Newcomers
in sentence
182 examples of Newcomers in a sentence
Soon, the
newcomers
encounter strange and eventually fatal spectral visitations.
I have appreciated some attempts by some
newcomers
to the genre.
The antagonist is the extremely unfriendly neighbor from across the street who, for no apparent reason, is openly hostile towards the
newcomers.
many would simply class it in the same school because it is british, it features "hip" newcomers, and the direction is very flashy and effects rich.....well except for the british part this describes most every film coming out now. the last minute is as far from guy ritchie as one can get.
The cast are surprisingly good, Thora Birch is a talented lead and the other 3
newcomers
are very promising.
Forget the cheap sets, poor cinematography and weak soundtrack; a gay indie with a bunch of
newcomers
is entitled to take short cuts.
Ryan's Hope, the story of the Ryan family, was a wonderful show filmed in New York City, thereby giving it the advantage of some veteran stage actors as well as
newcomers.
Very well-acted by a mix of
newcomers
and veteran talent, "The Garage" has a great, evocative look, and subtly brings back its late 1970s, pre-MTV time period.
It's only saving grace Is the actors, who understandably still work well together after all those years, even
newcomers
Rosario Dawson and whoever plays Joanne fit in nicely.
These are the freak-show Stanley Kubrick works of anime, and more than likely scare the HELL out of
newcomers
to this wonderful art form.
Director Todd Graff brought a cast of talented young
newcomers
(see the IMDb page for this film for cast names)to this high-energy story about a summer at "Camp Ovation," a kind of Parris Island for theatre arts and music and dance ingenues and would-be stars.
Not only did Chinese regulators enable the bubble’s growth by allowing retail investors – many of them
newcomers
to the market – to engage in margin trading (using borrowed money); the policy response to the market correction that began in late June has also been highly problematic.
Nuclear safety is of the utmost importance to both established users and
newcomers.
This translated into series of positive initiatives towards the aspiring newcomers: the PHARE programme, the EBRD, the association agreements leading to a slow but steady strengthening of the EU's ties with candidate countries.
Continental Europe is becoming, and will become, more ethnically mixed as more
newcomers
from Eastern Europe and the developing world arrive.
In the United States and elsewhere, elected governments used to take care of the people, but now, like companies colluding against their customers to keep out disruptive newcomers, they have become a separate interest group.
For example, to maintain its current population size, Japan would have to accept 350,000
newcomers
annually for the next 50 years, which is difficult for a culture that has historically been hostile to immigration.
To some extent, this trend is being offset by immigration, with three
newcomers
(officially) arriving for every Italian who leaves.
But, although it reflected real differences between established EU members and the newcomers, it also managed to solidify the false impression that the EU's new members share a similar identity and political agenda.
We impress upon potential
newcomers
the need to plan properly, to train the required number of highly skilled nuclear engineers and scientists, to build the complex technical infrastructure, to establish independent and effective regulatory bodies, and to adhere to international safety standards and security guidelines.
Tumen’s paper, too, takes on an argument frequently used to oppose admitting refugees: that the
newcomers
will take locals’ jobs and drive down wages.
Likewise, whereas welcoming refugees requires an initial investment of public funds, it can pay dividends as soon as the
newcomers
start working.
Many will argue that refugees who lack the skills that the economy demands will be harder to integrate than other
newcomers.
Leaders should shift their attention from questions concerning “how many” and “where” to the “what” of the crisis – namely, what they should be doing to integrate these
newcomers
into their societies and economies.
While this fact alone will not quiet opponents of immigration, it does give countries more breathing room to repair and strengthen badly broken systems for receiving and integrating
newcomers.
Adopting the ways of potential
newcomers
to those of the EU takes time; negotiating terms of entry can be fiendishly complex; and the EU itself must reform its institutions for a future Union with perhaps 30 members.
Many EU members look at the
newcomers
from Central and Eastern Europe and see countries that largely try to adhere to the liberal, free-market model.
First, the
newcomers
share a problem that undermined the social market model in Western Europe: demographic decline and, consequently, the prospect of soaring health and pension costs.
If the
newcomers
are to embrace the social market model, that model must operate throughout the EU and offer to them what it offered new EU members in the past.
Regulation without redistribution could undermine the EU's legitimacy among the
newcomers.
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