Indeed
in sentence
12187 examples of Indeed in a sentence
Indeed, it is expected to be one of the last foreign trips for the 79-year-old emperor, who has undergone several major surgeries in the past decade.
Indeed, America’s only successful attempts at peace diplomacy in the Middle East involved a masterly combination of power, manipulation, and pressure.
Indeed, the mind does not operate like a video recorder, and thus not every aspect of a traumatic experience gets encoded into memory in the first place.
Indeed, business lending – particularly to small businesses – in both the US and Europe remains markedly below pre-crisis levels.
Legal transplants, indeed, are as old as the law.
Transplanting laws, indeed, seems as risky as transplanting organs because, like organs, legal transplants may be rejected.
Servants, indeed, are a bulwark of Mexican machismo.
Indeed, the overwhelming majority of African rulers regard their countries as their personal possessions, to be used as they see fit.
If you worry about financial Armageddon, it is
indeed
metaphorically the time to stock your bunker with guns, ammunition, canned food, and gold bars.
Indeed, at the peak of the global financial crisis in 2008 and 2009, gold prices fell sharply a few times.
Indeed, US and global equities have vastly outperformed gold since the sharp rise in gold prices in early 2009.
Indeed, a report that Cyprus might sell a small fraction – some €400 million ($520 million) – of its gold reserves triggered a 13% fall in gold prices in April.
Indeed, according to the IMF, Spain should record growing current-account surpluses over the next five years, as exports rise strongly, thus cutting the external debt/export ratio by half (to about 150% in 2018), while Portugal’s ratio should fall to about 250%.
Indeed, China’s military use of space is increasingly dependent and interlinked with civilian and commercial space activities, infrastructure, and human capital.
Indeed, despite the destabilizing impact of Brexit, it is possible that, in the long run, Europe would be better off without the UK.
Indeed, given the difficulty in estimating the total size of resources, many consider peak oil theories irrelevant.
Indeed, even much of the Islamist political movement in Turkey has already made its choice in favor of democracy and universal human rights.
Indeed, outdated cultural norms and stereotypes – such as the idea that science, technology, engineering, and mathematics are “for boys” – continue to prevent women from pursuing ICT-based careers.
Indeed, such considerations can help them to chart a path to economic prosperity and social cohesion.
Indeed, there is a strong positive correlation between the pace of economic growth and “intangible infrastructure” – the combination of education, health care, technology, and the rule of law that promotes the development of human capital and enables businesses to grow efficiently.
Indeed, even without full independence, this is precisely what Scotland, which has been promised even greater autonomy within the UK than it already has, will have to do if it is to succeed.
If choices among policies were purely Paretian, i.e., if no one was made worse off by choosing one policy, as against another, the choices involved would
indeed
be purely "technical."
Indeed, because VAT is a tax on the formal sector--the new factories, banks, and so forth that pay regular salaries and whose incomes and expenditures can easily be traced (as distinct from those of the cash-based street vendors, village enterprises, and poor farmers)--VAT impedes development.
Indeed, Putin and Medvedev have worked in perfect tandem with respect to Georgia, cooperating and skillfully performing their different roles, with Putin cast in the lead role of the menacing god of a Russian reckoning, and Medvedev in the supporting role of a possible humanitarian peacemaker.
An integrated, continent-wide energy strategy, linked to national policies for growth would, indeed, go a long way toward addressing this important need.
Indeed, boosting its energy capacity will be critical to unleashing the continent's economic and human potential.
However, the fate of Bush’s friend, British Prime Minister Tony Blair, shows that lame-duck status can occur even without a constitutional term limit – indeed, without a written constitution at all.
Indeed, reforms announced by Blair increasingly sound like empty promises, because the apparently inevitable has happened: the Prime Minister has lost touch with the public.
And, indeed, the new CEO shows up with big plans, spending the first six months dismantling and castigating past policies and practices, sometimes without rhyme or reason.
Trump fancies himself America’s CEO; indeed, he won the presidency partly because he pitched himself as a successful business tycoon.
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