Outlook
in sentence
541 examples of Outlook in a sentence
And if you are open-minded enough to leave this film grasping that you will have a new
outlook
on a number of things and possibly a new
outlook
on life.
Pleasantly surprised by Tyra's bubbly rendition of a doll's
outlook
and reaction to 'real life'.
The doll's
outlook
on life based on infusion from commercial ditties and TV perfection helps to show the difference between TV and reality in a way kids can understand.
This is a brooding, dark, bitter film, with a pessimistic
outlook
on life and a downright depressing core message.
Mr. Martin is a wonderful actor that gave his role as the Prince a 3 dimensional and more human
outlook
on the man who haunts history as a viscous and sadistic ruler with a taste for unnameable torture.
And for a person who loves entertainment that is wholesome and positive in its outlook, this one made me nauseous.
It is not an attractive
outlook.
The fact that leaders and pundits are hailing this brighter
outlook
indicates just how diminished our expectations have become.
This may sound cynical but it is actually an optimistic message, at least in terms of the
outlook
for reducing poverty around the world.
The
outlook
for oil prices could turn out to be such a case, for several reasons.
Specifically, the question is not whether it can grow, but whether it can grow fast enough to propel a large economy that, according to the US Federal Reserve, faces “balance-sheet deleveraging, credit constraints, and household and business uncertainty about the economic outlook.”
It is the story of a region undergoing a renaissance in which people’s minds are re-opened and their
outlook
refreshed.
At first glance, the
outlook
appears grim.
Within an integrated economy, there are divergent categories of actors, such as creditors and debtors, or manufacturers and agricultural producers, the combination of which can affect the
outlook
of states and regions.
Today, the
outlook
could not be more different.
With the Asian giants, Israel lacks the shared global
outlook
that is essential for a true strategic alliance.
The highest priority problem is the overall budget’s medium-run outlook, as the Bush tax cuts have opened Reagan-size deficits that threaten to cripple US economic growth.
But, whereas the scientific community embraces uncertainty, remains ever curious, and is confident about the power of science and technology to create new opportunities for mankind’s collective future, other segments of society do not necessarily share this
outlook.
Since 2010, the US Congressional Budget Office has lowered its
outlook
for productivity growth in the decade to 2020 from 25% to 16%; so has the United Kingdom’s Office for Budget Responsibility, reducing its forecast from 22% to 14% productivity growth.
Such an outcome would have three profound implications for the economic outlook: First, since consumer demand still accounts for 71% of real GDP, a protracted shortfall in trend consumption represents a major headwind for overall US economic growth.
But the more positive
outlook
about the US and the global economy implies that over time the Federal Reserve and other central banks will exit from quantitative easing and zero policy rates, which means that real rates will rise, rather than fall.
That
outlook
sets Brazil apart in a region where politicians – from Argentina and Chile to Ecuador and Venezuela – often seem more concerned with handing out slices of natural-resource wealth than with creating new sources of prosperity.
The
outlook
for other economies is more uncertain.
These efforts will culminate at the Warsaw Summit, where NATO should establish a new strategic
outlook
that accounts for the complex and diffuse security challenges affecting its southern flank.
NATO’s ability to transform its strategic
outlook
and develop an effective southern strategy will depend on its leaders’ ability to reconcile the interests of these two groups of members.
If Abe and his allies were cosmopolitan in their outlook, with a deep understanding of, or concern for, other countries, the decision to revisit the 1993 apology would indeed be extraordinary.
That, plus the gloomy international
outlook
and a fiscal policy that will have to become less expansionary after the election, will slow the economy down.
The Great Macro DivergencePARIS – “The global expansion has peaked,” the OECD warns in its latest economic outlook, and performance could be weaker if downside risks materialize.
Projections by the UN suggest that a coordinated economic-recovery agenda centered around such policies would boost annual global output growth to an average rate of 4%, and close the jobs deficit, by 2016 – a far better
outlook
than that implied by the current approach.
This
outlook
for the current-account balance does not depend on what happens to the renminbi’s exchange rate against other currencies.
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