Professional
in sentence
1380 examples of Professional in a sentence
Women who enjoy parity in education are more likely to share unpaid work with men more equitably, to work in high-productivity
professional
and technical occupations, and to assume leadership roles.
This increases the public's suspicion of political parties, not least because--like all
professional
sports--playing the game is expensive.
Moreover, for Keynes, “[t]he game of
professional
investment is intolerably boring and over-exacting to anyone who is entirely exempt from the gambling instinct; whilst he who has it must pay to this propensity the appropriate toll...”It is for these reasons that we have seemed frozen for the past generation or two whenever we have contemplated reforming our system of financial regulation.
Similarly, China’s Communist Revolution began with a decade of attacks on the middle and
professional
classes and a reshaping of the countryside, culminating in the Great Leap Forward of 1958-59.
This may not be a problem in countries with well-developed housing markets, where there are plenty of rental properties available from
professional
landlords.
China’s Higher-Education GlutMILAN – China has always valued education, reflecting its Confucian tradition, according to which one must excel scholastically to achieve high
professional
and social status.
Italy’s populist Five Star Movement (M5S), which came out on top in Italy’s 2013 parliamentary elections and is predicted to do well again in 2018, emerged from large rallies organized by comedian Beppe Grillo against “la casta” – his derogatory term for what he sees as the country’s ruling casteof
professional
politicians and journalists.
In the United Kingdom, the last month has brought harrowing reports about child abuse in youth soccer teams, where promising young athletes attempt to play their way to the
professional
level.
At last count, 98 amateur and
professional
clubs in the UK were implicated in some way.
Add to that the modern scale effects on
professional
and “superstar” incomes – a result of winner-take-all global markets – and a picture emerges of fundamental forces tending to concentrate primary income at the top.
A few major drug seizures by a
professional
group of counter-narcotics agents would make drug traffickers change their perception of West Africa as a low risk/high benefit transit route.
Leaders are not being asked to negotiate a new agreement themselves; that job will remain with their
professional
negotiators and environment ministers.
A good politician should be able to explain without seeking to seduce; he should humbly look for the truth of this world without claiming to be its
professional
owner; he should alert people to the good qualities in themselves, including a sense of the values and interests which transcend the personal, without giving himself an air of superiority and imposing anything on his fellow humans; he should not yield to the dictate of public moods or of the mass media, while never hindering a constant scrutiny of his actions.
In my former
professional
roles, I witnessed as few others did the entry of Poland and Hungary into the Euroatlantic institutions.
Insurance companies provide professional, finely detailed risk management that respects the complexity of the dangers to be hedged and responds creatively to individual needs.
The lesson is clear: even high-class businesses are only as
professional
as the existing institutional infrastructure permits them to be.
Ben Bernanke, the nominee to replace Alan Greenspan this month as Chairman of the US Federal Reserve Board, is a highly capable economist who has devoted his
professional
life to understanding the historical role of central banks and the problems that they have faced.
Georgia should adopt the Singaporean model and create a small, professional, and (relatively) well-paid administration.
Like his mentor, Tung Chee-hwa, Hong Kong’s first chief executive after its return to China, Leung harbors a deep antipathy toward the British and the
professional
civil service, a legacy of colonialism.
And when paired with other data about us (financial, professional, and social), our biometrics can be fed into algorithms and used to deny us loans, health insurance, and jobs, guess our sexuality or political preferences, and predict our likelihood to commit crimes — entirely without our knowledge.Having a unique, unforgeable identity could be a blessing.
And when paired with other data about us (financial, professional, and social), our biometrics can be fed into algorithms and used to deny us loans, health insurance, and jobs, guess our sexuality or political preferences, and predict our likelihood to commit crimes — entirely without our knowledge.
Its analysis has been by far the most
professional
and least politicized.
But, given what some psychiatrists see as a national emergency, many have broken the rule and spoken or written publicly about their
professional
assessments of Trump’s mental state.
But many
professional
women’s career advancement is systematically blocked should they choose this path.
But, while the scientific community – including academic and
professional
institutions, agency heads, managers, and editors – is often reluctant to handle cases of misconduct rigorously, the reputation of science as a whole is at stake, not just that of a person, institution, journal, or national science entity.
But, nowadays, research increasingly is misdirected toward lucrative prizes,
professional
recognition, and financial gains – rewards that are suffocating the creativity and passion that scientific progress demands.
That is a pity, because economists’ understanding of the substantive issues,
professional
obsession with incentives, and attention to unanticipated consequences give them a natural advantage in designing institutional arrangements to further the objectives in question while minimizing behavioral distortions.
The sense of a
professional
ethic is conveyed by clauses in the oath that require managers to “develop both myself and other managers under my supervision so that the profession continues to grow and contribute to the well-being of society.”
Another clause stresses accountability to one’s peers, a hallmark of
professional
self-regulation.
Diesel engines and turbines are not the only alternatives; many services, like
professional
therapy, nursing, and teaching are available.
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