Partly
in sentence
1761 examples of Partly in a sentence
But Putin’s simulacrum of Sovietism began to collapse much faster,
partly
by virtue of the fact that his regime’s ideology never had much substance to begin with, and so couldn’t begin to be used as a prop.
But execution has been slow, owing
partly
to China’s failure to enforce its bankruptcy law fully.
That role
partly
reflects the CCP’s birth in 1921 out of the violence and chaos that followed the collapse of the Qing Dynasty nine years earlier, as well as the three decades of civil war and Japanese colonization that intervened before the party took power in 1949.
This is
partly
because trees cannot grow forever: China’s economy could not continue to get 10% bigger every year.
Trade is
partly
driven by differences in labor costs.
For starters, tensions between several Southeast Asian countries and China are on the rise, owing
partly
to the fact that China, under President Xi Jinping (its most autocratic leader since Deng Xiaoping), has been acting increasingly assertively in staking its contested territorial claims in the region’s waters.
Hong Kong’s success
partly
reflects a fundamental moderation within the culture, a competency and rationality that enables the city – an autonomous Chinese territory – to thrive in a complex context.
Thanks
partly
to their efforts, the public tends to be knowledgeable and vigilant about encroachment on Hong Kong’s freedoms, such as the recent abduction of five book publishers by mainland agents.
Some are economic: Barring a lasting (and still elusive) growth acceleration, the objectives of boosting competitiveness and achieving debt sustainability remain
partly
in conflict.
But the vast majority of “crown jewels” remained
partly
in the hands of governments, with a strategic private partner or private investors acquiring stakes through capital markets.
Chinese nationalists believe that the war was undertaken by the US
partly
in order to place its military near one of China’s most sensitive borders.
The US health-care system is notoriously expensive,
partly
because many of the key costs are controlled by the American Medical Association and private-sector health-insurance companies, which act like monopolists, driving up costs.
Such foreign-exchange operations among G-7 central banks have fallen into disuse in recent years,
partly
owing to the theory that they do not affect exchange rates except when they change money supplies.
The history of the postcommunist transition has been a struggle between reformers who tried to build a market economy and ruthless businessmen, like Gazprom's managers, who thrive on only
partly
liberated markets, subsidized credits, import subsidies, export rents, and non-payment of taxes.
This is especially significant, given that, over the last 30 years, Sub-Saharan Africa has suffered from de-industrialization.Indeed, by the late 2000’s – owing
partly
to the structural-adjustment policies pushed by the international financial institutions – manufacturing as a share of GDP in developing African economies was lower than it was in 1980.
This new international group would possess a formidable military capacity, based
partly
on NATO and
partly
on a “new quadrilateral security partnership” in the Pacific between Australia, India, Japan, and the US.
How deep the zealots and the coal lobby will be able to make that point depends
partly
on the barriers built by the rest of us.
Specifically, export dependence
partly
reflects the high degree of difficulty of doing business in China.
They – along with Brazil, India, and South Africa (the BRICS) – have established their own development bank, motivated
partly
by the International Monetary Fund’s failure to fulfill its 2010 pledge to adjust voting rights to reflect the global balance of economic power.
The Bank’s failure to lend to new clients
partly
reflects its slowness.
Not since the Asian financial crisis of 1997, rooted
partly
in the flawed economic policies of Park’s father, Park Chung-hee, have South Koreans faced such an impasse.
The potential for intra-Maghreb trade seems to be constrained
partly
by the similarity of the economies of some countries, notably Morocco and Tunisia.
Europe remains a significant economic and commercial actor – one that can rebound at any time, now that it has at least
partly
transcended its systemic crisis.
First, IRENA will hit the ground running in developing policy and spreading technology,
partly
because the countries instrumental in its birth – Denmark, Germany, and Spain – have impeccable “green” policy credentials.
This is
partly
a question of what to do now in Iraq; but it is also a question of Britain’s relationship with the US.
This was
partly
because wages naturally began to rise as the surplus of rural workers dried up.
What began as a democratic uprising against Bashar al-Assad’s dictatorship has developed into a cat’s cradle of conflicts,
partly
reflecting a brutal proxy struggle among Iran, Turkey, and Saudi Arabia for regional domination.
But even Draghi’s bazooka is
partly
a bluff.
It will also (partly) mitigate the concentration of wealth that results from a highly skewed income distribution.
The weak and only
partly
implemented Kyoto Protocol expires in 2012, and the world requires a much stronger framework, one that sets a strong target for stabilizing greenhouse gases by 2050 by including agreements on ending tropical deforestation, developing high-mileage automobiles, and shifting to low CO2-emitting power plants.
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