Jumped
in sentence
499 examples of Jumped in a sentence
Among Iraqis, primary self-identification in national terms
jumped
from 23% of respondents in 2004 to 57% in 2011.
Among Saudis, the figure
jumped
from 17% in 2003 to 46% in 2011, while the share of those claiming a primary Muslim identity dropped from 75% to 44%.
Yet, barring particular sectors like steel, most American politicians and bosses bit their tongues about the dollar's strength and few, if any, have
jumped
for joy at its recent decline.
Historically, real rates have
jumped
around a lot, showing little correlation with asset prices.
Since 2010, eight times as many jobs as housing units have been added in San Francisco, where the average cost of building “affordable apartments” has
jumped
to $425,000.
CAMBRIDGE: The emerging markets crisis has
jumped
across the Atlantic Ocean, to engulf Brazil and several other Latin American countries.
The Ifo climate indicator for Germany, based on monthly surveys of 7,000 firms,
jumped
upwards in the second half of 2005, reaching its highest value since the boom year 2000, with businesses’ assessment of the current situation and expectations improving.
Over the same period, South Korea’s share of global exports
jumped
from 0.3% to 3% – very close to Japan’s 3.6%.
And price growth in health-care services, which had slowed in recent years, has
jumped
to 3.9%, double the rate recorded a year ago.
But, while Fannie and Freddie
jumped
into dubious mortgages (particularly those known as Alt-A) and did some work with subprime lenders, this was relatively small stuff and late in the cycle (e.g., 2004-2005).
On the contrary, they
jumped
at the opportunity to hide their responsibility when disoriented politicians blamed other non-bank financial activities, which they have misnamed “shadow banking.”
The crew had
jumped
ship.
Nor is this the first time that Obama has
jumped
the gun.
Politicians and lobbyists who care only about this year's jobs and next year's votes have
jumped
all over this lack of a plan.
Foreign direct investment
jumped
to about 6% of GDP on average in 2005-2011 (from a historical 1%), and averaged close to 4% after that.
And the latest study by the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences shows that the debt
jumped
sharply, to 47.5% of GDP, by the end of 2014.
It finally
jumped
back up to 40% in 2016, propelled by the removal of distortionary price subsidies that had previously been used to disguise the true inflation rate.
Online sales via mobile phones have
jumped
from only 1.5% in 2011 to 55.5% in 2015, and may reach 73.8% by 2018.
Even people who used to invest in Russian oil and steel companies have
jumped
on the bandwagon.
If not, is that because 11 out of the 14 governments today are socialist/social-democrats, and
jumped
to help out when fellow Austrian socialists were poised to lose power?
This shows that the SARS virus has
jumped
species, from animals to man, on other occasions, with benign consequences.
That influenza virus has also
"jumped"
from the chickens to those who look after them, killing some people.
Since the fall of the Berlin Wall in 1989, most of the world has
jumped
on the free-market bandwagon.
When Ghana updated its reporting a few years ago, its GDP
jumped
by 60%.
While some wealthy donors are redirecting their money to congressional and state-level candidates, many others have
jumped
on board – and others will, too, to the degree that Trump seems able to beat Clinton.
French President Jacques Chirac unguardedly speculated that an Iran with one or two nuclear bombs might not pose a serious a threat, given the possibility of nuclear retaliation -- his musings so startled French officials that they quickly
jumped
in to correct the President’s comments.
When the United States, under President Barack Obama, showed itself to be unwilling to enforce its “red line” in Syria – the use of chemical weapons by President Bashar al-Assad – the Kremlin
jumped
in, establishing Russia as a sinister guarantor of Assad’s disarmament.
Annual GDP rose by 3.2% and growth of final sales
jumped
to a remarkable 7.1% year-on-year rate.
By mid-1997, the number
jumped
to 764,000!
With capital inflows amounting to 20% of GDP in the years before the war, annual economic growth
jumped
to over 12% in 2007, with the country experiencing almost 40% growth since 2003.
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