Infant
in sentence
323 examples of Infant in a sentence
They have to follow wedding vows, attend the classes regularly & get abstain from sex, handle robotic
infant
twins etc.etc.during the course.
Unemployed, penniless, and father of a deformed
infant
(possibly the result of Agent Orange spraying), leading man Frankie (Rick Giovinazzo) walks the streets of New Jersey like a shambling corpse and encounters various miscreants as troubled as himself.
This 1941 animated introduction to Superman had a different "take" on it in that they explain that when the baby from Krypton crash-landed on earth, the
infant
was taken to an orphanage and raised.
Eliminating it will not only help farmers and the West as it tries to curtail heroin use, but also Afghanistan's
infant
government as it struggles to assert its national authority against the warlords.
It was believed that the Internet and mobile communications, then
infant
technologies, would make it unnecessary for people to live in crowded and expensive urban hubs.
As prime minister, Nehru carefully nurtured the country’s
infant
democratic institutions by showing them respect, even deference.
Among ASEAN countries, Myanmar has the lowest life expectancy and the second-highest rate of
infant
and child mortality.
After Kenya removed tariffs and taxes on anti-malaria products, for example, it reported a 44% decline in
infant
mortality and disease between 2002 and 2009.
List of priorities, outcome document from Copenhagen Consensus by UN ambassadors, June 16-17 2006 at Georgetown University:challengeopportunity1Communicable DiseasesScaled-up basic health services2Sanitation and WaterCommunity-managed water supply and sanitation3EducationPhysical expansion4Malnutrition and HungerImproving
infant
and child nutrition5Malnutrition and HungerInvestment in technology in developing country agriculture6Communicable DiseasesControl of HIV/AIDS7Communicable DiseasesControl of malaria8Malnutrition and HungerReducing micro nutrient deficiencies9Subsidies and Trade BarriersOptimistic Doha: 50% liberalization10EducationImprove quality / Systemic reforms11Sanitation and WaterSmall-scale water technology for livelihoods12EducationExpand demand for schooling13Malnutrition and HungerReducing Low Birth Weight for high risk pregnancies14EducationReductions in the cost of schooling to increase demand15Sanitation and WaterResearch to increase water productivity in food production16MigrationMigration for development17CorruptionProcurement reform18ConflictsAid post-conflict to reduce the risk of repeat conflict19Sanitation and WaterRe-using waste water for agriculture20MigrationGuest worker policies21Sanitation and WaterSustainable food and fish production in wetlands22CorruptionGrassroots monitoring and service delivery23CorruptionTechnical assistance to develop monitoring and transparency initiatives24MigrationActive immigration policies25Subsidies and Trade BarriersPessimistic Doha: 25% liberalization26CorruptionReduction in the state-imposed costs of business/government relations27Climate ChangeThe Kyoto Protocol28ConflictsAid as conflict prevention29CorruptionReform of revenue collection30Financial InstabilityInternational solution to the currency-mismatch problem31ConflictsTransparency in natural resource rents as conflict prevention32ConflictsMilitary spending post-conflict to reduce the risk of repeat conflict33Financial InstabilityRe-regulate domestic financial markets34ConflictsShortening conflicts: Natural resource tracking35Financial InstabilityReimpose capital controls36Financial InstabilityAdopt a common currency37Subsidies and Trade BarriersFull reform: 100% liberalization38Climate ChangeOptimal carbon tax39Climate ChangeValue-at-risk carbon tax40Climate ChangeA carbon tax starting at $2 and ending at $20The Eurozone According to MerkelBRUSSELS – We had almost given up waiting for them, but then they came in a quasi-clandestine form.
Leon Kass, who subsequently served as chair of President George W. Bush’s Council on Bioethics, argued that the risk of producing an abnormal
infant
was too great for an attempt at IVF ever to be justified.
Spending $3.9 billion on family planning and maternal health initiatives, such as provision of emergency contraception in sub-Saharan Africa and South Asia, could avert 1.4 million
infant
deaths and 142,000 pregnancy-related deaths in women.
For example, between 1990 and 2015, average life expectancy increased,
infant
mortality rates were halved, secondary school enrollment soared, and infrastructure gaps narrowed.
Out-of-pocket costs skyrocketed,
infant
mortality rates stopped declining, and the disease surveillance system was weakened, which may have contributed to the SARS epidemic in 2002-2003, which took more than 900 lives worldwide and caused economic losses worth an estimated $60 billion.
The United Nations Population Fund, for example, estimates that increased use of contraceptives in developing countries would reduce annual maternal deaths by 70,000, and
infant
deaths by 500,000.
In the early years of the Internet, an
infant
tech industry pled for a hands-off approach to regulation and taxation.
The most common narrative we hear about Haiti is one of great need – the “poorest country in the Western hemisphere,” with weak infrastructure and health problems that include the region’s highest rates of infant, under-five, and maternal mortality.
It would likely seek to expand and deepen the
infant
Trans-Pacific Partnership, the trade agreement that President Barack Obama committed the US to last year.
Perhaps the most effective way to reduce
infant
mortality would be to encourage uptake of two readily available resources: maternal vaccinations and breast milk.
Armed with data from these and other studies, governments in low-income countries should be able to plan smarter immunization campaigns and substantially lower rates of
infant
morbidity and mortality.
In fact, producing milk for a single
infant
burns as much as 500 calories a day.
These two practices alone could do more to reduce
infant
mortality than just about any other global health initiative.
In announcing his resignation on December 31 Boris Yeltsin may have succeeded on both counts, assuring not only his personal safety, but his place in history and Russia's
infant
democracy.
Malnutrition causes the greatest damage during the first thousand days of life, leading to grievous and irreversible changes in
infant
health.
Is it really worth the risk of destabilizing Yugoslavia's
infant
democracy to carry out trials that Yugoslavia's government shows every sign of being able to carry out?
Is EU membership worth the life of Romania’s democratic parties, perhaps its
infant
democracy?
A Duty to Help the RefugeesNEW YORK – I owe my life to the readiness of the British authorities to accept me as an
infant
refugee from Nazi Germany.
Malawi is one of the world’s least developed countries, with an
infant
mortality rate of 94 per thousand and a life expectancy at birth of 41 years.
One can only regret that the media seem less interested in this exciting and momentous story, which has the potential to help millions of children, than in Madonna’s adoption of a single Malawian
infant.
Every percentage-point fall in growth has direct social consequences, whether on nutrition levels,
infant
mortality, or school attendance.
For all the good news about Mexico's
infant
democracy, its president is beginning to justify the early fears about him: no vision, no Congress to work with, and no team that knows what to do.
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