Projects
in sentence
2702 examples of Projects in a sentence
that has a great program to further reinforce The Ultimate Gift and really 'brings the movie to life' with a program of
projects
(activities) that help you and your family discover all of the gifts and live them on an ongoing basis...
This is one of weirdest of film
projects
Marlon Brando ever got himself involved in.
I love the way the passion for creativity shows up in the swirl of colors, images, music, poetry, and love of human diversity that this DVD
projects.
Granted, Kellogg and Curtis went on to do some better projects, but this film and Giant Gila Monster were pretty hammy.
This was the responsibility of T. Guerra, a name that I have come to hate because, even if I agree that La Notte was a masterpiece and L'Aventura comes pretty close, I see them mostly as the result of Antonioni's vision, and Guerra's later
projects
convinced me he wasn't much of a screenwriter after all.
An unfortunate but well intentioned flick, "OA" has nothing new to offer and appears to be a misguided attempt to expose the real truth behind the
projects
(drugs, gangs, crime, cockroaches, etc.) as if we haven't had our fill of ghetto flicks.
He picks his own
projects
in a way that I always applaud him.
Gregory Peck's performance is Oscar worthy, he
projects
command presence and competence.
It's beautiful, I've used it in video
projects
and a play I directed.
This globally acclaimed and masterful film was definitely one of the most risky and dared
projects
in cinema history and thus it also easily could have been one of the biggest failures ever.
The result is that the viewer
projects
a multitude of emotions on that face.
In it, we have a bevy of the finest actors ever to grace Hollywood, some of which have made memorable
projects
in their own right.
A good source for school
projects
but thats about it.
I cant believe Hollywood didn't target Dacascos for the biggest projects, save Cradle II the Grave.
First, the Fed is raising the short-term federal funds rate and
projects
that it will increase from a little over 2% to about 3.5% by the end of 2020.
Indeed, the Fed now
projects
the federal funds rate at the end of 2020 to be less than 3.5%.
They will be less vulnerable to political pressure from local governments to finance development
projects.
By contrast, their greatest failures have come from funding grandiose
projects
that benefit the current elite, but do not properly balance environmental, social, and development priorities.
In general, there is a tendency to overestimate the economic benefits of big infrastructure
projects
in countries riddled by poor governance and corruption, and to underestimate the long-run social costs of having to repay loans whether or not promised revenues materialize.
Moreover, the world is awash in liquidity right now, and even where a government’s own money is inadequate, it is often possible to establish public-private partnerships to build genuinely high-return
projects.
Given the legacy of problematic loans and
projects
funded by Western-led infrastructure banks, it is reasonable to ask whether another one is needed, as opposed to reforming existing institutions.
We should evaluate the AIIB by how it chooses and fosters projects, not just by how much financing it provides.
Moreover, there is a need to limit legislative pressure for additional spending on locally important
projects
that fuel overall fiscal dysfunction.
Already, the Congressional Budget Office
projects
that spending in 2020 for Medicare and Medicaid (the government health-care programs for the elderly and the poor, respectively) will be roughly 15% below the level projected in 2010.
When export growth softened in mid-2012, they halted the appreciation of the renminbi and rolled out additional costly capital
projects
like the high-speed rail line – the world’s longest – that was recently completed.
Financing for the most expensive
projects
– implementing green-energy systems, building transport infrastructure, and developing modern cities – must come from foreign institutional investors.
Today, the EU is just one of several European
projects.
But, while the EU is undoubtedly willing to launch ambitious projects, it appears less able to implement them quickly and effectively.
Some governments have adopted new, rules-based governance codes, and are instituting strict controls to keep
projects
on track.
Policymakers must wait to see if new parties or leaders will assume power, and if so, whether they will commit to the
projects
approved by their predecessors.
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