Individual
in sentence
3461 examples of Individual in a sentence
The only hope for offsetting this fundamental shortcoming is that the court exercises sound judgment in
individual
cases.
In 2001, 72% of institutional investors and 74% of
individual
investors chose “increase.”
By May 2007, only 48% of institutional investors and 59% of
individual
investors chose “increase.”
Performance enhancing drugs affect the
individual
athlete's integrity in two ways.
Joblessness will undermine
individual
and community wellbeing even if consumption levels are propped up through cash grants.
After all, in a world where automation can free us from the drudgery of endless work, a good education will better equip us to live satisfying lives, regardless of whether it increases
individual
pay or measured prosperity.
The modern information ecosystem is like a Rubik’s Cube, where a different move is required to “solve” each
individual
square.
Better still, initiatives are no longer confined to
individual
cities.
Individual
consumers are also important, because their behavior shapes energy demand.
Although
individual
taxes on corporate income reduce the after-tax return to savings, they have less distorting effects on investment location than corporate taxes do, and they are more likely to fall on owners of capital than on workers.
Moreover, it is far easier to collect taxes from
individual
citizens and resident shareholders than from multinational corporations.
Apple can use sophisticated techniques to manipulate the location of its corporate income, but
individual
US citizens who own Apple stock have to report the dividends and capital gains that they earn from it in their worldwide income.
In public education, Bush favors a system of vouchers administered by
individual
states.
In other words, Gore sees the pension system as a means to redistribute between rich and poor;Bush sees it more as a “private” system to accumulate
individual
pension savings.
Obama also claimed that the US targets only “terrorists who pose a continuing and imminent threat to the American people,” and that it does not launch drone strikes when it has “the ability to capture
individual
terrorists.”
Turkey is now fully under the political control of a single
individual
– and incapable of dealing with the multiple crises that it faces.
While Americans certainly mourn the dead and support the city of Boston, there has been a kind of penetration into the national consciousness that, after the 2001 attacks, America’s leaders used the bogeyman of terrorism to encroach on
individual
rights, fund almost every conceivable domestic-security boondoggle, and advance the self-interested agendas of the defense and surveillance industries.
First,
individual
countries borrow far above any sensible level, knowing that they will be saved from insolvency by rescue operations financed by the other member countries.
Italians already shoulder heavy taxes: an
individual
taxpayer with annual income of €50,000 pays €15,000 in income tax; with two children, that total drops by only €1,000.
They also reflect a disturbing trend affecting EU institutions:
individual
countries’ interests are increasingly trumping unity and cooperation.
Our empathy toward them might even drive us to make sacrifices that jeopardize our
individual
survival, but that makes perfect sense in terms of preserving our shared genes.
Amid the debates about their future role, Europe’s universities must not lose sight of their
individual
identity, their traditions, and their sense of social purpose.
The alternative is a formulaic educational experience that not only lacks
individual
character, but that is also devoid of moral purpose.
A World Bank study found that under-nutrition can cost an
individual
up to 10% of his or her potential lifetime earnings, and as much as 3% of a country’s GDP.
It also requires tolerance of minorities and respect for
individual
rights, as well as the development of effective institutions for resolving political conflicts in divided societies.
To succeed in restoring a strong growth path, East Asia must deliver justice for more than
individual
human rights violations.
One issue connected with institutional reform is the question of how to give smaller States a certainty that they will not be simply outvoted by larger ones, yet pay due regard to the size of these
individual
States.
Thus, the EU’s first chamber - ie, its present Parliament - would mirror the size of
individual
member States; its second chamber, with the same number of representatives from every State, would enhance equality.
Fourth, the JLN and the GCEN are committed to measuring collective and
individual
progress.
In any case, it would be absurd to rearrange the currency union every time
individual
members’ relative competitiveness changes.
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