Partly
in sentence
1761 examples of Partly in a sentence
That recognition may arise
partly
out of an understanding of history.
Yes, the bilateral deficit is much higher than even that level; but that is
partly
because China’s exports to the US contain so many imported inputs.
Partly
for that reason, it is little understood.
Although Iraq still matters a lot to Americans, its importance for determining how they vote has receded,
partly
because US casualties there are markedly down as the security situation appears to be gradually improving.
The following year, a coalition of non-governmental organizations pledged more than $750 million for nutrition programs, based
partly
on our findings.
This is
partly
because national governments, rather than building on currency unification to turn the eurozone into an economic powerhouse, tried to hang onto their remaining power.
This is
partly
a result of the 1997 Amsterdam Treaty, which will give him a key role in the selection of the other 19 Commissioners, and of allocating their portfolios between them.
The Swiss Federal Institute of Technology in Zurich (ETH) has the highest number of Nobel Prize winners of any institution in the world, no doubt
partly
due to the fact that 35% of its faculty is foreign.
The military dictatorship established by Park Chung-hee in 1962 adopted an aggressive economic development policy,
partly
to contain North Korea.
This uncertain response
partly
explains Western governments’ lack of will to draw tangible conclusions from the systemic failure of the financial sector.
This is
partly
because a sensible agenda must simultaneously address its macroeconomic, educational, distributional, and spatial dimensions.
But legislative- and executive-branch integration has lagged, and, while Europe has created a president and a central figure for foreign relations, foreign and defense policy remains only
partly
integrated.
And make no mistake: These events are, at least partly, the result of climate change.
Partly
in response to the Soviet collapse, India embraced capitalism without reservation, which has produced spectacular economic progress.
But migration from crisis-hit countries,
partly
to avoid repaying legacy debts (some of which were forced on these countries by the European Central Bank, which insisted that private losses be socialized), has been hollowing out the weaker economies.
The reform process then slowed – or even stopped altogether – from 1996 to 2005,
partly
because Venezuelan support made it less necessary.
In fact, returns to education have been falling
partly
because the supply of skilled workers has outpaced demand, as most informal firms do not require them.
The predominant Western view that Xi’s growing authority represents a dangerous trend
partly
reflects anxiety over growing challenges to democracy in the United States and across Europe.
That failure
partly
reflects the short-termism that tends to dominate in Western democracies, where short electoral cycles (from about six months to four years) often compel politicians to focus on cyclical issues, rather than on structural impediments to long-term productivity gains and income growth.
Partly
because of the floods, which will shave off at least 1% from GDP,
partly
because of the administration’s inability and unwillingness to curb non-essential expenditures, and
partly
because of slowing export growth, Pakistan is once again facing serious fiscal and balance-of-payments problems.
This
partly
explains the current tensions between China and Japan over their conflicting territorial claims to islands in the East China Sea, which occupy an area of only seven square kilometers, but are surrounded by rich hydrocarbon reserves.
But it is he who most likely will be remembered as the fool – a bungling, capricious leader whose attacks on China only made that economy stronger, at least
partly
at America’s expense.
Second, the decline in US consumption should also be
partly
offset by a rise in US investment.
Some 38,000 Somalis have sought refuge in Uganda as well, fleeing a war that is also
partly
of Uganda’s making.
Cell phones, satellite tracking, and high-resolution cameras are not cheap to come by, but happily for the industries that use them, costs for their development have been
partly
picked up by the government.
US President Donald Trump seems intent on ensuring that America retreats, at least partly, from its global leadership role.
If opposition to trade has not become politically salient in Europe today, it is
partly
because such social protections remain strong there, despite having weakened in recent years.
The current strength of the German economy is also
partly
due to this temporary demographic stabilization.
Japan has never learned to interact with its Asian neighbors the way that Germany after World War II learned to cooperate with its future European partners,
partly
because its apologies have appeared formalistic and half-hearted, when they have taken place at all.
This tax effect
partly
underlies the robust association between spikes in world oil prices and US economic downturns documented by James Hamilton of the University of California San Diego.
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