Losing
in sentence
1635 examples of Losing in a sentence
In other words, immigration bans put the US – where 30% of the country’s Nobel laureates were born somewhere else – at risk of
losing
its attractiveness for foreign talent.
And, make no mistake: despite what the populists say, ISIS is
losing.
In Nigeria, I started the Independent Project for Equal Rights (TIERs) in 2005 to respond to the increasing number of people who were
losing
their jobs because of suspicions about their sexuality.
The housing recession – the worst in US history and worsening every day – will eventually see house prices fall by more than 20%, with millions of Americans
losing
their homes.
Similarly, one in five eligible workers nationwide (more than six million people) do not file for the federal EITC each year,
losing
out on some $16 billion in unclaimed credits.
Nor will the West acknowledge Iran’s centrality to any multilateral process, for fear of
losing
negotiating leverage with respect to Iran’s nuclear program.
In fact, while concerns over the eurozone’s survival tend to focus on its indebted members, Europe’s monetary union is at risk of
losing
one of the few members that still enjoys a triple-A credit rating: Finland.
America is
losing
its international competitiveness, neglecting its poor – one in five American children is trapped in poverty – and leaving a mountain of debt to its young.
They need to make money but have no idea about risk, as demonstrated by the fact that they loaned money to every
losing
proposition of the past 15 years.
The first is Monti’s surprise resignation in December, after
losing
the backing of Berlusconi’s party.
A Lifeline for European SolidarityMADRID – A human tragedy is unfolding in the Mediterranean, with hundreds of thousands of refugees risking – and, in many cases,
losing
– their lives for the chance to find refuge in Europe.
I’m not a wholehearted Euro-enthusiast, but a European Union without Britain feels like
losing
a limb in a terrible accident.
Peering into the future of this premier league of companies five years from now, the FT sees a number of shifts as likely, with Europe catching up, Japan
losing
even more ground, and America giving up some ground, too.
This glimpse into the future mirrors today’s perceptions of a maturing (a code-word for
losing
its edge) American economy and a Europe able to play catch-up because the new business culture is at last taking hold.
In
losing
its existential enemy, the West lost the foil against which it declared its own moral superiority.
In the 1980s, President Reagan believed that America was
losing
its entrepreneurial edge, and that Japan and Europe were overtaking it, so he let the deficit rip.
France could afford to reduce its profit tax rate to 25%, as Macron has proposed, without
losing
significant tax revenues.
And southern Mediterranean countries can’t hope to make up in America and Asia the opportunities and investments that they are
losing
in Europe, certainly not in the short term.
She was right, but it is a war that the US is losing, because it is regularly out-flanked by Al-Qaeda.
As a common sports adage puts it: never change a winning game, but always change a
losing
one.
Instead, Sudan (along with Benin) was the tournament’s least successful team,
losing
all three games that it played.
Banks in Ireland and Spain are discovering that their customers are
losing
their jobs and income as the construction bust hits the national economies.
But that has not made a real difference; at the end of the day, America is also
losing
interest in NATO, which turned in a not-fully-convincing performance in Libya and a downright poor one in Afghanistan.
Broadening the discussion beyond a focus on the big two agreements – and beyond some of their substantive issues – will create a sense of urgency and purpose, pushing the US to engage actively or risk
losing
its central role in the global trade agenda.
The rationale underlying this policy is that Iran’s leaders, fearful of
losing
political control as popular discontent increases over the sanctions’ effects, will recalculate the costs and benefits of their nuclear activities and become receptive to negotiated constraints in exchange for removal of sanctions.
Divided between the fear of a hasty enlargement and the fear of a slow one, European governments have begun
losing
influence across the Balkans, as the region’s leaders have started to doubt the sincerity of the EU’s commitment – and the need to pursue EU-mandated reforms.
Given all of this, Europe is
losing
relevance internally and externally.
The same sort of logic applies to the large states: France and Germany are
losing
skilled labor at the same time as they are drawing in cheaper labor from Eastern Europe.
The “hard Brexit” option that has gotten a lot of attention lately – particularly since British Prime Minister Theresa May announced her intention to focus on limiting immigration, even if it means
losing
access to the single market – would by itself change the way Europe functions.
This creates a powerful incentive to overinvest and implies enormous redistribution from households to SOEs, most of which would be
losing
money if they had to borrow at market-equilibrium interest rates.
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