the problem was the 1867 Compromise, which
divided
the empire into Austrian and Hungarian halves.
With a weak and
divided
EU unable to resolve Europe’s many crises, and with nationalism resurgent, we can expect further disintegration in different forms.
This question has long
divided
economists along a right-left axis, at least since University of Chicago economists George Stigler and Milton Friedman argued that many, if not most, regulations were motivated by rent-seeking among bureaucrats and business incumbents.
A Russian public anxious about its status; a Chinese people concerned about rampant corruption; a Turkish population
divided
over ethnicity and religion: All create enabling environments for leaders who feel a psychological need for power.
As a result, we live in a world that is more economically and socially interconnected than ever, but increasingly
divided
territorially by physical barriers that are taller, longer, and stronger than their totalitarian antecedent’s planners could ever imagine.
Certainly by the time of the West’s military intervention in Bosnia, this strategy was based on the assumption that the European continent after the end of the Cold War should not allow itself to have a
divided
security system – that is, if security and peace were to be permanent.
Europeans may be too tired and
divided
to play a significant role in world politics, which could have dire consequences for Europe in this time of global realignment.
They acknowledge that the European Union matters for trade agreements and currency issues, but consider it too irresolute to be a real player in today’s global power game, and too
divided
to cope with security and migration challenges.
And all of this comes at a time when the EU is already deeply
divided.
Worries over migration and the spectacle of a divided, dysfunctional Europe have benefited xenophobes and extremists across the continent.
The UN itself appears too
divided
to make the vital difference.
Opponents of Juliana, including the politically influential energy industry, cynically hope that they can succeed in getting the case dismissed and put generational rights in the hands of a deeply
divided
– and, for powerful vested interests, pliable – Congress.
NEW YORK – The global economy ends 2010 more
divided
than it was at the beginning of the year.
The most likely outcome in Syria is that the human catastrophe will continue until President Bashar al-Assad’s regime collapses, after which the country very likely could be
divided
along ethnic and religious lines.
Egypt, Iraq, Jordan, and Saudi Arabia all competed to draw the country into their orbit, while scheming to keep Syria weak and
divided.
Exposed to a regional proxy war between Iran and Saudi Arabia, plagued by an entrenched Al Qaeda affiliate, and
divided
by tribal disputes and a secession movement, the country has become a poster child for everything that can go wrong in the Arab world.
The Democrats, meanwhile, are
divided.
Russia's Center Is Failing to HoldMOSCOW: For most of its nine years of postcommunist transition Russia's political blocs were too deeply
divided
to work together except negatively – this at a time when the country demanded resolute and positive decisions.
While many of the most important governors support removing the Communist majority from the State Duma to ensure less ideologically and more regionally based governance, they are
divided
on other crucial issues.
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