Fears
in sentence
1520 examples of Fears in a sentence
The country’s new mobile “battlefield nuclear weapons” – easier to purloin – augment current
fears.
Such talks, Turkey fears, would offer tacit acknowledgement that Iraqi Kurds have won a degree of autonomy from Baghdad.
If anything, in his most recent speech, Fischer seemed to brush aside any such
fears
– assuring his audience that there is great social value in continuing to have extremely large financial firms that operate with so very little equity capital (and therefore a great deal of leverage).
In Europe, the rise of political opposition to German Chancellor Angela Merkel, the Brexit vote, and the growing appeal of nationalist parties on the right can all be attributed to real and imagined
fears
stemming from refugees.
Investors have responded to these
fears
by buying gold, agricultural land, and other traditional inflation hedges.
Fears
that the move would lead to Japanese involvement in distant US wars are similarly overblown.
Fears
that the Soviet Union would cheat reinforced their position.
He
fears
Ukraine’s 2014 uprising as a “revolutionary plague” only because it might erupt in Moscow’s own squares.
But this might bring with it social problems, as Europeans resist an influx of foreigners, owing to
fears
about jobs, security, or cultural differences.
If they allow the
fears
of the present to continue to stifle action, they may soon find themselves wishing for a vanished opportunity.
But one
fears
that something more dreadful than the daily misery must occur before India's politicians decide to act.
The newly released growth data may have dispelled
fears
of a hard landing for China, but have nonetheless prompted many to argue that China must stimulate its economy further to guarantee 8% annual growth.
Media-fed
fears
that the disease could spread to affluent countries led to extraordinary precautions.
Nevertheless, the fears, and especially the prospect of a new and lucrative market, set pharmaceutical firms scrambling to develop Ebola-related products, while health officials lamented that nothing had been done beforehand.
But, when it comes to reform in the Arab world, Western observers have usually implied that reformers need to be revolutionaries, democratizing their systems quickly, heedless of others’ concerns and
fears.
They say that
fears
of “running out of resources,” notably food and energy, have been with us for 200 years, and we never succumbed.
Similarly, China’s acceptance of international arbitration of its claims in the South China Sea would assuage the
fears
of its Southeast Asian neighbors.
The lack of an official announcement until now attests to the esteem in which it was held, its usefulness as an ornament of credibility for central banks, and
fears
that there might be no good candidates to succeed it as the preferred anchor for monetary policy.
NEW YORK – When parts of Japan were devastated recently by an earthquake and subsequent tsunami, news of the human toll was quickly overshadowed by global
fears
of radioactive fallout from the Fukushima Daichi nuclear power plant.
But our latest nuclear
fears
have broader implications, especially for energy supply and our desire to shift away from reliance on fossil fuels.
Food
Fears
ReturnROME – Lack of food is rarely the reason that people go hungry.
Fears
of imminent major hostilities are clearly overblown.
Rather than remaking the world in its image, the EU
fears
neighbors that export chaos rather than import values.
But this stability fuels
fears
that Somaliland’s people will activate the declaration of independence they adopted in 1991.
Yet Ethiopia may hesitate, owing to its
fears
that formally recognizing Somaliland’s independence could undermine Somalia’s fragile Western-backed Transitional Federal Government.
To win, he exploited the
fears
of a large part of the electorate; to succeed, he must instill hope.
Egypt’s
fears
are mainly of Sudan’s disintegration into a chaotic tapestry of mini-states controlled by warlords and plunged into lawlessness and bloody tribal feuds.
The Republican establishment
fears
he will not be able to defeat Hillary Clinton, the likely Democratic nominee.
Education in the Age of AutomationSEOUL – As digital technologies and automation have advanced,
fears
about workers’ futures have increased.
As we saw in the anti-IMF protests in Prague recently, and last year’s street protests against the World Trade Organization in Seattle, such
fears
are spreading far and wide.
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