Hopes
in sentence
1845 examples of Hopes in a sentence
If Khamenei holds fast, Mousavi cannot gain the presidency, but he will continue to represent the
hopes
of the majority of Iranians who differ dramatically with their government.
But, in the case of Turkey, Europe has long been reluctant to provide the same sort of incentives and
hopes.
One
hopes
that it, too, will be properly prepared.
This includes creating more efficient energy systems and increasing our investment in renewable sources (which will, one hopes, create jobs in the process).
As in real life, fans can be torn between their
hopes
for victory and their fear of defeat.
He also
hopes
to sign and implement the Regional Comprehensive Economic Partnership, which China initiated several years ago to counter the now-defunct Trans-Pacific Partnership, next year (an overly ambitious target unlikely to be achieved, owing to the complexities of multi-party trade deals).
This will mean fewer sources of information for a government that
hopes
to build support for its development goals in the region.
A new UN mission began to deploy in Libya – the vanguard of the international community’s effort to help a newly liberated and, one hopes, democratizing country emerge from conflict and 42 years of despotic rule.
Many Americans started 2013 with high
hopes
that congressional leaders would overcome, even if only partly, the polarization and political dysfunction that had slowed recovery.
NATO Means SolidarityPRAGUE: We have come a long way from those poetic, buoyant, and euphoric days that followed communism’s fall; those days of suddenly gained liberties, of enormous and often quite naive
hopes.
From the outset, the Trump administration has maintained a pro-business attitude, exemplified by his commitment to deregulation, raising
hopes
among investors of a boost to the US and global economies.
Through such endeavors, Brazil
hopes
to contribute to a more balanced international order, one less subject to hegemonies of any kind, without losing sight of the importance of mutually beneficial partnerships with developed countries.
One
hopes
that the ECB will be forthright.
A unilateral default, one hopes, will not be necessary.
The UK votes to leave now, in the
hopes
that a panicked EU would not only grant further concessions, but also alter its own vision of ever-closer union.
While many lost jobs, homes, and hopes, trillions of dollars in savings have been sloshing around the world’s financial centers ever since, on top of more trillions pumped out by desperate central banks eager to replace the financiers’ toxic money.
There are many reasons for this political earthquake, but the biggest are the enduring misery of depressed living standards, double-digit unemployment rates, and diminished
hopes
for the future.
This, one hopes, is the silver lining in the cloud now hanging over the World Bank.
Not many people are brave enough (or foolish enough) to turn down a billion dollars today in
hopes
of much more later.
Just as the Arab Spring, and the chaos and violence that it fueled, showed that Israel cannot be blamed for all of the region’s problems, the movement of the Islamic State to areas that do not struggle with poor Shia leadership may, one hopes, force Sunni governments to take responsibility.
This susceptibility is the clearest sign that India's experiment with the Westminster model of parliamentary democracy has failed to justify the
hopes
that prevailed fifty years ago when the Constitution was proclaimed.
In any case, one
hopes
that something has been learned from our decades of experience in fighting NCDs, and that these lessons can be applied in the more challenging and resource-poor settings of the developing world.
Not only did reckless monetary accommodation set the stage for Japan’s demise; the country’s central bank compounded the problem by taking policy rates to the zero bound (and even lower), embracing quantitative easing, and manipulating long-term interest rates in the
hopes
of reviving the economy.
The effectiveness of the G20’s 2008 and 2009 summits raised
hopes
that, at a time of rapid change, this emerging platform, comprising economies accounting for 85% of world output, could serve as a global fire brigade.
Western central bankers need to become much more vocal and, one hopes, more persuasive in placing pressure on politicians and other policymakers.
Libya’s Unwilling RevolutionariesTRIPOLI – Egypt is not the only place where the bright
hopes
of the Arab Spring are fading.
Public and private displays of atavistic machismo, one hopes, will no longer be considered acceptable.
Palestinian
Hopes
for Barack ObamaRAMALLAH – President-elect Barack Obama’s defiantly positive campaign for change has inspired hope not only in the millions of Americans who voted for him, but also in the billions of others worldwide who could not.
That the same society elected an African-American president only a few decades later renews Palestinian
hopes
that, in our ongoing struggle for justice and freedom, we, too, shall overcome.
If he
hopes
to be anything remotely close to a responsible leader, he must move urgently to address the deep divisions that he so enthusiastically fueled during his campaign.
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