Emerged
in sentence
1387 examples of Emerged in a sentence
Significant federal spending programs could have
emerged
only from the transfer of existing national programs to the European level.
Nonetheless, its leaders have recognized the need to secure their country’s future by diversifying its energy sources; as a result, the UAE has
emerged
as a pioneer in the renewable-energy revolution.
The eurozone technically
emerged
from recession, the unemployment rate in the United States was lower than in previous years, and Japan began to stir after a long slumber and the negative shock of the earthquake and tsunami in 2011.
This conundrum
emerged
after the 1995 ejection, spawning political panic.
The Libertarian and the LobbyistsWASHINGTON, DC – In the three years since the global financial crisis erupted, two dominant views of what went wrong have
emerged.
While hundreds of boat people have drowned in the Mediterranean Sea this summer, voices have
emerged
in almost every corner of Europe, 26 years after the fall of the Iron Curtain, calling for isolation, mass deportations, and the construction of new walls and fences.
This territorial sliver with a population of a half-million
emerged
in the early 1990’s, after the dissolution of the Soviet Union (population almost 300 million), when it broke away from the Republic of Moldova (population four million), which had separated in the 1940’s from Ukraine (population 50 million).
An international consensus has
emerged
regarding the importance of secure land tenure for development outcomes.
The strategy that emerged, beginning with the annexation of Crimea, delivered results almost immediately.
Even the G20, which
emerged
when the G7 proved too narrow and exclusive to support effective economic-policy coordination, failed to change the game.
Schisms
emerged
between northern and southern states, and between smaller and larger ones.
But, as the revolts proceeded, it
emerged
that people wanted good government and social justice, and were not enamored of Iran or interested in joining an axis of resistance.
With German unemployment, too, hitting record lows, while joblessness hits record highs in Italy and remains at obscene levels in Greece and Spain, what has
emerged
is a two-tier Europe, with German Chancellor Angela Merkel’s government calling the shots.
The yen and the Deutschemark
emerged
as new potential reserve currencies, although the Japanese and German governments and central banks were profoundly worried about this new role for their currencies and the volatility that it might entail.
Even more extraordinarily, when these new currencies
emerged
as the new claimants to reserve status, they had only recently become convertible for current-account transactions, and capital flows were still restricted.
The Vatican II reforms, for example,
emerged
not from a populist groundswell, but from the preferences of progressive theologians and bishops.
An alternative hypothesis, which seems to fit the facts, recently
emerged
from the Paul Woolley Centre for the Study of Dysfunctionality in Capital Markets, at the London School of Economics.
No obvious European leader
emerged
from the election, and political haggling among EU governments over the next Commission president is likely to be prolonged and to look anything but democratic.
This approach
emerged
soon after Kazakhstan’s independence in 1991, when the country initiated the Conference on Interaction and Confidence-Building Measures in Asia, modeled after the Conference on Security and Cooperation in Europe (now the OSCE).
Everyone can see that the European Parliament
emerged
much stronger than before, even if its new strength is not defined in Treaty terms.
But after the Soviet Union imploded, the US
emerged
as the sole hegemon, and the world seemed to return to its historic status quo.
Whether in New York, Paris, Madrid, Rome, Istanbul, or New Delhi, a feeling of unease and a desire for change has
emerged
in societies that are becoming increasingly unequal, and in which politics and business mix in non-transparent ways.
But electrophysiological evidence later
emerged
suggesting that higher-level brain functioning may be affected as well.
Recognizing the blatant injustice – not to mention the destructiveness – of this state of affairs, a new initiative, launched by the Carbon Levy Project and supported by a growing number of individuals and organizations, has
emerged
to demand compensation for vulnerable developing countries from the big polluters.
Besides, many “electronic plumbers” have
emerged
who will come to your computer and fix the problem as you while away the hours working where your competence lies.
The right to assemble freely
emerged
from the right to petition kings.
The US, it should be recalled,
emerged
from World War II with a very high debt burden, but the ensuing years marked the country’s most rapid growth ever.
This was one of many encounters that Obama has had with Prime Minister Manmohan Singh in various forums since taking office, often in multilateral summits like the G-20, and it consolidated the new relationship that has
emerged
from a decade of dramatic change.
After several months of mostly quiet demonstrations and brutal suppression, a pattern
emerged.
Inspired by the events taking place in Charlottesville, advocates have
emerged
in Britain seeking to pull Admiral Nelson off his famous column on Trafalgar Square in London, because the British naval hero supported the slave trade.
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