Partly
in sentence
1761 examples of Partly in a sentence
But this is only
partly
true.
For starters, while recent studies have concluded that higher levels of inequality produce lower long-term growth, other data have challenged this assumption, making definitive claims that are impossible to support,
partly
because different sources and types of inequality likely have different impacts on growth.
But such debates largely stopped in the twentieth century,
partly
because they challenged democracy’s universality.
The European Central Bank is staying calm for the moment, but it, too, is probably holding back on interest-rate hikes
partly
out of fear of driving the euro, already at record levels, even higher.
But the group of lenders that the EU and the IMF wanted to help the most – the banks – only
partly
reduced their exposure.
But it does
partly
illustrate why international terrorism has not established a major presence in Latin America.
Russia's recent strong growth
partly
reflects the reforms of the early 1990s, and the reform achievements of 2000 and 2001 will feed through to measurable economic performance only in, say, 2005.
This
partly
explains both the hostile stance toward QE adopted in the German financial press and the over-indebted periphery countries’ increasingly desperate calls for more action by the ECB.
The problem
partly
reflects a lack of consensus about the criteria that a judicial candidate must satisfy.
They
partly
restored Argentina’s social and political fabric, which had been weakened by the brutal adjustments made during that crisis, which triggered a president’s fall from power, default on the country’s debts, and a dramatic decline in living standards that left more than half of the population below the poverty line.
Balance was achieved
partly
by a system of weighting of votes in the Council of Ministers, where most decisions are taken.
Kenya, for example, won its independence
partly
in an anti-colonial war of liberation in which both the British colonial forces and the Mau Mau movement resorted to terrorism.
Adjustment in the United States’ monetary union occurs
partly
through labor mobility.
Thanks
partly
to Englishnization, Rakuten has been able to expand outside Japan, buying e-commerce sites like Ebates in the United States and PriceMinister in France.
The tax law could worsen these disparities by lowering the incomes of low- and middle-income Americans, many of whom are already living shorter lives, owing
partly
to the opioid crisis that is ravaging much of the country.
For starters, they could arouse suspicion that the Commission is motivated at least
partly
by a desire to reap more customs revenues for itself, as a hedge against a Brexit-triggered financial crisis.
With global peace and prosperity
partly
hinging on a stable Western-Russian relationship, is it too much to ask for such small, paranoia-reducing steps?
But that seems unlikely,
partly
because the US demands are either beyond China’s capacity to deliver (such as a substantial reduction in the bilateral imbalance) or are too fuzzy to be verifiable in the short term (such as ending forced technology transfer).
The discrepancy
partly
reflects the dominant share of services in modern advanced economies, relative to manufacturing and agriculture.
Many believe that Brexit’s feared negative effect on UK growth has not yet materialized,
partly
because the Bank of England eased monetary policy.
Instead, the supply-demand gap has been
partly
bridged by increasingly sophisticated engineering techniques.
That strategy faltered –
partly
owing to US intransigence under President George W. Bush – and was abandoned when the 2009 Copenhagen conference failed to produce a treaty to replace the expiring Kyoto Protocol (which the US never signed).
Bush was also able to
partly
change the tone of the US message in the hemisphere: from free trade and fighting terrorism, to combating poverty and strengthening democracy and human rights.
In this sense, US President Donald Trump may be
partly
right in saying that, “at the right time, everyone will come to their senses.”
By including the entire international community in its
partly
binding framework, the deal establishes a new paradigm in global governance.
Efforts and initiatives to catalyze a more rapid move toward greener practices by companies, investors, and capital markets are multiplying, spearheaded
partly
by business leaders eager to profit from the transformation.
Today’s inflationary pressures are
partly
the result of the lagged impact of the stimulus package that China adopted in 2009 to fight off the effects of the global financial crisis.
The steady increase in production costs,
partly
attributable to high borrowing costs, is squeezing enterprises’ profit margins of – small and medium-sized enterprises in particular.
But while perfect policy is unattainable,
partly
effective controls can still play a useful role if targeted at the interface between short-term inflows and domestic credit cycles.
To be sure, there are cases where the absence of trust-building efforts could
partly
explain why a conflict drags on.
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