Histories
in sentence
219 examples of Histories in a sentence
The third potential source of conflict consists in the fundamental cultural differences created by societies’ unique
histories
and institutional arrangements.
Similarly, China’s nascent used-car market stands to benefit significantly from the Internet revolution, as e-commerce boosts the transparency of vehicle listings and transactions, and new online tools help lenders acquire and analyze credit
histories
in a more detailed and sophisticated way.
In other words, the cosmic sprawl can help us disentangle the complex terrestrial systems and
histories
of which we are a part.
These first power stations will develop the operational and financial performance
histories
that will be necessary before HDR geothermal energy can begin making an impact on world energy supplies.
In large bookstores across Russia, a huge number of political biographies and
histories
portray Stalin and his era.
Amazon has a mountain of information about all of its users – from their profiles to their search
histories
to the sentences they highlight in e-books – which it uses to predict what they might want to buy next.
Credit
histories
cannot be shared, because a credit bureau is just getting started.
Both have
histories
of military rule.
So while men with
histories
of predatory behavior continue to occupy senior positions in the global news industry, women journalists are pushed to the point that they consider leaving it.
Who gets to know about predictive health
histories?
Brazil and Argentina had long
histories
of superstars: Pelé, Garrincha, Ronaldo, Alfredo di Stéfano, and Diego Maradona.
In a country with one of the worst
histories
of economic crisis and volatility, fears of a new meltdown are growing, and investors have been dollarizing their portfolios in order to protect their capital.
These divergent attitudes can be explained by the vast differences between European countries’
histories
and strategic perspectives.
But their response to their difficult
histories
has been to adopt a low profile and avoid taking a stand on major international issues.
The issues that preoccupy health policymakers and practitioners in Lima, Cairo, Kolkata, and Jakarta reflect contrasting climates, geographies, histories, and cultures.
Different world regions have different histories, which have given their peoples different ideas about how to live, govern themselves, and earn a living.
These
histories
are all worthy of respect: there is no “right” road to the future.
But the sad reality is that political, social, and economic pressures tend to push EU members and citizens in opposing directions; shared histories, it seems, are an insufficient basis for shared policies.
The mega-regions, which tend to share common dialects, ethnic identities, and histories, are becoming economic powerhouses in their own right.
We can dig into their family
histories
in strife-torn Dagestan, or examine, once again, the lethal appeal of Islamist radicalism.
More fundamentally, why do these countries seemingly fail to exercise the kind of economic leadership and innovation that their
histories
lead us to expect, especially in the innovative high technology sectors that most define our future?
They use their given role as a badge of moral authority, taking their voices and their truth out of the home and into the streets to fight not for abstract concepts of justice, but for sons and daughters with names and
histories.
But such efforts cannot obscure the clash between these two histories, reflected perhaps most clearly in the divide between conservatives and liberals on condemning Stalinist repression.
They are going about it in ways that reflect their different resource endowments, industrial histories, and political pressures.
Their stories, and their heroism, have long been omitted from popular
histories
of the war, or relegated to the footnotes.
Until recently, too, many Europeans believed in their kings and queens, flew their national flags, sang their national anthems, were taught heroic versions of their national
histories.
That is because there is so much that unites us: common values, shared histories, and an abiding faith in democracy.
Inside the Palais, the hulking brutalist structure where the films are screened, this year’s lineup was filled with tales of ordinary people, or poor people, struggling with the fallout of the global issues that increasingly unite us – or confronting painful political conflicts that official
histories
had laid to rest.
Many countries with
histories
of colonialism and other forms of tyranny, as well as countries without abundant natural resources, have chosen to educate women and grant them legal rights.
In the years ahead, we are going to have to figure out how to create a “fair” global trading regime among countries with fundamentally different economic systems, histories, cultures, and societal preferences.
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