Hopes
in sentence
1845 examples of Hopes in a sentence
This would not be seen as 'second class' membership, but rather as the right 'Agenda 2000', the proper answer to the
hopes
of a genuinely reunited Europe that were reborn in 1989.
Realistic conflict management will replace utopian
hopes
for conflict resolution.
Today, the
hopes
of the world economy rest with the emerging powers in east and south Asia, led by China and India.
In addition to the risk that a few would be tempted by extremism is the certainty that, if we fail to meet our commitment to universal education, millions of children would be relegated to a life of poverty and struggle, with their hopes, dreams, and potential squandered, undermining the country’s development potential.
Seeing the twenty-first century as a “contest for supremacy in the Pacific” between the US and China, Lee
hopes
that the two countries can fashion a viable power-sharing arrangement.
These are ambitious hopes, but even if the UN Security Council adopts and implements a resolution that would lead to such an eventual solution, it will provide just another band-aid and temporary relief.
It
hopes
to generate 40% of its energy from renewable sources by 2030, and it expects 100 gigawatts of that to come from solar energy by as early as 2022.
One
hopes
that the protests in India will inspire the West to emulate the protesters’ lack of complacency.
Many will probably be absorbed into Libya’s security service, but many others, one hopes, can go back to their place of origin.
One
hopes
that his insights continue to have such an impact, as they encourage more analytical policymaking at all levels.
She
hopes
that her story will motivate them to complete their education, too.
The United Nations
hopes
that infrastructure PPPs will provide the means to realize its post-2015 global development agenda.
Moreover, one
hopes
the benchmark will prod into action all of the firms that have not even bothered to join the fight against AMR.
But with less than a year remaining until “Brexit day” – when the UK’s EU membership officially ends – it is clear that the British government’s
hopes
of dividing and conquering the EU economy have been dashed.
The result, one hopes, would be a much-needed political realignment – indeed, a political renaissance.
Avoiding Algeria in EgyptPORTO – The military coup that has overthrown Egypt’s first democratically elected president and led to the arrests of Muslim Brotherhood leaders across the country poses an enormous danger not only for Egypt’s democratic transition, but for the democratic
hopes
of the entire Arab world as well.
Given all of this, one
hopes
that opposition from political figures like Clinton amounts to naught – an entirely plausible outcome, in Clinton’s case, because the TPP should be enacted before the presidential election in November 2016.
One
hopes
that America’s leaders do not miss a golden opportunity to give US businesses – and thus the US economy – a significant boost.
When it comes to Ukraine, Russia has made it clear that it
hopes
to obstruct the May presidential election, which Western leaders hope will cement change in Ukraine, while turning the country’s constitutional negotiations into the opening act in the establishment of a new European order.
The best example is US President Barack Obama, on whom so many
hopes
rested – probably too many for any one leader.
Many of us believe that such an impossible wager can be fulfilled only by a providential man, with all the
hopes
– and dangers – that this entails.
The International Criminal Court in The Hague, one hopes, will one day bring Qaddafi, his family, and his minions to justice.
Obama’s election has raised
hopes
for a massive commitment to carbon cuts and vast spending on renewable energy to save the world – especially developing nations.
Greece, one hopes, will remain in the eurozone.
At the same time, as Europe’s largest consumer of Russian gas, Germany has built its
hopes
for energy security on developing a rich web of economic ties with Russia.
One
hopes
that Carney will follow this trend of challenging conventional wisdom at the BoE.
(Fiesler
hopes
that her database will help faculty make this case to their universities.)
Considering the state of Europe and the world – and the
hopes
many outsiders are pinning on German leadership – these issues seem rather marginal.
That Walt Whitman and Mark Twain, Herman Melville, Henry James, and John Dos Passos had lived here, that Enescu, Brancusi, or Eugen Ionesco had been successful here in no way raised my
hopes.
RCV has already been adopted by a number of American cities and the state of Maine, and one
hopes
it will continue to spread in the years ahead.
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