Growing
in sentence
6077 examples of Growing in a sentence
The paradox is that while anxiety over China’s
growing
assertiveness has returned the US to the center of Asian geopolitics and enabled it to strengthen its security arrangements in the region, this has not led to action aimed at quelling China’s expansionary policies.
We are also pursuing new areas of cooperation in defense exercises, such as submarine salvage and rescue, reflecting this key partnership’s
growing
dynamism.
There is a
growing
recognition of the importance of institutions – particularly legal frameworks and public agencies that administer rules and incentives – in the development process.
In the months ahead, the military-enforced calm will coexist with
growing
anxiety about what will follow King Bhumibol Adulyadej’s nearly seven-decade-long reign.
Fighting Corruption in the Post Communist WorldCAMBRIDGE: In the last few years, corruption in the former socialist countries has been
growing
rapidly.
Take the case of Russia, corruption is
growing
precisely because private business is
growing.
In the coming years, superconductors are expected to play a
growing
role in technology.
So the Saudi regime is divided, its legitimacy is questioned, and sectarian tensions are
growing.
But, with the
growing
success of appeals to identity and renewed ethnic or religious nationalism, that is changing.
But they are
growing
increasingly brazen, all the more so when not confronted.
But the same deficiencies existed when India was
growing
rapidly.
The monsoon has been good and will spur consumption, especially in rural areas, which are already
growing
strongly, owing to improvements in road transport and communications connectivity.
For example, in large countries like the United States or China, which account for a significant portion of world demand, the world price of oil is likely to be high when the country is
growing
strongly and citizens have lots of income, whereas the price is likely to be low when the country is doing poorly.
It is in this kind of world that seemingly nonsensical behavior like
growing
grain in the desert to ensure food security begins to make sense.
After years of decline, the economy is growing; after numerous financial scandals, the banking system is safer.
As a result, the US Congress appears to be
growing
more hostile toward a deal; indeed, the longer it takes to conclude a final agreement, the more likely Congress is to scupper it.
This lack of peace would have resulted in outright economic and financial war if not for the critical – and
growing
– role played by the European Central Bank.
Martin Luther King, Jr. benefited from
growing
up in an African-American church tradition rich in the rhythms of the spoken word.
With advanced economies struggling to avoid financial collapse, escape recession, reduce unemployment, and restore growth, central banks are being called upon to address, sometimes simultaneously,
growing
imbalances.
Asia Enters the StormBERKELEY – As 2011 draws to a close, there are
growing
signs that Asia is becoming caught up in the global slowdown, dashing hopes that the region’s economies would “decouple” from the prolonged recession in Europe and America’s lackluster recovery.
Again, there is cause for optimism: China’s imports from Asia have been
growing
faster than China’s exports to the US for the last several years.
After the recent elections in the Netherlands and France, a
growing
chorus is now proclaiming that “peak populism” has passed.
But the region’s protest politics also reflects
growing
rejection of dictatorship and arbitrary rule.
There is also a
growing
clamor in the EU to enforce the correct labeling of products made in Israel’s West Bank settlements.
At the same time, despite a strongly
growing
US and global economy, inflation remains mystifyingly low.
More important, at least for now, the decision amounts to an endorsement by the IMF of the progress China has made toward renminbi internationalization, while reflecting – and reinforcing – China’s
growing
economic clout.
While these protests have no unified theme, they express in different ways the serious concerns of the world’s working and middle classes about their prospects in the face of the
growing
concentration of power among economic, financial, and political elites.
For example, the rise in inequality has many causes: the addition of 2.3 billion Chinese and Indians to the global labor force, which is reducing the jobs and wages of unskilled blue-collar and off-shorable white-collar workers in advanced economies; skill-biased technological change; winner-take-all effects; early emergence of income and wealth disparities in rapidly growing, previously low-income economies; and less progressive taxation.
But, despite the pains my father had taken, the other designers expressed
growing
discontent about Korolev getting all the publicity, even if anonymously.
And, indeed, the security risks facing Asia are only
growing
– exemplified in China’s move from military expansion to blatant assertiveness.
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