Hopes
in sentence
1845 examples of Hopes in a sentence
One
hopes
that Tanzania is the first in a wave of countries putting education first.
The US
hopes
to get the best of both worlds.
One
hopes
that this task has been made slightly simpler by the publication of a book in which the Copenhagen Consensus economists boil down their insights.
One
hopes
that most countries will have the good sense not to implement inflation targeting; my sympathies go to the unfortunate citizens of those that do.
But while Merkel herself may not be missed much, a power vacuum in Berlin is a blow for
hopes
to revive the EU.
It is, after all, a European nation in cultural, if not political terms, whereas progress in China will not be measured by the introduction of Western-style democracy, but eventually, one hopes, by Singapore-style rule of law.
One
hopes
that those who understand the economics of debt and austerity, and who believe in democracy and humane values, will prevail.
It is Sarkozy himself who has betrayed the
hopes
of his supporters and consolidated the hostility of his opponents.
One
hopes
that they will continue to resist.
But whatever their purpose, by raising fanciful
hopes
they thwart the possibility for real reform - something, incidentally, that the West ceaselessly demands from the Kremlin.
Wen Jiabao’s critique six years ago was a powerful diagnosis of the Old China’s flaws that pointed to the Next China’s
hopes
and dreams.
If these
hopes
are likely to be disappointed, it is not for lack on trying by America’s charismatic president.
On the contrary, it is precisely the middle class, bought off by promises of ever-greater material gains, that
hopes
to conserve the current political order.
The EU is pinning its
hopes
on one mechanism to reduce Greek debt: loans from the European Financial Stability Facility that would allow Greece to buy its own debt at a discount in the secondary market.
One
hopes
that North Korea’s recent behavior – the sinking of the South Korean warship Cheonan in March, and now the shelling of Yeonpyeong island (which followed a supposedly “accidental” shooting incident in the DMZ in October) – will focus minds in Beijing.
Putin
hopes
that harsh policies, at home and abroad, will allow him to maintain a stranglehold on Russia.
A broader, more transparent recruitment process would reduce groupthink, challenge the status quo, and, one hopes, leave central banks better equipped to handle a financial crisis.
With the European Union also preparing to commit to new 2030 climate targets,
hopes
for a global deal are rising.
But now, just six months later, the promise of education for all refugees is about to be broken, dashing the
hopes
of millions of Syrians.
In addition, the Fed
hopes
that lower long-term interest rates will push up asset prices, giving households more wealth and greater incentive to spend.
Finally, by demonstrating a willingness to print money, the Fed
hopes
to increase inflationary expectations from their current low levels.
One
hopes
that it will furnish an ambitious agenda.
The summit between South Korean President Kim Dae Jung and North Korea's "Dear Leader" Kim Jong Il raised
hopes
on both sides of the Korean peninsula that 55 years of hot and cold war may diminish.
This year’s revamped publication – shorter than usual, analytically well-structured, and written in lucid prose, without hyperbole – in some ways mirrors Africa’s own transformation, as it raises
hopes
that we may at last be witnessing the continent’s long-promised economic arrival.
In the 1960s,
hopes
were high.
Many had much higher
hopes
for Russia, and the former Soviet Union more broadly, when the Iron Curtain fell.
Costs are being pushed higher by the arrival of new medical technologies, aggressive marketing of pharmaceuticals directly to consumers, and the public's high
hopes
for medical miracles.
Maintaining financial stability in a crisis is too important for us to pin our
hopes
on a narrow bankruptcy channel.
One
hopes
that African heads of state will turn up in large numbers to the AU Kigali summit this month.
But
hopes
for democracy, be it secular or Islamist, for the people concerned have been buried in the rubble and carnage of Baghdad, Beirut, and Kandahar.
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