Papers
in sentence
606 examples of Papers in a sentence
While traveling after signing the
papers
they discover discover an old diary and some pictures, things which tell the story of a serial killer, a killer that may still be operating.
Since they've got no papers, they will take any work, any wage, any risks.
And the random goons who storm the office building shooting at
papers
on desks is pretty cool, if you like random goons who shoot at paper on desks that is.
I really don't know why there are all those brilliant reviews in so many respected
papers
and magazines.
A British secret agent is assigned the task of taking some secret documents to Washington, D.C. It's wartime in Europe and enemy agents would be only too happy to get their hands on these
papers.
This is basically the story of a man who's made it in life the hard way without even a high school diploma but decides to follow in his kid's footsteps and tries to attend college himself to help his boy's attitude after he hands divorce
papers
to his second wife.
Just what exactly are these
papers?
They have books to catalog, websites to update, research to perform, and
papers
to publish.
This might have been an ad that Mrs. Marrable ran in the local
papers.
The reason behind this is because the mother was trying to get
papers
for her son to come to America.
Routine Bette Davis and George Brent film devoted to two reporters, who love each other but work for rival papers, trying to scoop each other on a murder story.
Professors should also be encouraged to dedicate themselves to writing textbooks and conducting science outreach, not just publishing more
papers.
The secrecy of the ballot makes it impossible to prevent people writing nonsense on their ballot
papers
or leaving them blank.
Russia and NATO must jointly develop a new security agenda and a more cooperative methodology based on common working groups and joint
papers.
I spent hours picking through sources – mostly dusty
papers
in the years before the Internet, or strangers on the telephone – to clarify questions of fact: Was this really the first such product?
In a series of academic
papers
with Carmen Reinhart – including, most recently, joint work with Vincent Reinhart (“Debt Overhangs: Past and Present”) – we find that very high debt levels of 90% of GDP are a long-term secular drag on economic growth that often lasts for two decades or more.
Sixty-three years after the Guatemalan experiments, an American historian, Susan Reverby, was rummaging through archived medical
papers
from the 1940’s.
She was examining the
papers
of Thomas Parran, US surgeon-general from 1936-1948, when the Tuskegee research was already in full swing.
Every time a poor pregnant woman must bribe an orderly to get a hospital bed (to which she is entitled), or else deliver her baby on the floor; every time a widow cannot get the pension that should be hers by right, without bribing a clerk to process the papers; and every time a son cannot obtain his father’s death certificate without greasing the palm of a petty municipal official, Indians know that the system has failed them.
According to my own calculations in a series of research
papers
with Maurice Obstfeld, the trade-weighted dollar would likely fall by 20% if a global demand shift (say, due to a US housing recession) were to cut the US trade deficit in half.
In each of these projects, experts wrote dozens of research
papers
examining how best to spend resources on a variety of issues, from armed conflict and biodiversity destruction to infectious disease and sanitation.
In a series of innovative papers, Stiglitz picked up some elementary facts about the economy that lay strewn about like jigsaw pieces, put them together, and proved why some prices were naturally sticky, thereby creating market inefficiencies and thwarting the functioning of the invisible hand.
But Stiglitz’s papers, published in the 1970s and early 1980s, shifted the mainstream paradigm of the microeconomic theory of markets.
As he put it, “Venture capitalists literally ‘walk the halls’ of major research institutes in search of breakthroughs, embodied in patents and published papers, around which to build companies.
The six front-running countries (Czech Republic, Estonia, Hungary, Poland, Slovenia and Cyprus) recently submitted position
papers
to the EU demanding that their farm sectors should participate fully in the CAP from Day 1, and that their farmers should get all the benefits, including income support payments.
But the position
papers
of the candidate countries explicitly rule out this delaying tactic.
After enduring a few more inaccuracies, I felt compelled to put aside the students’
papers
that I was grading.
Perhaps the most well-known recent example has been the Nobel laureate Paul Krugman’s campaign against the economists Carmen Reinhart and Kenneth Rogoff, in which he moved quickly from criticism of an error in one of their
papers
to charges about their commitment to academic transparency.
In their monumental research on centuries of public and sovereign debt, the normally very careful Reinhart and Rogoff made an error in one of their working
papers.
But a dearth of
papers
addressing it had been submitted to the meeting.
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