Proposed
in sentence
2143 examples of Proposed in a sentence
Not surprisingly, Macron’s
proposed
legislation has provoked criticism, not just from Marine Le Pen’s far-right National Front, but also from the extreme left.
But his
proposed
law will need to include safeguards.
For now, it is promising to learn that the
proposed
law would pertain only to the period preceding elections – a delicate moment in the public life of a democracy.
In any case, Macron’s
proposed
legislation will be but one tool in the fight against disinformation.
The immediate cause of the government’s demise was Parliament’s rejection of the center-left coalition’s
proposed
budget, in favor of the budget presented by the center-right Alliance parties, which formed the previous government.
And, last week, US Defense Secretary Ashton Carter unveiled a
proposed
military budget for 2017 that signaled plans for a muscular global stance.
Worryingly, however, the
proposed
strategy may over-emphasize ring-fencing the government’s own involvement in the economy.
Many promising policies with the potential to create a safe and humane asylum process have been
proposed.
Influential opposition figures – such as former parliamentarian and political prisoner Riad Seif and the SNC’s former leader, Burhan Ghalioun – have
proposed
promising strategies for forming such an umbrella organization.
The history of previous summits suggests that the president will promise in Cannes only what he has already
proposed
at home.
From the 60-point reform program issued by the Central Committee’s Third Plenum in early November to the six core tasks endorsed by the Central Economic Work Conference a month later, China’s leaders
proposed
a raft of new measures to address the daunting challenges that their country faces in the years ahead.
The consumer- and services-led rebalancing initially
proposed
in the 12th Five-Year Plan and endorsed by the recently concluded Third Plenum implies slower GDP growth than the 10% average annual rate recorded from 1980 to 2010.
Moreover, there is nothing to indicate that the government aid
proposed
in the budget will reach those who need it with any more efficiency than the dismal record so far.
But the roughly 240 detainees remain incarcerated without having been charged with any crime, and will still not get a fair trial, even under Obama’s
proposed
military commissions.
The EU’s
proposed
“college of supervisors,” even with the addition of a European “systemic risk board,” is only a partial solution, because it endorses the leadership of the home-country regulator and fails to address the potential conflict of interests between home-country and host-country regulators.
Within weeks, Chancellor Angela Merkel’s government
proposed
legislation that put religious circumcision on a solid legal basis, with the support of most members of the Bundestag.
Almost every day brings news of some radical change in the legislation
proposed
in either the House of Representatives or the Senate.
The current
proposed
legislation does the opposite.
Medvedev’s
proposed
transatlantic security treaty would enshrine the principle of avoiding external force to resolve national disputes, which would rule out international intervention in the conflicts affecting the northern Caucasus, including Chechnya.
Instead, the “ limit-the-swings” strategy
proposed
here implies that, as the exchange rate moves further away from parity, central banks should use their reserves to intervene at unpredictable moments in order to reinforce the effect of their regular announcements of the parity range on traders’ perception of increased risk of capital losses.
The concept of the “social protection floor,” recently
proposed
by the Bachelet Report (produced by the International Labor Organization under the leadership of former Chilean President Michelle Bachelet) provides better intellectual grounding.
Fortunately, the
proposed
secrecy bill has not yet been enacted.
But the
proposed
secrecy law is utterly at odds with this initiative, and with South Africa’s reputation as a defender of freedom.
The Taylor rule
(proposed
by the Stanford University economist John Taylor in the early 1990s) is often used to describe central banks’ interest-rate policies.
But would immigration restrictions work instead, as
proposed
by some developed-country organizations, which worry about the “brain drain”?
And immigration experts like me have
proposed
since the 1970’s that schemes be developed to enable the academic diaspora to run workshops aimed at bringing teachers up to the best international standards.
Others who
proposed
tougher trade rules were not convinced – and with good reason.
Jean-Claude Juncker, the president of the European Commission, has
proposed
distributing 160,000 of the refugees currently in Europe across the EU’s 28 member states.
Why, then, was the European Commission’s
proposed
services directive, which would ensure freedom to supply services across the Union to all EU companies, vilified as the “Frankenstein directive”?
And the 317 Conservative MPs who remain are split about 200-100 between those who back May’s
proposed
Brexit plan and those who want Britain to “crash out” without a deal.
Back
Next
Related words
Would
Which
Their
Should
Government
Could
Other
Countries
About
Years
Economic
After
There
Including
Reforms
Recently
While
Budget
System
People