Harder
in sentence
817 examples of Harder in a sentence
There are many conflicts around the world, starting with Syria, that will only become
harder
to solve without US diplomatic attention.
As a result, politically and legally, it is much
harder
to shut down a project than to stop it before it starts.
Yet, by switching off the lights, all we are doing is making it
harder
to see.
The voting system used by the BoE’s Monetary Policy Committee makes it
harder
for the governor to know when a majority for tightening will emerge, and some members’ views have been oscillating in recent months.
Because of the dispersion, shrimp, squid, and some fish populations suffered, with fisheries hit even
harder.
In this scenario, a tiny minority becomes super-rich – not, for the most part, because they are smarter or work
harder
than everyone else, but because fundamental economic forces capriciously redistribute incomes.
Meanwhile, those employees left behind must work that much harder, often without increased compensation.
Protectionism will be
harder
to resist on both sides of the Atlantic.
This will hit households in Democratic-leaning states such as New York, New Jersey, and California much
harder
than households in Republican-leaning states.
Understandably, companies and households are becoming even more cautious – inevitably making a difficult job for policymakers that much
harder.
What is
harder
to find, suggests Walzer, is solidarity on the "thick" level--those times when we must take into account conflicting values.
At the level of individual consciousness, this means that religious certainty is now
harder
to come by.
Here are some
harder
facts.
And cultural clashes are much
harder
to address than logistics – especially once they leave the regulated confines of the asylum center, which can mitigate potential conflicts with surveillance and design.
Nevertheless, future rates of extinction constitute a problem that will be very much
harder
to solve.
But correcting this will become
harder
after new members have joined.
It is the responsibility of all Saudis – and not just the royal family – to work
harder
to tamp down radicalism within their country’s borders and beyond.
The United Kingdom, for example, has had a
harder
time than other countries for an obvious reason: it had a real-estate bubble (though of less consequence than in Spain), and finance, which was at the epicenter of the crisis, played a more important role in its economy than it does in other countries.
Second, the perception of weakness and division in the WTO will make it far
harder
to resist protectionist pressures worldwide, especially if the global economy slows.
At the same time, the stronger dollar would make exporting
harder
for US companies, and nullify the benefit of having a zero-tax rate on foreign sales.
This requires a Europe that knows its own mind, so that it can approach the US – and the rest of the world – with a clearer eye and a
harder
head.
Mark Twain once said, “Fewer things are
harder
to put up with than the annoyance of a good example.”
They produce skin-deep democracies in which people have a vote but don’t really have a stake, in which wealth is increasingly concentrated and income disparities are
harder
to breach.
So, trying to parse their positions to make a case for one over another is
harder
to do than guessing who will end up winning the World Cup.
A greater effort to raise the average level of education in America would have made the country richer and produced a more even distribution of income and wealth by making educated workers more abundant and less-skilled workers
harder
to find – and thus worth more on the market.
The second major conclusion that Funke, Schularik, and Trebesch draw is that governing becomes
harder
after financial crises, for two reasons.
We also control for the fact that migrants tend to tweet less than others, making it
harder
for us to find them in the 1% sample.
Such a solution might work for fish, provided that migrating populations could be tracked; but it is far
harder
to apply it to something like the climate.
Finally, if the US steps back, the EU, the United Nations, and even China can remind the Russians of the political consequences of flagrantly violating international law and swallowing up impoverished, restive territories that will prove far
harder
to digest than the fixed referendum results would suggest.
Data are hard to come by and even
harder
to interpret.
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