Presumably
in sentence
490 examples of Presumably in a sentence
Presumably, British citizens understand this, but they prefer to have their own national teams rather than a stronger UK team – even if this means losing to tiny Iceland.
Unless you think that a modern financial sector really can operate with absolutely no regulation of any kind (including, presumably, the rules for banks that come with deposit insurance), the real problem is not government officials’ policy preferences, but what financial-sector lobbyists are able to persuade officials to do.
Commitment to participate in the program would, presumably, be long term.
During the 2010 elections in Tamaulipas, a candidate for governor and another one for mayor were assassinated,
presumably
by “organized crime.”
Likewise, the killing of 13 Chinese boat crewmen on the Mekong River in October serves as a stark reminder that China’s
presumably
peaceful southern land border, which has been untroubled for nearly 20 years, today resembles the most hostile sort of neighborhood.
That is why Syria, with North Korean assistance, tried to develop a nuclear program
(presumably
destroyed by Israel’s officially unacknowledged “Operation Orchard” in 2007).Iran will not consider abandoning its nuclear insurance policy unless a broad agenda is agreed upon that addresses Iran’s concerns as a regional power and secures the immunity of its Islamist regime from American actions.
With voters heading to the polls in early 2018, genuine progress toward resolving the energy crisis would
presumably
be good for Pakistan’s political leaders.
Critics who accuse Japan and other countries of currency manipulation
presumably
know that they have not been intervening in the foreign-exchange market in recent years.
However, beyond the mortgage market, other huge risks are lurking, especially in the US financial system: credit cards, car loans, and
presumably
a few other things.
This more nuanced view
presumably
reflects a new appreciation, whether born of security briefings or the sobering fact of actually occupying the Oval Office, that the world is a dangerous place.
Holding more capital is not costless for US banks, as advisers like Gary Cohn, formerly of Goldman Sachs and now the head of Trump’s National Economic Council,
presumably
tell the president morning, noon, and night.
The ESAs also need more money, which probably can come from fees levied on financial firms, and consideration should be given to merging them in a single location,
presumably
Brussels.
The same could
presumably
be said today of Russia’s fatal attraction to the former Soviet republics.
Given that the enclaves’ residents have
presumably
lost much of their cultural or personal ties with India since 1947, most are expected to remain where they are.
North Korea
presumably
has a few, and Iran is most likely pursuing a nuclear-weapons program.
The tariffs are
presumably
having a negative effect on US imports, but negative effects on US exports are also large.
While it will
presumably
lack the public option many of us prefer, this is still a real achievement.
Cut off from all external finance, Greece will become an economic pariah – the Argentina of Europe – and public pressure will
presumably
oust Syriza from power.
Putting debt on a sustainable path
presumably
means that it will not increase without interruption.
And its bilateral trade surplus of $65 billion with the United States
presumably
makes it an even more irresistible target.
Until now, US policy has boiled down to pinprick bombings against Sunni extremists and an effort to train some 5,000 Syrian “moderate oppositionists,” who
presumably
would defeat the other Sunnis, vanquish President Bashar al-Assad’s forces, and finally march victoriously into Damascus – perhaps with a flyover by US aircrafts.
Paulson’s appointment
presumably
shows that Bush is far more concerned about environmental issues than is commonly believed.
That means potentially giving a pass to the many wealthy Russians who in recent years have been selling off parts of their holdings in Russia and investing in Western countries
(presumably
at least partly owing to sanctions).
Presumably
having learned their lesson from the Brexit referendum, young Britons contributed to an unexpected victory for Labour in June’s snap general election.
After the terrorist attacks on the US of September 2001, it wanted to withdraw troops from Saudi Arabia, and it
presumably
chose Iraq as its new long-term base of operation.
Germany’s labor code bars such layoffs, but German employers also are
presumably
less inclined than US employers to shed workers, because they have invested more in their companies’ human capital.
Presumably, our attempt at resurrecting it was pathetic and hopeless.
He is in favor of protectionism and cheap money,
presumably
because these positions play well with his core political constituency – white working-class voters.
In this way, the terrorists oppose the “purity” and “authenticity” of their arguments to the compromises
presumably
forced upon religious establishments.
In the US, this sentiment has fueled the Tea Party, which coalesces around opposition to government expansion (and to elites more generally), even if that expansion is aimed at regulating big banks
(presumably
because government regulations tend to be shaped by the powerful among the regulated).
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