Remarked
in sentence
457 examples of Remarked in a sentence
As the Bank of England’s Governor Mark Carney (who I assume also heard Murdoch’s lecture)
remarked
earlier this year, “[U]nchecked market fundamentalism can devour the social capital essential for the long-term dynamism of capitalism itself.”
Former Vice President Dick Cheney famously remarked, “deficits don’t matter” – meaning that there were no immediate political consequences of running a budget deficit and pushing up the national debt.
But the US also needs to understand that its relationship with China is, as a Chinese official
remarked
recently, “too big to fail,” and requires purposeful management.
As Luxembourg’s Prime Minister Jean-Claude Juncker remarked, all EU governments know what must be done; what they don’t know is how to get re-elected once they have done it.
As Ralph Waldo Emerson remarked, “Our distrust is very expensive.”
As Australia’s wartime prime minister, Ben Chifley, once famously remarked, “The trouble with gentleman’s agreements is that there aren’t enough bloody gentlemen.”
I witnessed a similar attitude from a cosmologist when I participated in a radio show a few years ago: the host
remarked
to him that his research “has virtually no practical applicability,” to which he quickly replied, “I’m proud of that, yes.”
VIENNA – Karl Marx famously
remarked
that major historical events occur twice – the “first time as tragedy, then as farce.”
Not even Donald Trump is eternal, as French President Emmanuel Macron has
remarked.
The strongest evidence, as Sherlock Holmes might have remarked, comes from the dog that didn’t bark.
Referring to Jalal Al-e Ahmad’s 1962 book Gharbzadegi (“West-toxication”), which became one of the manifestos of the 1979 revolution, one secular intellectual in Teheran
remarked
to me that, “Nobody reads Al-e Ahmad anymore.
The journalist and poet Pritish Nandy, interviewed in the Times article,
remarked
that even he had more Twitter followers than Prime Minister Manmohan Singh (who had only around 195,000 at the time).
Many commentators
remarked
on Americans’ resilience, and that of Bostonians in particular.
As Keynes wisely remarked, “If nations can learn to provide themselves with full employment by their domestic policy…there would no longer be a pressing motive why one country need force its wares on another or repulse the offerings of its neighbor.”
Marx and the Mechanical TurkBERKELEY – The economist Suresh Naidu once
remarked
to me that there were three big problems with Karl Marx’s economics.
As the physicist-turned-ecologist Fritjof Capra and the chemist Pier Luigi Luisi
remarked
in their 2014 book The Systems View of Life, “the major problems of our time are systemic problems – all interconnected and interdependent.”
“Maybe I am a little optimistic,” Cardin
remarked
in 2010.
Greek Lessons for EuropeBERLIN - “It’s when the tide goes out that you find out who has been swimming naked,” the legendary investor Warren Buffett aptly
remarked
when the global economic crisis hit.
The Keynes-Hayek RematchLONDON – The Austrian economist Friedrich von Hayek, who died in 1992 at the age of 93, once
remarked
that to have the last word requires only outliving your opponents.
Barely four years ago, former US President Bill Clinton
remarked
that human knowledge doubles every five years.
As my colleague Jeffrey Frankel has remarked, for more than 20 years, Germany’s elites have insisted that the eurozone will not be a transfer union.
At a recent press conference, US President Barack Obama
remarked
that he was loathe to comment immediately on matters of great public importance before being absolutely sure that he knew – and knew what he thought about – the subject in question.
As Prime Minister Vladimir Putin
remarked
at a recent meeting with the CEO of state-owned bank VTB, “Perhaps we should buy something [abroad]?
Following Prime Minister David Cameron’s recent election victory in the United Kingdom, my good friend Lord Norman Lamont, a former chancellor of the exchequer,
remarked
that the UK economy’s recovery supports our government’s position.
Today, it is often
remarked
that Denmark is providing every third terrestrial wind turbine in the world, creating billions in income and jobs.
As former Prime Minister Donald Tusk, now the president of the European Council, remarked, “This is a difficult moment for the opposition, because the government’s diplomatic success is indisputable.”
Warren Buffett famously
remarked
in 2011 that his tax rate is lower than his assistant’s – and this is not an isolated occurrence.
Camillo Cavour, the architect of Italian unification in the nineteenth century, once
remarked
that, “Reforms made in time weaken the revolutionary spirit.”
As James McAuley of the Washington Post remarked: “if an observant Muslim woman wanted to get on the Paris Metro, she would be required to remove her burqa and replace it with a mask.”
US Supreme Court Justice Louis Brandeis once famously
remarked
that any state could serve as a “laboratory” for innovative policy experiments which could later be adopted nationally.
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