Published
in sentence
1368 examples of Published in a sentence
A survey
published
on a Web site associated with Hamas claimed credit for killing 54% of all the Israelis who died as a result of Palestinians’ armed struggle, and this body count is Hamas’s claim to success.
For example, the head of Islamic affairs in the Ministry of Religion, Nasaruddin Umar, is a self-described Islamic feminist who has
published
sophisticated critiques of gender bias in Koranic exegesis.
The Peterson Institute for International Economics, which
published
the pro-TPP study, inexplicably states in its brief: “The agreement will raise US wages but is not projected to change US employment levels…” The result on wages is a conclusion of the study, whereas the employment “projection” could have been made before the computer crunched a single number.
The Bank of Thailand’s
published
balance sheet wildly exaggerated its available foreign-exchange reserves – hardly a shining example of financial transparency.
The US Federal Reserve Board’s
published
forecasts suggest only three quarter-point rate hikes this year, and futures markets have priced in just two such moves.
A report
published
in May 2010 by the Council of Europe, entitled Islam, Islamism, and Islamophobia in Europe, recognized that Europe has been home to Muslims for many centuries, and acknowledged the contribution of Islamic civilization to European culture.
Moreover, even though his emails have been hacked and published, and the government has searched his home and confiscated his computers and phones, there are no convincing charges against him – except for the obviously politically motivated cases.
A 2016 study
published
in the Journal of the American Medical Association found that American men with incomes in the top 1% live 15 years longer than the poorest 1%; for women in these respective groups, the gap is ten years.
Thus, Idomeneo must be performed, and Salman Rushdie must be
published.
Most of the
published
responses to Ridley’s essay were critical.
As he put it, “Venture capitalists literally ‘walk the halls’ of major research institutes in search of breakthroughs, embodied in patents and
published
papers, around which to build companies.
They are convinced, according to recently
published
public-opinion polls, that their new president will not keep some of his “untenable promises,” and they seem to accept this as inevitable.
And, while some question whether the machine is truly a quantum computer, its designers have
published
articles in peer-reviewed journals demonstrating that the basic elements of this novel computer are indeed superconducting quantum bits.
For example, after spending five years crisscrossing the US in their single-engine propeller plane, James and Deborah Fallows have
published
Our Towns, a deep and faithful account of local efforts to rebuild the country.
In France, two prominent Socialists recently
published
proposals calling for a re-think of traditional French attitudes towards the EU, including a re-think of the farm policy.
The latest Global Financial Centres Index (GFCI),
published
by the consultancy Z/Yen in London, revealed that the Rock had risen further and faster up the ranks than any other center – 17 places, from 70th to 53rd position, since the previous report in September 2013.
Likewise, as France slides into a governance crisis and its leaders’ credibility rapidly erodes, the leading French intellectual Alain Minc has
published
Vive l’Allemagne (“Long Live Germany”), in which he argues that Germany is Europe’s healthiest and most democratic country.
Revealingly, the writer Miranda Seymour’s recently
published
book Noble Endeavours reminds Britain of the centuries-old love affair between Germany and England.
Despite
published
speculation about the country’s nuclear intentions, the IAEA considered Libya to be NPT-compliant.
Nevertheless, an officially blessed book
published
in 2005, Tibet’s Waters Will Save China , openly championed the northward rerouting of the Brahmaputra.
Bendjedid, whose memoirs were recently
published
(he died in October), gave Algeria its first relatively democratic constitution, lifting the ban on political parties and guaranteeing a minimum of basic rights, including freedom of speech, assembly, and conscience.
And, as Robert Jervis argued in Perception and Misperception in International Politics,
published
during the Cold War, the illusions that we create have an enormous influence on decision-making – even becoming a fundamental cause of conflict.
Indeed, United Nations Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon criticized Iran for not assuring the world that it is not seeking nuclear arms at a time when the International Atomic Energy Agency has
published
a new report suggesting that it is.
And Germans have been responding to an essay
published
by German Deputy Finance Minister Jens Spahn, in which he complains that English-speaking hipsters in Berlin are eroding German national identity.
Even the editors of the Bucharest literary magazine ("Revista 22") that
published
the article backtracked, saying it "tended to estrange Eliade from sympathetic understanding in Romania, instead of bringing him closer to it."
Klimov’s approach echoed that of Svetlana Alexievich – this year’s Nobel laureate in literature – in her first book, War’s Unwomanly Face,
published
the year before.
The passage of libel reform is attributable to a campaign launched more than three years ago by three organizations: English PEN, a writers association;Index on Censorship, a bimonthly journal that has monitored censorship worldwide and
published
the works of censored writers for the past four decades; and Sense About Science, an organization that promotes scientific knowledge and understanding.
Nature had to contend with a libel suit for pointing out that a physics journal had
published
many articles by its editor, and that these articles had not been subjected to peer review.
The science case that probably played the most significant role in the campaign was a suit filed by the British Chiropractic Association against science writer Simon Singh for an article he
published
in The Guardian in 2008, in which he discussed “bogus treatments.”
Nearly 400 years ago, in 1644, John Milton
published
his Areopagitica, an essay denouncing a measure in Parliament for licensing the press that was intended, among other things, to suppress libelous publications.
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