Reaction
in sentence
1167 examples of Reaction in a sentence
Across the globe, the
reaction
to the images of destruction and death in Lebanon, but also in Gaza and Israel has been one of abhorrence.
The angry
reaction
– combined with the government’s diplomatic reprisals against those who use the word – has the perverse effect of stigmatizing present-day Turks as deniers of one of the great crimes of the twentieth century.
In the end, US policymakers backed off the idea; but, not surprisingly, the
reaction
to the article was mostly negative.
However, concern that the Syrian government could intensify its use of chemical weapons against rebel-held areas, or that rebels could initiate attacks or respond with captured chemical weapons, raises questions about the pattern’s durability and the international community’s
reaction.
Conventional wisdom regards it simply as a
reaction
to stagnant living standards.
The US-led Trans-Pacific Partnership, for example, is directed against China; and China’s New Silk Road initiative is a
reaction
to its exclusion from the 12-country TPP.
PRINCETON – When I wrote the cover article of the July/August issue of The Atlantic, entitled “Why Women Still Can’t Have It All,” I expected a hostile
reaction
from many American career women of my generation and older, and positive reactions from women aged roughly 25-35.
What I did not expect was the speed and scale of the
reaction
– almost a million readers within a week and far too many written responses and TV, radio, and blog debates for me to follow – and its global scope.
But even if Moscow's
reaction
to the Polish reforms was very much on everyone's mind, Moscow was not the first destination on my travels, as the ritual of all previous governments demanded.
Much will hinge, finally, on the president’s
reaction.
The Sunni
reaction
to Iran may reflect deep-seated suspicions about the Shia (witness the cold shoulder given by most Sunnis to Shia rule in Iraq).
A Talking Cure for SyriaLONDON – The proposal by the United States and Russia to hold a diplomatic conference to end the carnage in Syria deserves a less skeptical
reaction
than it has received.
The
reaction
of Boot, and others of his persuasion, points to a genuine dilemma that always occurs in authoritarian systems that use some semblance of democracy to bolster their legitimacy.
But there also seems to be a bit of a
reaction
against the “new kids on the block,” namely multinational enterprises from emerging markets, especially when these are state-owned and seek to enter the US market through mergers and acquisitions.
Fidesz in Hungary and the Solidarity Electoral Alliance (AWS) in Poland gained power two years ago because of a
reaction
to their post-communist predecessors.
So far, the exuberant
reaction
of markets to Trump’s victory – all US stock indices have reached multiple record highs – has not been reflected in “hard data.”
An important law of politics is at work here: every integrative process provokes a fissile
reaction.
To navigate it, we need strong political will around the world – leadership over brinksmanship, cooperation over competition, and action over
reaction.
Just as Southeast Asia’s peasant rebellions of the 1930’s were a
reaction
to the breakdown of an earlier episode of globalization, so Islamism in Asia is a response to our new secularist/consumerist societies.
But that may prove to be a shortsighted
reaction.
And, foreseeing that reaction, no British prime minister, not even David Cameron, would have dared announce a Brexit referendum.
Still, market
reaction
to the announcement was negative (the EuroStoxx Banks index fell 7.5% in two days), most likely because the EBA did not include specific estimates of European banks’ capital shortfalls or outline a recapitalization plan.
In a new paper investigating this market reaction, using United States capital-requirement rules, we calculate the total capital shortfall in all 51 participating banks to be €123 billion.
Our default reaction, often reinforced by Western philosophical traditions and simplistic political rhetoric, is that evil acts must be the product of fundamentally evil or insane individuals.
It is also emblematic of the knee-jerk
reaction
that often obfuscates the pros and cons of capital controls.
The IMF’s
reaction
to Brazil’s financial taxes reflects how ingrained finance fetishism has become, and how difficult it is to reintroduce some balance in the debate on capital flows – even in the aftermath of the greatest financial crisis the world has experienced since the Great Depression.
European officials’ incensed
reaction
– the banks are fine, they insist, and need only liquidity support – should serve to buttress the Fund’s determination to be sensible about Europe.
My own sarcastic
reaction
was to think, “Oh, now the IMF thinks that some of the core eurozone countries are a default risk.”
By not taking national military-mobilization processes off of autopilot, European political leaders allowed for an international chain
reaction
to occur.
The
reaction
has been swift, harsh, and almost universally excoriating.
Back
Next
Related words
Would
Which
Their
About
First
Movie
There
People
Could
After
Other
Against
Chain
Public
Should
Initial
Political
Negative
Financial
Years