Issue
in sentence
4803 examples of Issue in a sentence
That is what's happening right now, and it's a very different
issue
than the global warming
issue.
And the
issue
in Africa is that there are fewer nurses, really than doctors, and so we need to find new paradigm for health care.
And in a way because of the stigma, by wearing this t-shirt I say, "Yes, we can talk about this
issue.
The first really big health
issue
is a word that Murray Schafer coined: "schizophonia."
It may seem like a small thing, but it's representative of a much more serious
issue.
Now with the pollination, it's a very serious
issue
for plants, because they move the pollen from one flower to the other, yet they cannot move from one flower to the other.
So if sales start to drop, then the person can identify the problem and address the
issue.
But that suggests the
issue
that I'm trying to get at here, that we have an opportunity to redefine what is health.
And my intention was to go out to the gyre, raise awareness about this
issue
and begin to pick up the plastic, chip it into little bits and cold mold it into bricks that could potentially be used as building materials in underdeveloped communities.
So I came together with a group of other people who were all looking at this issue, and we created the Plastic Pollution Coalition.
So this is a big
issue
for us.
We can solve this by raising awareness of the
issue
and teaching people to choose alternatives.
So in Lebanon, we enrolled the newspaper editors, and we got them to publish eight cartoonists from all sides all together on the same page, addressing the
issue
affecting Lebanon, like religion in politics and everyday life.
And then in Kenya, what we did was addressing the
issue
of ethnicity, which is a poison in a lot of places in Africa.
The
issue
is, at that price, can you give them some extra value?
I struggled to [unclear] day was a huge
issue.
So we're seeing financial reward being used to tackle the great
issue
of obesity.
He said, "We often
issue
these permits to do research in our waters, but usually we get a note two or three years later, or a reprint.
There's also the
issue
of timescales, because some processes take place on a scale of seconds, some minutes, some days, months and years.
And then rebellious military deserter Ryan Phillippe goes on a "Road Trip" with best friend's girlfriend, an artificial storyline manipulation to visit families of dead servicemen, maimed soldiers in military hospitals, etc. and finally to broach the
issue
of fleeing to Canada or Mexico.
In a courtroom drama, the closing statement of the defence attorney is pretty much the crux of the film, and when the
issue
is as difficult to resolve as this one, the statement is really being delivered to the audience as well as the jury.
Then there was the
issue
of Shipwreck tied up along with his parrot, and tossed into some room where nobody had checked for several days.
The story lines are dire - every episode revolves round a bizarre medical
issue
acted out by a variety of brummie extras who can never actually act, and for some reason the doctor always ends up round their house solving their problem.
I can completely understand if someone is opposed to the death penalty, but to completely ignore the crime, as if it didn't happen, and try to put Wanda on some moral mountain top, is offensive in nature, and that's not the side of the
issue
I would be associated with.
And Calvin is faced with another moral
issue
involving taking a large sum of money.
Blame that on shows like "The Dating Game" and "The Newlywed Game" bringing the
issue
of sex to the forefront in the mid-1960s.
Considering that it was made in 1953, this is a very courageous movie about transvestites, tackling the
issue
fairly seriously and sympathetically (and offering the viewer a lot of information on the subject) and trying very hard not to stereotype.
It deals with the pain of not being accepted in society - the plot revolves around a police officer (Lyle Talbot) desperately trying to understand the
issue
because of the recent suicide of a transvestite.
I really wanted to like this film for all sorts of reasons -- the subject matter is inherently interesting and is probably the major
issue
facing the world today and has thrown up fascinating works (e.g.
The main
issue
here is that Attenborough's character brings everything upon himself and, quite frankly, is guilty of almost every accusation brought against him, so it's baffling why the film (and all the characters) have so much sympathy for him.
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