Letter
in sentence
2000 examples of Letter in a sentence
Five years ago, Taylor and his intellectual allies wrote an “Open
Letter
to Ben Bernanke,” warning that the quantitative easing planned by the Federal Reserve’s then-chairman risked “currency debasement and inflation.”
Building on the sentiments of his encyclical letter, Laudato Si’, Francis highlighted the international community’s responsibility to respond to human suffering, such as that faced by refugees and those living in extreme poverty, and called for global solidarity in order to overcome social exclusion and inequality.
Each
letter
of the acronym is important and necessary in the fight against the tobacco epidemic.
So is the 19-page annual
letter
that describes the work of the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation, the world’s largest philanthropy.
Bill Gates’s experts seem not to know that; the foundation’s annual
letter
contains the following single mention of DDT: “The world hoped in the 1950s and 1960s that [malaria] could be eliminated by killing mosquitoes with DDT, but that tactic failed when the mosquitoes evolved to be resistant to the chemical.”
With his letter, President Bush managed to punish the Palestinians twice: by making significant concessions on their behalf and by excluding them from negotiations.
For the Palestinians, the bottom line in the Sharon plan and the Bush
letter
is that diplomacy and negotiations no longer have a role: Israeli unilateralism, combined with American prejudgment, makes that clear.
There can be no doubt that before coming to the US, Iran’s new president studied Obama’s
letter
to Khamenei, who promised “heroic flexibility” in negotiations.
A similar letter, signed by CEE Bankwatch Network and 45 other environmental NGOs from across the region, had already been sent to the European Commission’s Directorate-General for the Environment and the European Union’s director at the EBRD.
In a
letter
published last month in The Lancet, doctors, scientists, and bioethicists from a wide range of countries – including Guinea, Ghana, Nigeria, and Senegal, as well as Britain, France, Hong Kong, and the United States – argued that a randomized trial is justified only when there is “equipoise,” or balance, between the two options offered.
At the end of August, I joined nine other American Nobel Prize winners in economics in signing an open
letter
to the American public.
To contact friends or colleagues overseas, you had to write them a
letter
and wait at least two weeks for a reply.
Vikram Seth, the author of A Suitable Boy and other fine novels, recently published an open
letter
to the government of India calling for a repeal of the law that makes homosexuality a crime.
Many other notable Indians signed the letter, while still others, including the Nobel Laureate Amartya Sen, have given it their support.
On February 1, Laurence Fink, the chief executive of investment firm BlackRock, wrote a
letter
to some of the world’s largest companies in which he issued a stern warning against short-termism and demanded that companies lay out clear strategic plans.
As Greek Prime Minister George Papandreou put it last week in his powerful
letter
to the head of the Eurogroup, Luxembourg’s Prime Minister Jean-Claude Juncker, “The markets and rating agencies have not responded as we had all expected.”
For example, a coalition of lawyers argued this week in an open
letter
that the UN is being “overcautious” and has the authority to enter Syria without its government’s consent in order to provide aid.
Obama’s Letters and Trump’s DelusionsTOKYO – When was the last time you sat down and wrote a
letter?
No, I mean an old-fashioned “Dear Donald” or “Dear Hillary”
letter.
Rather than a letter, he might be handed a string of Republican congressional defeats.
In May 1930, some 1,028 of America’s leading academic economists wrote a public
letter
to US President Herbert Hoover urging him to veto the pending Smoot-Hawley tariff bill.
Eddie’s accompanying flattery aside, I would normally trash such a letter, figuring it was a fraud or scam of some kind.
A group of strange bedfellows – “gig” employers, labor organizations, venture capitalists, and bipartisan think tanks – recently issued a
letter
calling for a stable and flexible safety net based on these conditions.
On trade and tariffs, while AMLO’s specific stances are unknown, many of his economic proposals contradict the
letter
or the spirit of NAFTA.
A large coalition of technology companies and civil-society organizations recently sent a
letter
to President Barack Obama arguing against backdoors.
The technology corporations that signed this
letter
understand that while they may be incorporated in the US, they are global players and have global responsibilities.
He was a signatory to a November 19, 2008
letter
also signed by noted progressives James K. Galbraith, Dean Baker, and Larry Mishel calling for a stimulus of $300-$400 billion – less than half of what the Obama administration proposed.
Many non-Chinese, including me, have signed a
letter
of protest against the jailing of Liu Xiaobo.
In a recent
letter
to the chief executives of the S&P 500 companies and large European corporations, Larry Fink, the CEO of BlackRock, the world’s largest investment management company, expressed concern that many global firms may be sacrificing value-creating investments by distributing dividends and buying back their own shares.
In his recent CEO letter, Fink also calls on companies to issue annual “strategic frameworks” for long-term value creation, supported by quantifiable financial metrics and linking long-term executive compensation to performance on them.
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