Echoed
in sentence
187 examples of Echoed in a sentence
The downing in eastern Ukraine of Malaysia Airlines Flight 17
echoed
the 1914 assassination of Archduke Franz Ferdinand in its recklessness, not to mention the failure of governments and citizens to recognize that diplomatic rivalry can quickly give way to violence.
I am delighted that this message is increasingly
echoed
by the political mainstream, including most recently by European Central Bank President Mario Draghi.
One should know that all manner of conspiracy theories are often uncritically
echoed.
What appears in The New York Times or the Washington Post matters less than presidential tweets that go straight to millions of people and are
echoed
in partisan radio or TV shows.
Moreover, these Prometheans’ concerns have been
echoed
by Google co-founder Sergey Brin and AI ethicists such as Joanna Bryson and Patrick Lin, who caution against recklessly accepting AI’s “gifts” before figuring out how to control them.
Charlie Hebdo’s Rights and WrongsDAVOS – In the wake of the terrorist attack on the French satirical magazine Charlie Hebdo in Paris, declarations of “Je suis Charlie” have
echoed
worldwide.
War to the last breath was declared by Kuvaev on the media, and he was soon
echoed
by the feral Makashov, who suddenly found reporters "acting worse than the worst of the Yids."
On NATO and Russia, Tillerson has
echoed
Trump in pressuring the Alliance’s European members to increase their defense spending.
This process, indeed, is
echoed
in the 22 Arab countries, where religious orthodoxy rules out any significant liberal political opposition.
Young Muslims, particularly in the West, are setting an example that is slowly being
echoed
in the Middle East, despite massive state repression.
Kamel, a municipal employee,
echoed
this sense of disenchantment: “I will not vote for any one of them so that they can earn 18 times my salary for doing nothing.”
Meanwhile, the Democrats in government – most notably President Barack Obama – have largely
echoed
Clinton’s gracious concession-speech injunction that Trump should be given an opportunity to lead.
But the protesters are ingenious: they
echoed
what I said through the crowd, so that all could hear.
But Trump’s view –
echoed
by people who speak for him – that Bee was as bad as Barr, if not worse, ignores a crucial distinction.
The theory of secular stagnation, as advanced by Alvin Hansen and
echoed
by me, holds that, left to its own devices, the private economy may not find its way back to full employment following a sharp contraction, which makes public policy essential.
The ideal of multiculturalism at home was
echoed
with an ideology of cultural relativism abroad, especially in the 1970’s and 1980’s.
This position was accompanied by Iran’s harder line on military involvement in the Syrian civil war,
echoed
by its Lebanese proxy Hezbollah.
And is not an updated version of Syrian (and then Iraqi) King Faisal’s exhortation to Arabs – “Choose to be either slaves or masters of your own destiny” –
echoed
in the political pronouncements of new leaders in Egypt and elsewhere.
Since then, George W. Bush and Obama have
echoed
similar sentiments when speaking about their educational-policy goals.
TEL AVIV – Israel’s latest war in Gaza has
echoed
through Europe’s capitals in a powerful and destructive way.
The nationalist thrust of Trump’s inaugural address
echoed
the isolationism championed by the racist aviator Charles Lindbergh, who, as a spokesman for the America First Committee, lobbied to keep the US out of World War II.
Tony Blair’s Democratic InsurrectionLONDON – Former British Prime Minister Tony Blair’s recent call for voters to think again about leaving the European Union,
echoed
in parliamentary debates ahead of the government’s official launch of the process in March, is an Emperor’s New Clothes moment.
As US Supreme Court Justice Robert Jackson (who was also the chief US prosecutor at Nuremburg) put it, the constitution is not “a suicide pact” – a sentiment
echoed
by the Israeli jurist Aharon Barak, who emphasized that “civil rights are not an altar for national destruction.”
A final way of thinking about the EU is as the “ever closer union” referred to in the Treaty of Rome and
echoed
in the Maastricht Treaty.
The demonstrators’ calls for peace should be heard and
echoed.
This
echoed
Zuckerberg’s earlier attempts to paint himself, when convenient, as a wide-eyed young leader.
Indeed, Finance Minister Lou Jiwei
echoed
Adams (and Adam Smith) when he proclaimed, “…resources should be allocated by prices and markets, not government officials.”
Tell that to a colleague here in Nairobi who was trapped in the mall for five hours as gunfire
echoed
all around.
This view, which suggests a structural shift, was emphasized in early October during one of the most upbeat IMF/World Bank annual meetings in recent memory, and the message was
echoed
in The Economist’sspecial report “Freedom from financial fear.”
More than once he
echoed
Krugman’s assertion that Osborne had been motivated by an erroneous belief that if he did not reduce the deficit, he might forfeit investor confidence (the “confidence fairy”).
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