Fundamental
in sentence
2832 examples of Fundamental in a sentence
Russia, therefore, should apply two
fundamental
principles that it has already accepted in several declarations.
The tasks confronting NATO require redefining the essence of transatlantic relations in order to answer some
fundamental
questions.
Islam’s Fanatical 1%The dominance of conservative Islam in the Middle East reflects a
fundamental
reality of Muslim society.
If these
fundamental
institutions were right, then landlords, merchants, and manufacturers would invest and improve.
The
fundamental
problem, though, is scarcity.
Would such a
fundamental
Europe-wide political shift – much like the one in France that brought Macron to power last year – actually come to pass?
High market valuations that are fueled by liquidity and irrational exuberance do not reflect
fundamental
economic realities.
In China, I have organized a group of equity investors to share ideas and insights about
fundamental
investing, and I help start-up fund managers who share a long-term philosophy get their businesses off the ground.
A
fundamental
tenet of American society is that everyone has an equal chance – a belief that appears more plausible with the decline of social bias.
Other ideas, like moving to fiscal union, would require a
fundamental
revision of the EU’s founding treaties.
The president’s domestic agenda is bold and revolutionary, but it clashes frontally with the most
fundamental
tenets of America’s liberal and individualistic ethos.
Despite the seeming power of Germanys postwar Chancellors, the countrys political system can only be administered; governance in the sense of addressing
fundamental
problems by enacting far-reaching reforms is usually impossible.
WASHINGTON, DC – As Canada, Mexico, and the United States focus on the next round of negotiations on modernizing the North American Free Trade Agreement – a highly uncertain endeavor – governments in the rest of the Americas are grappling with a more
fundamental
question about trade.
If implemented, the US could reassert its historical leadership among a group of countries that share its
fundamental
values, as well as an interest in inclusive economic growth and rising living standards.
Two
fundamental
principles have underpinned European integration: solidarity and subsidiarity.
Nineteenth-century concepts of international order, based on zero-sum balance-of-power considerations and spheres of interest, are threatening to supersede modern norms of national self-determination, the inviolability of borders, the rule of law, and the
fundamental
principles of democracy.
So a
fundamental
strategic struggle is now a given.
This approach to the duties of a national leader, stated bluntly and honestly, forces us to consider a
fundamental
ethical issue.
But one would still be unable to answer the
fundamental
question: Why are these governments so popular?
Scientists conducting
fundamental
research cannot predict what they will find or when they will find it.
Let this generation be the first in history to ensure that all children are afforded the education to which they have a
fundamental
right.
So,
fundamental
considerations speak for deeper European integration, extending even to the creation of a single European state.
But there is one
fundamental
issue where contrasts dissolve into consensus: the desire to keep children safe.
In 2001, our shiksha yatra (march for education) called on government officials to make access to school a
fundamental
right for all children.
But NATO leaders will also lift their eyes from the immediate challenges of the day, and discuss a
fundamental
strategic question as well: how to use NATO to its fullest potential as a platform for holding political discussions and building transatlantic consensus across the wide range of the issues where Europe and North America share common interests and wish to defend common values.
Democracies can deal with political Islam and respect
fundamental
rights.
But the elevation of the Social Chapter, previously a list of good intentions, to the status of
fundamental
constitutional rights, threatens to encumber workers and businesses in the member states with burdensome judicial proceedings and expensive social entitlements written by judges in Luxembourg whose last word is beyond appeal.
The "social rights" in Part II are seen as compensating voters on the left for, say, enshrining "competition" as a
fundamental
objective of the Union in Part I.
If a political compromise is needed, "competition" should be removed as a
fundamental
Union objective.
The motivation is far more
fundamental
than the fact that India and China still have an unresolved border.
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