Predicted
in sentence
706 examples of Predicted in a sentence
Following the crisis, I
predicted
that the US and China would have to swap places to some extent over the course of the next decade.
Is it fair for flower sellers to raise their prices like this?”Just as the IMEMO economists predicted, most (66%) of those who answered this question in Moscow thought it was unfair.
This time last year, Oxfam
predicted
that the wealth of the top 1% would overtake that of the rest of the population by 2016; that milestone was reached two months ahead of schedule.
Many observers
predicted
that Indonesia, the world’s most populous Muslim country, would be unable to sustain democracy and would ultimately decline into chaos.
As predicted, widespread protests erupted, and five people were killed in clashes with the police.
No one
predicted
this boom, so predicting its end is risky.
Petroleum independent until 1993, China now consumes more and more imported petroleum every year, and power consumption is
predicted
to double by 2025, requiring an average of one new coal-fired plant to come on line each week.
John Maynard Keynes
predicted
accurately that all of these debts would end up in default.
Had it not been for these anti-Brexit voters, Prime Minister Theresa May would have won the widely
predicted
landslide.
In the party’s primary last November, early polling had
predicted
a win for Alain Juppé, a prime minister under Sarkozy’s predecessor, Jacques Chirac, and had put Fillon a distant third behind Sarkozy himself (who was seeking to stage a political comeback).
One could have
predicted
that a year in which Congress stopped actively impeding economic recovery would be a year in which the pace of expansion in output and employment picked up.
In 2016, a special panel commissioned by the British government
predicted
that, by 2050, as many as ten million more people will die from drug-resistant microbes every year.
And, though Nietzsche could not have
predicted
the level of integration between the UK and continental Europe, he did warn against precisely the kind of fragmentation that the British referendum threatens to advance.
Ten years ago, as the Asian financial crisis savaged Indonesia’s economy, many experts
predicted
that the country would become unstable, if not splinter.
In Europe, real growth GDP has been only barely positive, on average, since the financial crisis, and its level in 2016 was about 20% below that
predicted
by the trend over the ten years up to 2007.
North Korea’s Urge to PurgeBEIJING – Just when and how the North Korean regime will end cannot be
predicted.
In 1789, few observers in Paris would have
predicted
that a Corsican would lead French forces to the banks of the Nile within ten years.
Who would have
predicted
thirty years ago that British soccer fans would have cheered for a London team full of Africans, Latin Americans, and Spaniards, coached by a Frenchman?
Indeed, as the likelihood of QE has increased over this year, asset prices have already moved upward, as
predicted.
In the wake of the 2010 British election, Skidelsky, like Krugman,
predicted
that Chancellor of the Exchequer George Osborne was gravely wrong in seeking to reduce the budget deficit.
“Austerity” was not nearly as harmful as they
predicted.
In the meantime, earth’s climate has been heating up, as
predicted.
For example, the authors of The Limits to Growth
predicted
that before 2013, the world would have run out of aluminum, copper, gold, lead, mercury, molybdenum, natural gas, oil, silver, tin, tungsten, and zinc.
As a consequence, Japanese citizens who 30 years ago were saving for their retirement are now dissaving, precisely as economic theory
predicted.
The other post-election scenarios are a grand coalition between the CDU and the Social Democratic Party (SDP); a red-green coalition between the SDP and the Greens (if both do better than
predicted
and the liberal FDP falls below the 5% electoral threshold), possibly with tacit support from the left-wing Die Linke; or a CDU-Green coalition.
The bigger problem is that the United States has an enormous fiscal deficit – now about 7% of GDP and
predicted
to grow rapidly in future decades as an aging population and rising health-care costs increase government outlays for the “entitlement programs” that benefit middle-class seniors.
By and large, the all-pervasive view here is that of Harvard Professor Samuel Huntington who
predicted
that international politics after the Cold War would become a"clash of civilizations".
It can be confidently
predicted
that as the political tide turns, the British media and business opinion will follow, mainly because of direct financial interests.
Before the green revolution, Nobel Prize-winning economist Gunnar Myrdal
predicted
a bleak future for an Asia mired in poverty.
Despite US measures against imports of Chinese tires, the level of protectionism has been much lower than in the 1930’s and than many observers
predicted.
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