Opened
in sentence
2221 examples of Opened in a sentence
Time to Talk with IranBERLIN – The recent comprehensive assessment by America’s spy agencies about Iran’s nuclear program and ambitions – the so-called “National Intelligence Estimate” – has
opened
the door to fresh strategic discussions among the five permanent members of the United Nations Security Council and Germany.
I encountered the cult of Diana in 2004, when I was in Hyde Park on the day the Queen
opened
the Princess Diana Memorial Fountain.
I first
opened
my philanthropic foundation in Hungary in 1984, when the country was still under the domination of the Soviet Union.
Although he has
opened
Syria’s border to jihadists and has allowed Saddam’s supporters to operate freely there, that choice may not be entirely his.
New export markets and private investment opportunities
opened
up in developing countries.
In Rome, the army’s sit-down strike in the fifth century B.C.
opened
politics to the lower classes.
Huajian
opened
its doors in January 2012 with two production lines and some 600 workers.
Despite various setbacks, during the last academic year we
opened
1,000 public schools to non-Lebanese students.
To meet voters’ expectations, Renzi must work to fill the gaps that have
opened
in post-crisis Europe.
When the economic crisis
opened
up the Pandora’s Box of the EU’s fiscal woes, Germany stepped up to the mark and helped to bail out Greece.
Perhaps most important, energy markets must be
opened
to new players.
At some point, America will awaken from its geopolitical slumber; there are already signs that it has
opened
one eye.
As if all this were not enough, as the Davos meeting opened, America’s House of Representatives passed a bill requiring American steel to be used in stimulus spending, despite the G-20’s call to avoid protectionism in response to the crisis.
In Hamburg, the recently
opened
Elbe Symphony Hall was also funded via a government-owned holding company.
It
opened
this year.
"It’s a very lively and active regional group that has
opened
new relations and opportunities for all members," said Rejaie Khorasani, member of parliament and former ambassador to the United Nations, in an interview.
Here was a venture that
opened
new vistas for businesses and fired the imaginations of young people to emulate the entrepreneurial energies shown by owners, promoters, players, and fans.
Flawed US policy has
opened
the way for these efforts, in part by helping to turn China into an export juggernaut.
The US
opened
the door to China’s accession to the World Trade Organization in 2001 – a milestone in China’s ascendancy as the Ultimate Producer.
The Great Depression and World War II
opened
the new era of the Bretton Woods system of a more balanced state-market relationship.
And, indeed, when Rouhani succeeded Ahmadinejad in 2013, a door
opened.
In some ways, it was the US itself that
opened
the way for Russia’s Afghan strategy.
The tension between reason and religion since the sixteenth century has been "welcome and beneficial for both" and
opened
the way for the eventual reconciliation or equilibrium between the two, he explains.
How can you go home again if the sea has been sucked down a vast drain that
opened
up beneath it, emptying it who knows where, into a void?
So, instead, the Modi administration – and, in particular, Arun Jaitley, the finance minister – has taken the RBI to task for not preventing the accumulation of non-performing assets in the banking system after the credit spigots were
opened
to help cope with the global financial crisis.
Without a common fiscal authority, the single market
opened
the way to tax competition – a race to the bottom to attract investment and boost output that could be freely sold throughout the EU.
The onset of civil war in 2011
opened
a new chapter in the struggle.
And Samsung, a leading foreign supplier of washing machines, has recently
opened
a new appliance factory in South Carolina.
Indeed, it was at the Third Plenum of the CCP’s 11th Central Committee that Deng Xiaoping launched the reforms that
opened
up the Chinese economy and triggered more than three decades of rapid economic growth.
The measures taken so far have
opened
channels of contagion from Europe’s crisis-ridden peripheral economies to the still-sound economies of Europe’s core, placing the latter’s taxpayers and pensioners at great financial risk, while hindering long-term recovery in the troubled countries themselves.
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