Latest
in sentence
1874 examples of Latest in a sentence
This approach would be consistent with the principle, which US President Barack Obama highlighted when announcing the
latest
round of sanctions against Russia last month, that Ukraine must be permitted to “chart its own path.”
It is indicative that the
latest
Pew Research Survey in late May reveals unanimity about who the least hardworking Europeans are: southerners, especially Greeks.
According to the
latest
estimates, health-insurance premiums will rise this year by 10-15%, following similar increases in recent years.
The
latest
attempt to halt the war in eastern Ukraine by diplomatic means had an even shorter shelf life than the first attempt last September.
Nowhere is this question more relevant than with the
latest
source of that data: our bodies.
This is the
latest
in a series of revelations of how US information-technology firms have been enlisted, knowingly or otherwise, in the “war on terror” – revelations that are threatening the American IT sector’s global dominance.
Meanwhile, American and the world nervously await Trump’s reaction to this
latest
very bad turn of events for him.
In fact, the
latest
forecast reflects an even worse outcome for France and Italy this year than originally promised, with France’s deficit set to increase slightly for 2015 and Italy’s cyclically adjusted deficit expected to deteriorate.
Spend in haste, repent at leisure: America’s
latest
bailout planCambridge – With minds concentrated by fears of another 1930’s-style Great Depression, America’s politicians have adopted, virtually overnight, a $700 billon bailout plan to resuscitate the country’s rapidly deflating financial sector.
But there is a significant risk that this
latest
step, however grand, might end up doing more for profits and bonuses in the financial sector than for the rest of the economy.
The
latest
example is the United Kingdom, where trade unions have spurred the creation of the Pension Protection Fund, which will begin operating next year.
Likewise, although the
latest
measures might have some impact, cooling China’s turbulent property market – which relies on cheap credit – in the long term will require addressing underlying monetary-policy weaknesses.
But neither those concerns nor Chinese retaliation will win the US any sympathy, because the administration’s
latest
action comes on the heels of bogus US steel and aluminum tariffs, trumped up, as it were, on national security grounds.
Fortunately, the conservative political scientist Charles Murray points out some of these statistics in his
latest
book, Coming Apart.
This
latest
turn in our prime ministerial carousel has left Australians trying, yet again, to explain to bemused colleagues around the world how this stable bastion of Western democracy, and the world’s twelfth-largest economy, could be engaged in such a pantomime.
But, although North Korea’s
latest
economic travails have shaken the leadership, the regime has weathered worse.
On May 15, two small independent energy companies (Turkey’s Genel Enerji and Canada’s Addax Petroleum) became the
latest
foreign firms to begin drilling in Kurdish-controlled territory under an agreement with the regional government.
The establishment of a new air defense identification zone extending over the islands is its
latest
cabbage-style security “layer” – a unilateral power grab that US Defense Secretary Chuck Hagel quickly branded “a destabilizing attempt to alter the status quo in the region.”
In its
latest
report, the United Nations Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change concludes that it is virtually certain that, in global terms, hot days have become hotter and occur more often; indeed, they have increased in frequency by a factor of 10 in most regions of the world.
Yet the
latest
evidence demonstrates that we are not acting – the International Energy Agency’s World Energy Report 2011 reveals that CO2 emissions have rebounded to a record high.
The Durban meeting must agree to initiate negotiations towards this end – with a view to concluding a new legal instrument by 2015 at the
latest.
The
latest
indications from the Board of Governors of the US Federal Reserve – a crucial piece of this puzzle – are encouraging.
But let us put aside these questions – which have been explored in great depth – and focus on the moral issues raised by the
latest
outbreak of hostilities.
According to the International Monetary Fund’s
latest
outlook, the price deflator for all advanced economies should increase by just 1.5% annually, on average, from now to 2020 – not much higher than the crisis-depressed 1.1% pace of the last six years.
In Ukraine, violent clashes between pro-Russian separatists and the police are just the
latest
development in the country’s deteriorating security situation.
But the manufacturing fetish recurs repeatedly, the
latest
manifestation being in the United States in the wake of the recent crisis.
While these episodes reflected academic obsession with manufactures and therefore died early deaths, the same cannot be said for the
latest
revival of the “manufactures fetish” in the US and Great Britain.
The
latest
flirtation with supporting manufactures has come from the current crisis, especially in the financial sector, and is therefore likely to have greater prospects for survival.
To Thailand’s east, Vietnam is the
latest
Asian country to feel pinched by China’s policy of creating facts on the ground, or in this case at sea, to enhance its sovereignty claims on disputed territory.
But the real problem is censorship, for the explosion was but the
latest
offensive in Armenia’s hidden war against the press.
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