Lining
in sentence
204 examples of Lining in a sentence
Perhaps, but don’t expect to see true believers
lining
up to have their cryptocurrency tattoos removed just yet.
He also paid nearly $20,000 for a python jacket, but the ostrich jacket, with white satin lining, caught the public’s imagination.
Even the most optimistic-minded would struggle to find a silver
lining
in that outlook.
Is there even a shred of silver
lining
to be found in the tatters of Brexit, Donald Trump’s election, and European disunity?
But its consistent preference for
lining
up on the other side of the divide – even when doing so runs counter to its own national interests – calls into question whether it has the internal fortitude to be a leader.
The country’s declining number of voters are
lining
up in favor of cheaper, imported food.
The medium-term silver
lining
is that the Petrobras investigation demonstrates Brazil’s commitment to the rule of law, implying that the country’s reputation among investors will recover.
Another potential silver
lining
to a multiparty system is that it might lead to more political engagement.
Many are
lining
up to oppose the science of global warming.
Overlooked in all the excitement over Trump’s
lining
up with Democratic leaders was that the issue at hand concerned legislative timing, not substance.
But even here the cloud has a silver lining; clearly, Eastern Europe or the former Soviet Union (at least the stable and modernizing regions) are also among the potential offshore locations for a Germany or Japan that is fighting to cut labor costs.
Even left-wing intellectuals are
lining
up to support Putin for protecting ethnic Russians from what the Kremlin and its allied media portray as “fascist” Ukrainian nationalism.
They might think that, soon enough, other countries will be
lining
up to offer the North a seat at the diplomatic table.
As the occupying armies were replaced by civilian officials as administrators, and Germans were recruited to help them, the silver
lining
of Western democracy became more and more noticeable.
But disasters and economic crises can have a silver
lining
if they spur fundamental innovation by forcing us to think about how to manage risks in the future.
Global Institutions after the CrisisOXFORD – When Lehman Brothers collapsed and the global financial crisis erupted five years ago, many glimpsed a silver lining: the promise of more effective global economic governance.
Is Greece the “canary in the coalmine” – the warning that tells us that Europe’s monetary union is on the verge of dissolution, with the other three of the famous PIGS (Portugal, Italy, and Spain)
lining
up like dominoes to fall?George Soros fears this might be the case, and gives the eurozone only a 50% chance of survival in its present form.
The silver
lining
of past financial crises in Latin America is that most individuals carry far less debt than do Americans.
The only possible silver
lining
to this sorry history is that some of Tsipras’s supporters at home may now be willing to swallow the creditors’ bitter medicine.
The Great Divergence had a silver lining: developing countries could use technology transfers from advanced countries to achieve a faster rate of economic growth than the countries that were at the industrial vanguard.
That recession was destructive, but it had one silver lining: an inspiration to the world that an independent central bank can take tough measures to ensure price stability.
The silver
lining
of the Euroskeptics’ success is that pro-Europeans have been shaken from their complacency.
Let Developing Nations RuleCAMBRIDGE – There is a silver
lining
for developing nations in the present crisis, for they will emerge with a much bigger say in the institutions that govern economic globalization.
Instead of working to achieve the diplomatic objective of defeating al-Shabaab, Kenya’s military, politicians, and well-connected businessmen have been
lining
their own pockets.
That would be devastating, but the silver
lining
is that, eventually, a resistance would rise up and destroy the system.
In fact, a revanchist US trade agenda may have a silver
lining.
After
lining
up for an Association Agreement with the European Union, former Ukrainian President Viktor Yanukovych instead opted for closer ties with Russia, following immense pressure from the Kremlin, as well as a promise of $15 billion in financing.
There is, however, a silver
lining
for reformers.
Moreover, those who favor cutting ties seem to believe that there are partners all over the world just
lining
up to defend the liberal global order together with Europe.
And, though there is no shortage of candidates
lining
up to succeed him in 2016, one might wonder, after his experience, why anyone would want the job.
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