Famously
in sentence
514 examples of Famously in a sentence
When he
famously
proclaimed that “government is not the solution to our problem, government is our problem,” he was talking like a gunslinger, even though he was officially speaking as the newly installed US president.
Four years before
famously
shunning the centenary of the Russian Revolution in 2017, he sponsored lavish celebrations of the 400th anniversary of the House of Romanov.
If government investment has to be the main vehicle, then it would be far better to build desperately needed schools and hospitals than “bridges to nowhere,” as Japan
famously
did when it went down a similar path in the 1990’s.
In the aftermath of the collapse of Lehman Brothers in September 2008, Italy’s then-finance minister Giulio Tremonti
famously
endorsed the health of the country’s banking system.
The concept of separation of church and state is alien to Islam – former Iranian Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini once
famously
declared that “Islam is politics or it is nothing” – and Islamists have still to prove that they are amenable to democratic governance.
If America is
famously
a “melting pot,” then to me India is a thali, a selection of sumptuous dishes in different bowls.
Rudyard Kipling
famously
wrote in “The Ballad of East and West”: “Oh, East is East, and West is West, and never the twain shall meet.”
The ECB
famously
raised interest rates twice in 2011, just as the euro crisis was worsening and unemployment was increasing to double-digit levels, bringing deflation ever closer.
Nouriel Roubini, who
famously
forecast the 2008 financial crisis, agrees that “a correction has already occurred in emerging markets, limiting the need for further adjustment when the Fed moves.”
In the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries, many Muslim thinkers – most
famously
Jamal al-Din al-Afghani – believed that embracing many of the ideals developed in the West during the Enlightenment was the only way to promote progress.
President Franklin Roosevelt once
famously
addressed the Daughters of the American Revolution – a group that prided itself on the early arrival of its ancestors – as “fellow immigrants.”
Vladimir Putin
famously
described the break-up of the Soviet Union as the greatest geo-political catastrophe of the twentieth century.
America’s Grassroots SaviorsBERKELEY – Joan Didion
famously
observed that, “We tell ourselves stories in order to live.”
When one looks closely, most of these tables are, as Henry Kissinger
famously
put it, “content-free.”
Famously, the Fed’s efforts to tame a stock-market bubble in the late 1920s sparked the Great Depression of the 1930s.
As Walter Bagehot once
famously
said, “Money will not manage itself.”
But this hesitant acceptance of a certain normality in its relations with its neighbors has always been vulnerable to a sudden eruption of Russia’s
famously
irrational “derzhava” – an aggressive ethos that glorifies the state and asserts its strength by pouncing on weakness.
Britain at SeaROME – In the early 1960s, former US Secretary of State Dean Acheson
famously
quipped that the United Kingdom had lost an empire, and not yet found a role.
Rapprochements with Rogue StatesSEOUL – In his State of the Union address to the US Congress in 2002, President George W. Bush
famously
described Iraq, Iran, and North Korea as an “axis of evil.”
Immanuel Kant
famously
argued otherwise – that morality should be free of non-universal interests.
As the American economist Paul Samuelson
famously
quipped, “The stock market has called nine of the last five recessions.”
But many poor countries, most
famously
China and India, have achieved extraordinary economic growth in recent years by harnessing cutting-edge technologies.
The scientists and opinion leaders comprising the Club of Rome
famously
(and erroneously) predicted humanity’s end, forecasting that the world would run out of aluminium, copper, gold, lead, mercury, molybdenum, natural gas, oil, silver, tin, tungsten, and zinc.
As the former Justice Minister and Conservative Party Brexit leader Michael Gove
famously
put it, “People in this country have had enough of experts,” and “big changes” are needed to change how the government and civil service go about their business.
Truthiness on the MarchLONDON – The late US Senator Daniel Patrick Moynihan
famously
said, “Everyone is entitled to his own opinion, but not to his own facts.”
Hitler
famously
quipped that while the Bolsheviks had nationalized the means of production, the Nazis had gone further by nationalizing the people themselves.
NEW YORK – In 1981, US President Ronald Reagan came to office
famously
declaring that, “Government is not the solution to our problem.
As the French president, Nicolas Sarkozy,
famously
said, the burqa is “not welcome in France.”
As former US President John F. Kennedy
famously
said in an October 1963 speech in which he promoted his proposed corporate and personal tax reductions, “a rising tide lifts all boats.”
At a minimum, the Fed might develop a “portfolio” of analogies, test them for fitness, and distill their lessons, as President John F. Kennedy
famously
did when weighing his options during the Cuban missile crisis in 1962.
Back
Next
Related words
Would
Which
Former
Called
Their
After
Declared
People
Quipped
Economist
About
Wrote
Observed
Government
Country
Never
There
Asked
World
Political