Letter
in sentence
2000 examples of Letter in a sentence
And a group of 47 Republican senators wrote a
letter
to Iran’s leaders announcing that the next Congress may not honor whatever nuclear deal they reach with Obama.
He raised the stakes last September, when he wrote a
letter
to Jonathan accusing the Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation (NNPC) of failing to remit $49.8 billion to government coffers – a scheme in which several senior government officials were complicit.
Three months later, the
letter
was deliberately leaked to the press.
In 1980, in a famous open
letter
entitled “The Homeland Is in Danger,” the historian Jacob Talmon tried to share this simple lesson with Prime Minister Menachem Begin.
As soon as they were appointed in June 2007, Sarkozy’s ministers were given a clear set of objectives in the form of a
letter
of intent.
After Picuti made the charges public in June 2010, Alan Leshner, Executive Publisher of Science, sent an open
letter
of protest to Italian President Giorgio Napolitano on behalf of the American Association for the Advancement of Science.
A Path through Europe’s MinefieldLONDON – Earlier this week, a group of almost 100 prominent Europeans delivered an open
letter
to the leaders of all 17 eurozone countries.
The
letter
said, in so many words, what the leaders of Europe now appear to have understood: they cannot go on “kicking the can down the road.”
When 40 leading Republican foreign policymakers and national-security experts signed a
letter
expressing their opposition to Trump, whom they fear would be “the most reckless president in American history,” their concerns were largely disregarded.
Mourning Poland’s Anti-Populist MartyrWARSAW – Late in the afternoon on October 19, a 54-year-old man outside the Palace of Culture and Science in Warsaw distributed several dozen copies of a
letter
addressed to the Polish people.
The text of the
letter
that was left behind is eminently rational.
The
letter
accuses the government, controlled by the Law and Justice (PiS) party, of restricting civil liberties and undermining the judiciary.
One of the man’s goals in immolating himself, according to the letter, was to force “the chairman of PiS and the entire PiS nomenklatura to recognize that my death is their direct responsibility, and that they have my blood on their hands.”
But the
letter
also implores the party’s opponents – 16% of Poles support the largest opposition party – “to remember that PiS voters are our mothers, brothers, neighbors, friends, and colleagues.”
The
letter
concludes by calling on all Poles to “wake up” and change their government before it causes irreparable damage to the country.
So far, all we know about the
letter
writer is that his first name is Piotr, and that he is currently in critical condition, with burns covering 60% of his body.
In a separate
letter
to the media, Piotr warned that the PiS would attempt to minimize his act of protest.
For my part, I believe the Polish people should heed the message that Piotr conveyed in his
letter.
The corruption and lawlessness that characterizes Yanukovych’s Ukraine should spur the EU to hold fast both to the
letter
and the spirit of its conditions.
In a leaked letter, Deputy Prime Minister Arkady Dvorkovich explicitly acknowledged to Prime Minister Dmitri Medvedev the impossibility of fulfilling Putin’s spending promises, and proposed a radical revision of current fiscal plans.
These were highlighted in an “Open
Letter
to Obama” that I organized and released, over the signatures of nearly 50 of today’s most influential trade experts worldwide, urging a presidential shift in policy towards Doha.
Times columnist Thomas Friedman recently penned an open
letter
to the Chinese government telling them that, because the top “cause of death of Chinese regimes in history is greed and corruption,” a free press is more likely to help than hurt.
Fiscal councils should not be put in the position of trying to interpret the
letter
of the fiscal compact.
If a country lacks a letter, it cannot make the words that use it.
Moreover, the more letters a country has, the greater the number of uses it could find for any additional
letter
it acquired.
The Zinoviev letter, a forgery implicating Britain’s Labour Party in Kremlin-led Communist sedition, was published by the Daily Mail four days before the United Kingdom’s general election in 1924, dashing Labour’s chances.
Collective knowhow refers to the ability to perform tasks that cannot be carried out by an individual, like playing a symphony or delivering the mail: neither a violinist nor a
letter
carrier can do it alone.
Many in Israel recognize this: 25 prominent Israelis, including former diplomats, army generals, and academics, signed a
letter
to Trump’s Mideast peace envoy denouncing the Jerusalem decision.
That happened to Yue Zhengzhong, who sent an intercepted
letter
to the US Embassy praising the 1999 bombing of China's Embassy in Belgrade.
A
letter
to Chinese officials, signed by many members of the US Congress, and a report by Amnesty International state that China exported weapons to Sudan in violation of UN resolutions.
Back
Next
Related words
Which
Would
Wrote
There
Received
Their
After
Could
About
Written
Write
Should
Other
Before
First
Where
Without
Might
Himself
Father