Outbreak
in sentence
718 examples of Outbreak in a sentence
Fortunately, the Ebola
outbreak
is unlikely to expose Americans fully to the poor fiscal choices of the past decade.
Three years after the
outbreak
of the Latin American crisis, United States Treasury Secretary James Baker announced a systematization of the initial response.
The resulting shortcomings in the country’s provincial health systems have manifested themselves not just in the inability to eradicate polio, but also in a recent measles outbreak, which has killed more than 300 children.
In 2011, a polio
outbreak
in China was traced back to Pakistan.
Canadian Prime Minister Mackenzie King warned of an
outbreak
of “border warfare,” diplomacy-speak for deteriorating political relations.
I do not want anyone to forget that over less than half of the years contained in the past century—from the
outbreak
of World War I to the famine that followed Mao’s “Great Leap Forward”—about one in every ten people alive on this planet was shot, gassed, stabbed, burned, or starved to death by his or her fellow human beings.
Computer hackers attacked Georgian government Web sites in the weeks preceding the
outbreak
of armed conflict.
By 1993, the number of wild boar had increased sixfold, before halving due to a disease
outbreak
and predation from the rapidly growing wolf population.
The progress that the world has made in helping the poorest in the last 15 years is the kind of good-news story that happens one life at a time, so it often does not have the same visibility as a big setback, such as the
outbreak
of a new epidemic.
Five years from its outbreak, the fallout from the financial crisis and recession triggered by the collapse of the US investment bank Lehman Brothers continues.
With the
outbreak
of the global crisis, major advanced economies employed unconventional monetary policies, leading to massive capital flows to emerging-market economies, which lowered borrowing costs and increased access to credit.
Consider World War I’s
outbreak
in 1914, the Nazi-Soviet pact in 1939, the Sputnik launch in 1957, the Berlin Wall in 1961, and the failed coup in Moscow of 1991.
We cannot control it in one country if there is an
outbreak
next door.
In any public-health crisis – especially one like the current Ebola
outbreak
– potential profits cannot guide drug development or deployment.
The provisional government, by preventing a violent
outbreak
of internecine tribal violence, showed that it might be able to keep a lid on the types of animosity that savaged Iraq.
A New Year’s Banking UnionBRUSSELS – Five years after the
outbreak
of the financial crisis, Europe’s economic and political situation remains fragile.
The World Bank estimates the Ebola
outbreak
shrank the economies of Sierra Leone, Guinea, and Liberia by 16%.
If, over the past decade or two, affluent countries had done more to assist Liberia, Sierra Leone, and Guinea, the current Ebola
outbreak
could have been minimized, if not prevented.
Today, nearly a century after the
outbreak
of World War I, peace and stability are firmly entrenched in Europe.
Since then, many calls for coordination have lamented the
outbreak
of “currency wars,” otherwise known as competitive depreciation – an old phenomenon that recalls the tit-for-tat devaluations of the 1930s.
Five years from now, Europe will be reflecting on the 100th anniversary of the
outbreak
of World War 1, which led to a loss of life almost without parallel and set in motion a chain of events that led to the creation of Europe as we now know it.
Second, the
outbreak
of the Korean War in 1950 created demand for exports of all kinds.
The current Ebola
outbreak
that is ravaging much of West Africa and threatens to spread elsewhere is yet another stark example of this.
The only other time it has happened in recent decades was in Russia after the collapse of communism, and in Africa after the
outbreak
of the HIV/AIDS epidemic.
Next year will also mark the centenary of the
outbreak
of World War I. From that moment until the present, Europe has both endured the worst and enjoyed the best of its history.
For inflation control a strong currency is helpful and a DM tie, for example, works like a brake on any
outbreak
of inflation.
Like the 2014 Ebola
outbreak
in West Africa, the Zika
outbreak
in Central and South America in 2015 hit vulnerable social groups – women and children, ethnic minorities, and the poor – the hardest.
This means that, of the more than 1.5 million people stricken by Zika since the outbreak, the consequences were most worrying for women of child-bearing age, especially those who were already pregnant.
But abortion politics intervened, as Republican lawmakers, leading a congressional hearing on the Zika outbreak, made the funding conditional on anti-abortion policies in recipient countries.
Last year, the United Nations Refugee Agency and the World Health Organization emphasized the need to put human rights at the center of the response to the Zika
outbreak.
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