Particularly
in sentence
6679 examples of Particularly in a sentence
Making matters worse, the shift from mixed-use or indigenous systems of raising livestock to large-scale operations jeopardizes rural livelihoods,
particularly
in developing countries.
The correct implication, which Phelps repeatedly emphasized, is that governments can implement a variety of policies,
particularly
structural policies, to allow the economy to operate at a lower level of unemployment.
What is
particularly
devastating is how it also quashes hope.
Women with HIV, for example, are
particularly
prone to the disease.
The ECB is
particularly
concerned about the feedback loop to the eurozone from trouble in other markets.
Iran’s regional influence –
particularly
in Iraq, but also in Syria and Lebanon – is stronger today than 15 years ago.
But their willingness to engage could wane,
particularly
if sanctions exact a high financial price or military action causes a large number of casualties.
Moreover, “quiet” is not a strategic goal; nor is Israel’s way of pursuing it – a war every two or three years –
particularly
convincing.
Inadequate growth and higher inflation impose a
particularly
severe burden on Egypt’s most vulnerable.
This is
particularly
true of the Western Balkans, but also of countries east and south of the Union.
Politics, not technology, will determine the pace of change, and implementing the necessary reforms will be hard, slow work,
particularly
in democracies.
Indeed, Burma’s recent history has been plagued by ethnic violence and protracted conflicts with government forces,
particularly
in Karen, Shan, and Kachin states.
And two
particularly
violent, long-standing ethnic conflicts remain far from any resolution at all.
The current radicalization of Hong Kong citizens,
particularly
its young people, reflects a desire to change that, and make China pay a price for reneging on its promise of “self-rule” and responding to dissent with repression.
Whatever policies Chinese authorities pursue in Hong Kong between now and 2047, the goal will be to make the present –
particularly
the absence of political rights – look more and more like the future.
This a
particularly
poignant case.
According to this view, the US is especially well positioned to benefit from rapidly falling prices of information technology, owing to its openness to competition and new ways of doing business,
particularly
in distribution.
This is
particularly
true in Poland: although the PiS is still at the top of the polls, a coalition of non-populist opposition parties could well overtake it.
And that, unfortunately, is the perception held by many nowadays,
particularly
in the United States.
While it acknowledged that “the EU is currently undergoing grave economic difficulties and considerable social unrest,” it highlighted the EU’s role as a beacon of hope – a democratic anchor,
particularly
meaningful for peoples who have lived through the horrors of dictatorships.
As mobile phones and digital technologies rapidly spread around the world, their implications for economic development, and
particularly
finance, have yet to be fully realized.
The ongoing sovereignty disputes in the South and East China Seas – involving China, Taiwan, Japan, the Republic of Korea, Vietnam, Brunei, the Philippines, Indonesia, and Malaysia – are
particularly
poisonous, because they also carry a heavy burden of historical grievance.
As a result, China, which is
particularly
concerned to keep the US out of the negotiations, prefers to pursue bilateral talks, knowing full well that such an approach will invariably create a zero-sum game in which one side can be portrayed as protecting its national interest, and the other as having betrayed it.
South Korea also needs to improve its public schools,
particularly
at the secondary level, and significantly upgrade vocational training.
This is
particularly
important today, when public discourse in democracies is relentlessly demotic and academic work is increasingly specialized.
Much of the vast earnings that the Soviet state collected from energy sales,
particularly
exports, now flows into a few private pockets.
But neither seems to be
particularly
effective.
Northern Europe’s political elites, largely social or Christian democrats, have often been dismissive of such fears, and their paternalism and condescension may be why the backlash in those liberal countries has been
particularly
fierce.
An additional argument, always resonant in this tradition, but
particularly
so today in poor countries, is UBI’s emancipatory potential for women.
Many of the existing partnership arrangements that NATO has at its disposal,
particularly
the Partnership for Peace, are obsolete.
Back
Next
Related words
Which
Countries
Their
There
Where
Other
Would
About
Economic
People
World
Could
Global
Important
Given
Financial
While
Should
Political
Growth