Neither
in sentence
786 examples of Neither in a sentence
Yet, in debates in the Diet, our parliament,
neither
Prime Minister Koizumi nor the Foreign Minister utter anything more than such tepid responses as: "Japan cannot respond to a hypothetical situation;" or "Japan cannot take a definitive stance without assessing the results of the inspections;" and "It is in Japan's national interest not to declare whether or not it supports the use of force."
Neither
the US public nor Congress has proven willing to invest seriously in the instruments of nation building and governance as opposed to military force.
Transforming a dictatorship into a democracy in a country that has never known democracy and lacked the economic and civic resources to sustain it was at least a generation-long endeavor (though
neither
the US nor the UK government initially justified the intervention on these grounds).
Neither
the OAS nor the EU has been invited to observe elections in Venezuela since 2006.
In the developed world, we are surrounded by all kinds of technological staples – iPads, smoothie-making blenders, automatic vacuum-cleaning robots – that our parents
neither
had nor imagined that they would need.
Puerto Rico cannot declare bankruptcy under Chapter 9
(neither
can any of the 50 states).
Refugees are not an Eastern European problem, a Polish journalist told National Public Radio in the United States, because these countries did not participate in the decision to bomb Libya
(neither
did Germany).
Such individualism fit
neither
Leninist nor traditional Chinese proscriptions for behavior by a high official.
Neither
Europe nor the United States has put in place credible medium-term plans to stabilize their fiscal positions.
For the Arab regimes,
neither
the promise of subsidies nor the threat of repression can squeeze the political genie back into its bottle.
Neither
the intensity of these arguments, nor mountains of sophisticated data, can relieve me of the feeling that this debate is stuck in a rut and stunted: stuck, because beyond the notion that growth is a necessary but insufficient condition for reducing poverty, our ideas on the matter have changed little over the years; stunted, because two vital things are often missing from these arguments.
Although these programs’ comprehensive nature explains their success,
neither
the Banking Recovery and Resolution Directive nor the Single Resolution Board (SRB) are designed to put in place such systemic responses.
Neither
the economy in general, nor the retail sector in particular, should be adversely affected.
Neither
the old statist left, nor the rent-seeking, crony-capitalist right had policies to respond to the yearning for inclusion.
Neither
the economics nor the politics of this pattern of current-account balances is sustainable, especially in a recessionary environment.
For starters,
neither
the collapse of Credit-Anstalt nor that of Lehman Brothers caused all of the global financial tumult that ensued.
Contrary to what zealots in either camp claim,
neither
public nor private schools perform better than the alternative at all times.
Since the start of this decade,
neither
recession nor hurricanes nor sky-high oil prices have seemed to dent their appetites.
Unfortunately,
neither
SCAF nor Morsi espouses the type of liberal regime that would provide women with opportunities to take on the leadership roles that have traditionally been denied to them.
Yet
neither
the EU nor any of its member states has a coherent immigration policy with this end in mind.
Yet, despite their rhetorical commitments to completing the Doha round,
neither
the US nor any other economic power has done much to move it forward.
Neither
the left nor the right looked after the interests of the old working class in busted mining towns, rusting ports, and decaying smokestack cities.
Getting “stuck in transition” is a third possible scenario, with Libya remaining in a “gray zone” –
neither
a fully-fledged democracy nor a dictatorship, but “semi-free.”
Neither
the Bosnian nor the Kosovo problems have yet found a permnanet solution: the killings, however, have stopped.
In other words,
neither
God nor the Church is really needed to tell us how to behave.
Moreover,
neither
the costs nor the risks are possible to calculate with precision.
Neither
do I.
Neither
the conflict in Ukraine nor the dialogue with Russia should be allowed to undermine the Helsinki principles or the Paris Charter agreed at the Cold War’s end.
Neither
the Bank of Japan nor the European Central Bank has provided any indication that it is set to tighten monetary policy, even though economic conditions today are totally different from those that prevailed during the crisis and subsequent double-dip recession in the eurozone.
When both parties to a dispute know that they are likely to end in a labor court,
neither
has an incentive to compromise.
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