Embrace
in sentence
1216 examples of Embrace in a sentence
We have found in our country's suffering a new and unbreakable national unity, as well as a new determination to
embrace
root-and-branch reform of our economy, government, and society, because our very independence, not just our European future, depends on it.
But the government’s readiness to
embrace
the emerging digital age, pursuing supportive policies and avoiding excessive regulation, has already placed the country at a significant advantage.
For others, it was an opportunity to
embrace
a post-nationalist identity and overcome the weight of the past.
In fact, should events turn out badly, critically-minded and well-informed urban achievers would be most likely to
embrace
the ultimate form of non-participation: emigration.
Only in this manner – reflected most vividly in its
embrace
of the European project – did Germany win consent for its reunification.
We must
embrace
structural change and push for the diversification of Africa’s productive base away from over-dependence on raw materials and mining.
Myanmar faces monumental development challenges that
embrace
virtually every aspect of the economy.
“Our success depends on a coalition of strong and independent nations that
embrace
their sovereignty to promote security, prosperity, and peace for themselves and for the world.”
A French CurePARIS – France is widely regarded around the world as a country that has failed to
embrace
globalization or to modernize its economic and social model.
This is a moment when broad objectives should be set out clearly and openly debated, so that French society can
embrace
common aims.
So, should Europe
embrace
fiscal federalism in order to strengthen the eurozone and restore investor confidence?
Europeans would show that we could
embrace
an Islamic democracy and build a strong bridge between Europe and Western Asia.
In their rhetoric, President Dmitri Medvedev and his technocrats
embrace
this vision.
Equally important, the EU bureaucracy will have to
embrace
– enthusiastically – the concept of a two-track Europe.
The European Central Bank and the central banks of Switzerland, Sweden, Norway, and a few Central European countries are likely to
embrace
quantitative easing or use other unconventional policies to prevent their currencies from appreciating.
Developing countries, long encouraged or even compelled to export and otherwise
embrace
globalization, have been abruptly told to switch course: to produce for the domestic market and to import more.
If populist fear-mongering drives their countries to
embrace
exclusionary, protectionist policies, the effect on the global economy – and the livelihoods of millions of people around the world – would be disastrous.
And our
embrace
of our global responsibilities extends to Japan’s Self-Defense Forces.
That is why US President Donald Trump’s
embrace
of nationalist protectionism is so dangerous.
In today’s charged political environment, there is a growing temptation to reject globalization and
embrace
populist redistribution policies that could end up doing far more harm than good.
We have one year until they meet in Copenhagen – one year to reach an agreement that all nations can
embrace.
We cannot
embrace
the politics of upheaval, because we cannot be sure that it will produce a Roosevelt rather than a Hitler.
But Trump’s
embrace
of Saudi Arabia also seems to be about more than just Iran.
The consensus at the time, of course, was that a robust “V-shaped” recovery was around the corner, and it was foolish to
embrace
inflation heterodoxy.
And, far from excluding the current goal of ending poverty, it would
embrace
poverty reduction as an outcome of building stable, prosperous societies, in which citizens, through their taxes, are able and willing to fund capable and responsive states that honor agreed global standards and rules.
As always, much will depend on America’s readiness to move away from military solutions and rigid ideological imperatives and instead
embrace
the pragmatic culture of conflict resolution.
Many observers assumed that China would inevitably
embrace
Western-style liberal democracy.
China may have joined Russia in opposing the West’s
embrace
of “humanitarian intervention” in other countries’ internal conflicts, but the Cold War premise that ideological affinity is an adequate basis for military alliance would not work for China today.
On the contrary, rather than
embrace
the SDGs, the Bank is practically mute, and its officials have even been heard to mutter negatively about them in the corridors of power.
Europe is a destiny that Britain will never
embrace
easily.
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