Invest
in sentence
1669 examples of Invest in a sentence
But we also need to be willing to
invest
as a global society.
So knowing that direct air capture is one front in our fight against climate change, imagine that we could
invest
20 percent, 20 billion dollars.
We need you to help us imagine how to
invest
in the services and products and infrastructure that will support our dignity, our independence and our well-being in these many, many decades that we're going to live.
Barack Obama: To help families refinance their homes, to
invest
in things like high-tech manufacturing, clean energy and the infrastructure that creates good new jobs.
When you
invest
in a company, you own part of that company.
Would any of us
invest
in that new, deadly industry?
I suggest finance leaders ask a suite of three questions of any company in which they might
invest
our money.
If the global finance sector continues to lend money to tobacco companies, to
invest
in tobacco companies, and to strive to profit from tobacco companies, we are working against each other.
Let's
invest
enough in the middle class to make our economy fairer and more inclusive, and by fairer, more truly competitive, and by more truly competitive, more able to generate the solutions to human problems that are the true drivers of growth and prosperity.
Now, you might be likely to
invest
if that product was a drug or a device, but what if that product was a park?
We can all
invest
in making sure that we improve the allocation of resources upstream, but at the same time work together and show that we can move healthcare upstream.
But we have to
invest.
We have to
invest
in our cities, and we have to
invest
wisely, and if we do, we'll see cleaner cities, quieter cities, safer cities, more attractive cities, more productive cities, and stronger community in those cities — public transport, recycling, reusing, all sorts of things that bring communities together.
We can do that, but we have to think, we have to invest, we have to plan.
We have to
invest
strongly in energy, we have to use it much more efficiently, and we have to make it clean.
Governments should fund sanitation the same way they fund roads and schools and hospitals and other infrastructure like bridges, because we know, and the WHO has done this study, that for every dollar that we
invest
in sanitation infrastructure, we get something like three to 34 dollars back. Let's go back to the problem of pit emptying.
So I want to ask you all to
invest
in young refugees.
I would love to
invest
in a bullet train system in India and I would love to contribute to efforts to fight malaria in my village.
Sri Lankan men
invest
in their businesses.
When we're complacent with that as our bar, when we tell ourselves that giving aid is better than no aid at all, we tend to
invest
inefficiently, in our own ideas that strike us as innovative, on writing reports, on plane tickets and SUVs.
They're related, because if we
invest
heavily in new oil wells, we reduce the incentives for conservation of oil in the same way that's going to happen for antibiotics.
What we want to be able to do is
invest
in new antibiotics in ways that actually encourage appropriate use and sales of those antibiotics, and that really is the challenge here.
We need to have the courage to actually change the route,
invest
in something new, think that we can actually change the route.
I constantly see people saying, "Yes, I had this great idea, but no investor had the vision to invest."
Let's
invest
in building pan-African titans like Sudanese businessman Mo Ibrahim.
And secondly, we have to begin to seriously
invest
resources and share expertise to support the developing world as they fashion new, public systems of justice, not private security, that give everybody a chance to be safe.
If we
invest
in these most powerful learners and their development, in babies and children and mothers and fathers and caregivers and teachers the ways we
invest
in our other most powerful and elegant forms of technology, engineering and design, we will not just be dreaming of a better future, we will be planning for one.
They were so focused on their own individual work, they didn't even know who they were sitting next to, and it was only when I insisted that we stop working and
invest
time in getting to know each other that we achieved real momentum.
It's true that I had teachers that didn't give up on me, and I was very fortunate to have those teachers, because I often gave them cause to think there was no reason to
invest
in me.
This matters for governments, because to counter these groups, they will have to
invest
more in non-military tools.
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