Doubts
in sentence
658 examples of Doubts in a sentence
No one
doubts
that North Korea is responsible for its own delinquent behavior.
In fact, if one compares the Fund’s own positions with that of its internal watchdog, they are strikingly similar, raising
doubts
about the IEO’s independence in writing its report.
(Some of these
doubts
are, of course, politically or financially self-serving; a certain model of financial capitalism perceives the euro as a threat, and its adherents will do everything they can to bring about its demise.)
No one
doubts
that Germany and most other eurozone members would prefer the single currency to continue.
None of Europe’s financial problems would look remotely as challenging today if
doubts
about the eurozone’s future had been dispelled two years ago, and the reputational and financial costs would have been dramatically less than they have been in the past 30 months.
True, crises in problem countries and
doubts
about the euro’s viability could weigh on the common currency’s value.
This raises
doubts
about whether Trump will be willing to open US markets in the few areas where the UK can still compete, like the aerospace and automotive industries.
A couple of well-known opposition politicians, a chief minister and a federal cabinet minister of the previous pro-Musharraf government, were publicly thrashed, raising
doubts
about government control over law and order in the country.
Euro-skepticism is now at an all-time high in Turkey, fueled by some European political leaders’ rhetoric opposing Turkey’s accession, and by the EU’s own failure to dispel
doubts
about the feasibility of Turkey’s eventual membership.
No one
doubts
that ideas are the fuel of human progress and development.
Those who had
doubts
about George W. Bush’s invasion of Iraq were “appeasers,” akin to Neville Chamberlain.
Should you still have
doubts
that the planet is heating up, look at the shrinking mountain glaciers around the world, or the declining sea-ice cover on the Arctic Ocean, which in recent summers has been little more than half its size in the 1970’s.
That is one of several reasons why hardly any serious climate scientist
doubts
that greenhouse gases are the cause of global warming.
While North Korea’s nuclear arsenal is much smaller, persistent
doubts
about the regime’s sustainability make it a matter of grave concern.
Second, there are still legitimate
doubts
about the effectiveness of central banks, the one group of policymaking institutions that has been actively engaged in supporting sustainable economic growth.
In the United States,
doubts
focus on the willingness of the Federal Reserve to remain “unconventional”; elsewhere, however,
doubts
about effectiveness concern central banks’ ability to formulate, communicate, and implement policy decisions.
This feeds
doubts
about solidarity’s usefulness.
But the uproar caused by these decisions reinforces, rather than dispels,
doubts.
Despite the incoming president’s popularity and an all-out political effort, the Recovery Act passed by the thinnest of margins, with
doubts
about its ultimate passage lingering until the last moment.
Two recent papers raise further
doubts.
But such
doubts
ignore the political and cultural factors that buttress a deep European commitment to preserve the monetary union.
For all of the problems confronting the Coptic Christian community, no one
doubts
that they are as Egyptian as the Muslim majority.
If I believed that Xi was preparing to rule China with an iron fist for the next 20-plus years, I would share the
doubts
of many other commentators.
Doubts
about the Irish government’s solvency would then disappear quickly, and its guarantee of bank deposits would no longer look so shaky.
Scientific evidence has eliminated legitimate
doubts
about the scale of the risks that climate change poses.
And, indeed, there are serious
doubts
as to whether there is a viable alternative to today’s frail and sometimes violent status quo.
Some of these warnings were inspired by deep-seated
doubts
about European monetary unification.
While Chinese export industries remain highly competitive, there are understandable
doubts
about the post-crisis state of foreign demand for Chinese products.
This has raised
doubts
about the sustainability of the recovery, with some arguing that a rise in interest rates could trigger another global crisis.
Anyone who
doubts
that should review a recent letter orchestrated by the Bretton Woods Committee, addressed to Congressional leaders on behalf of an impressive array of former Republican and Democratic cabinet secretaries.
Back
Next
Related words
About
Their
There
Which
Serious
Would
Still
Other
Movie
Political
Could
After
Global
Countries
Should
Raises
Raised
While
Raising
Fears