Perceived
in sentence
1358 examples of Perceived in a sentence
For a long time, Russia has
perceived
itself as a “White Africa.”
But, so long as Russia is
perceived
as an energy blackmailer and not a partner, such cooperation will be impossible.
Likewise, the market for long-term bonds indicates extremely low inflation expectations (of course, interest rates are higher in cases of
perceived
sovereign default or re-denomination risk, such as in Southern Europe, but that has nothing to do with inflation).
The result should be a contract that is as fair as possible under the given circumstances – and
perceived
as such.
British leeriness about giving up the EU rebate in the face of what is
perceived
as French egoism is equally understandable—despite the fact that this stance harms the enlargement process, which Great Britain otherwise supports.
But that theory meshed with suspicious ease with the
perceived
domestic political need for the president to appear “tough” – to avoid appearing “less of a hawk than your more respectable opponents,” as Bundy later put it.
With that sentence, Draghi eliminated the
perceived
re-denomination tail risk that was highest in the case of Greece, but that was driving up borrowing costs in Spain, Italy, and Portugal as well.
On the Chinese side, the initial accommodating approach by Obama, although met with a level of caution and skepticism, was
perceived
as an inevitable reflection of China’s rise and more equal status with the US.
The automatic exchange of information is a pragmatic and effective response to the
perceived
lack of global governance regarding international tax issues.
In Rwanda, France has yet to live down its
perceived
role in enabling the 1994 genocide.
Conversely, the cause of Palestinian independence is supported worldwide precisely because Israel is
perceived
as the last Western colonial power in Arab lands.
So long as the IMF’s macroeconomic surveillance was in fact applied only to developing countries, with the G-7 and other rich countries evading a serious monitoring process, the Fund could not be
perceived
as fair and impartial.
The Fund’s almost universal membership and its staff’s technical expertise should enable it to carry out effective multilateral surveillance, provided that it accelerates its own governance reforms, so that surveillance is
perceived
as being in everyone’s interest.
They ruminated relentlessly over past humiliations, a habit that fueled resentment and, eventually, revenge fantasies, leading them to use mass murder to achieve infamy and to hurt those
perceived
to have hurt them – even if it meant a “welcome death” for themselves.
Perhaps they believe they can no longer bear the agony of life; once they have “settled the score” for the
perceived
slights that have produced it, there is no reason left to live.
Whatever these countries decide, they must remain cognizant of the “Russia factor,” the
perceived
significance of which inevitably influences their foreign-policy orientation and priorities.
Any country can leave the EU, and thus the eurozone, when the
perceived
burden of its obligations becomes too onerous.
But they can reduce interest rates by eliminating the
perceived
risk of sovereign default.
Only if China pays closer attention to how it is
perceived
and accepted by the rest of the world can it continue to rise in a peaceful manner.
The
perceived
size of the moon is determined by two factors: the physical extent of the light falling on the eye - also known as the angular subtense or the visual angle - and the distance information provided by the ground.
Some theorists include in this formulation the
perceived
distance of the moon (how far it appears to be from an observer).
The relationships between the stimulus (visual angle) and the
perceived
size and distance of the moon are summarized by the so-called "static size-distance invariance hypothesis" (SDIH): stimulus determines the ratio of
perceived
size to
perceived
distance.
One modification allows
perceived
distance to be evoked simultaneously by different behavioral responses.
Other explanations exclude
perceived
distance.
Verbal statements about the
perceived
distance of the moon are described as inferences based on
perceived
size rather than descriptions of experience: "The Moon looks big so it must be close."
Other researchers have gone beyond the SDIH altogether, substituting a perceptual outcome -
perceived
visual angle - for the stimulus input.
Our visual system automatically transforms such changing stimulus inputs into objects that appear to be rigid - i.e., unchanging in
perceived
size - but moving radially in three-dimensional space.
The
perceived
distance of the moon would be determined by contextual stimulus information from the ground and the horizon - when the moon is low, it would appear close (that is, at or near the apparent distance of the horizon) and when the moon is high in the sky, it would appear to be at a far greater distance.
The
perceived
size of the moon would be determined by the kinetic SDIH, which produces the perception of rigid objects moving radially when stimulus size changes continuously.
Accordingly, when the object appears to be at different distances, the
perceived
size of the object must change.
Back
Next
Related words
Which
Their
Would
Being
Other
There
About
Could
Against
People
Political
While
After
Where
Economic
World
Without
Might
Himself
Government