Embedded
in sentence
390 examples of Embedded in a sentence
The
embedded
flashbacks make it a bit hard to follow the first 10 times you watch it, but make it pleasantly Warhol-esque especially once you know the majority of the lines.
There simply was a weak story
embedded
in an hour and a half of nothing.
This has been satirized on the Simpsons, which proves it has
embedded
itself in the national pop culture consciousness.
But innovation is often
embedded
in capital and needs new investment to spread across economies.
The UK needs to be far more serious about skills training, embedding it in the country’s educational DNA in the way that apprenticeships are
embedded
in Germany’s.
In July, the G20 Sustainability Action Plan
embedded
the Paris agreement in G20 policies and noted that more effective use of financing from multilateral development institutions is key to innovation and private investment in climate action.
Yet changing the world’s energy system is a daunting challenge, because fossil fuels are so deeply
embedded
in the workings of the global economy.
This dual authority is
embedded
in the Islamic Republic’s constitution, and inevitably tilts toward the divine, particularly in a president’s second term.
Today, German governance resembles an 18 th century liberal system, with veto rights
embedded
throughout the decision-making process.
One-man rule has been so completely
embedded
in North Korea’s political culture and system that it is difficult to expect collective leadership to succeed.
Unlike individual countries, there is no central authority that can enforce redistribution of wealth around the globe, so the problem of fairness must be addressed through the development mandates
embedded
in trade negotiations.
Getting the kind of messages that emerged from the London meeting
embedded
in public and political consciousness is going to be slow boring through hard boards.
The Bank has been too focused on itself and its reputation, and not enough on the countries that it advises and in which it operates, while institution-building has been considered to be
embedded
in the growth agenda.
If, however, derivatives are no longer
embedded
in the guaranteed bank, the government could more easily bail out a bank, while leaving the derivatives subsidiary to fend for itself.
First, if workers remain unemployed for too long, they lose their skills and human capital; second, because technological innovation is
embedded
in new capital goods, low investment leads to permanently lower productivity growth.
The outcome made it clear that there are now two Europes: one in which the logic of integration is deeply
embedded
in the political system and the social order; and one that rejects the basic assumptions of pooled sovereignty.
First, deeply
embedded
trends demonstrate that, while the European Union is risky in the short term, it will be strong in the medium and long terms.
Whereas more than 80% of the value of the Standard & Poor’s 500 consisted of tangible assets 40 years ago, today that ratio is reversed: more than 80% of the largest companies’ value is intangible – the knowledge and skills of their employees and the intellectual property
embedded
in their products.
We are becoming
embedded
in a cyberspace that can link anyone, anywhere, to all the world’s information and culture – and to every other person on the planet.
Ruling out the connivance of top executives raises an alarming question: Does Jamie Dimon, J.P. Morgan’s highly regarded CEO, have as little grasp of the exposures
embedded
in his bank’s nearly $80 billion derivatives book as Tony Hayward, the hapless ex-CEO of BP, had of the hazards of his company’s ill-fated rig in the Gulf of Mexico?
Existing global rules –
embedded
in multilateral, regional, and bilateral trade and investment agreements – are being challenged by the new processes that digitization is enabling.
With the dangers of demagoguery not
embedded
in their living memories, they are far more vulnerable to fear-mongering and false promises – illustrated in the growing influence of nationalist narratives and populist movements.
These politically imposed weaknesses and distortions are today so deeply
embedded
in Europe’s political economy that there is little hope that the system can cure itself.
Hierarchies are becoming flatter and
embedded
in fluid networks of contacts.
Well-functioning democracies are
embedded
in complex constitutional and other laws that separate executive, legislative, and judicial power, and that protect freedom of speech, assembly, and peaceful dissent by those who lose elections.
Nonetheless, the government’s moves have proved divisive in a country where pacifism is
embedded
in the constitution and widely supported by the population.
Its focus on “discipline” reflects, first and foremost, a predisposition
embedded
in Germany’s culture and universities to link economics with moral philosophy.
So the data could be split into two types: a program that
embedded
the “meaning” of the logical sequence recognized by the machine, and the pure data that provided the context for the program to run.
Germany’s deeply
embedded
commitment to Europe and insistence on constitutionalism reflect its profound effort to understand what went wrong during the interwar period, the consequences of racism and extreme nationalism, and the legacy of Nazi crimes.
As the novelty of wearable tech gives way to necessity – and, later, as wearable tech becomes
embedded
tech – will we be deprived of the chance to pause, reflect, and engage in meaningful, substantive conversations?
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