Evidently
in sentence
718 examples of Evidently in a sentence
Evidently, something else is going on.
Evidently, US authorities believe that in some situations geopolitics trump economics (reflected, for example, in the IMF’s recent re-entry into Ukraine after a string of failed programs).
The 1970s embargo was
evidently
a defining moment in the strategic thinking of Messrs. Cheney and Rumsfeld.
Despite past pledges to abandon nuclear-weapons development, the government has lately been pursuing new research,
evidently
in the hope of proclaiming the achievement of some new technological milestone.
Rusbridger
evidently
was seeking to establish a record with which he could defend the Guardian from what he immediately must have understood could potentially become a criminal charge – the idea that Baker appeared to be floating.
Evidently, he is trying to redefine the relationship, probably with a view to enhancing Japan’s freedom of maneuver in foreign and security policy.
We are
evidently
facing the mystery of Russian thought that has proved so unfathomable to others, so unyielding to every analytical scalpel, and about which our Slavophiles and Eurasians wrote at length.
Evidently, the markets think the authorities are up to the task.
The financial markets are
evidently
punishing the currencies of countries that, due to macroeconomic imbalances or political instability, are susceptible to external shocks of any kind.
Europe’s leaders may have declared last December that “defense matters,” but
evidently
not as much as their economic concerns.
Evidently, the pessimism and despair that often overwhelms free traders today is unwarranted.
This threat
evidently
motivated Medvedev to speak out in November: “It is no secret,” Medvedev wrote in his blog, “that, as of a certain period, symptoms of stagnation have begun to appear in our political life, and the threat of turning stability into a factor of stagnation has appeared.”
Even now, in the midst of an inflationary crisis, the NBU wants to move in small steps,
evidently
failing to grasp the severity of the crisis.
For its part, China’s government is
evidently
supportive of Chinese businesses developing a capacity to produce indigenous innovations.
Britain’s most adept and skillful politician has
evidently
known for years exactly what not to do about arranging his departure, and yet he has chosen to ignore his own advice.
Clinton has described today’s major global challenge for her country as being the improvement of communication across borders and at all levels of society,
evidently
everywhere.
Among the single-regulator countries, Singapore and the Scandinavians were successful in dodging most of the fatal bullets, while the UK
evidently
was not.
Others, such as Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin, are
evidently
skeptical.
We can also agree, as Obama
evidently
does, that far less thought, energy, and resources went into planning for life after Qaddafi than tearing him down; that France, the United Kingdom, and other US allies pulled their weight less than they should have; and that all the interveners profoundly underestimated the complexity of the shifting personal, tribal, and regional enmities and alliances that made the civil war both so bloody and so inconclusive.
China’s ever-zealous propaganda officials,
evidently
fearful of not demonstrating sufficient loyalty and respect for the new party chief, quickly hijacked the slogan; the China Dream has replaced the “China Model” in official political branding.
So the real issue now is whether Russia will push further and claim territory in eastern Ukraine, where a sizable number of Russian-speaking citizens,
evidently
spurred on by Kremlin operatives, wants to cut ties with the government in Kyiv.
Evidently, the Bush administration would rather help Middle East oil producers, whose interests so often seem at variance with those of the US, than Brazil.
A two-round electoral system in which the runoff pits a populist outsider against the last mainstream candidate standing is no guarantee, evidently, that the center will hold.
To many, both in and outside of Greece, this stance was peculiar: billions had been spent saving big banks, but
evidently
saving a country of eleven million people was taboo!
Meanwhile, the European Union’s severe, self-inflicted wounds have
evidently
left it too weak to develop an alternative to its crumbling status quo.
Evidently, he does not hold concerns about credibility in high enough regard to let his hands be tied.
The EU’s interlocutors in Washington, Beijing, and elsewhere already make it plain that national leaders claiming to speak for Europe lack credibility, as do EU leaders who so
evidently
have no convincing political mandate.
The United States and the Pakistani army, meanwhile,
evidently
believe that their sole responsibility is to keep the Taliban at bay.
North Korea’s Samurai RulesTOKYO – On December 17, North Korea announced that its supreme “Dear Leader,” Kim Jong-il, had died in a train carrying him on one of the many inspection tours that he had taken since suffering a stroke in 2008 –
evidently
part of the regime’s effort to eliminate concerns about his health.
The dire threat to both Iranian and US interests posed by the Islamic State (formerly the Islamic State in Iraq and Syria) has, evidently, brought the two countries closer together.
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