Remembered
in sentence
1077 examples of Remembered in a sentence
But he will be
remembered
primarily as the visionary who provided the intellectual firepower for free-market enthusiasts during the second half of the century, and as the éminence grise behind the dramatic shift in the economic policies that took place after 1980.
“We always
remembered
the war,” Alexievich recalled, “at school, at home, at weddings and christenings, during holidays and funerals.
On that spot, that Golgotha of modern times, he called the Poles, who
remembered
dear ones gassed to death in Auschwitz's crematoria as well as those frozen into glass in Siberia's concentration camps, to a brotherhood devoted to struggle against even justified hatred and revenge.
Ramaphosa’s victory is an important sign that many within the ANC understand that they must change or risk being
remembered
as the party that allowed an avaricious few to sell off the country.
Today, the Bosnian War is barely
remembered.
It was just such a move, it should be remembered, that effectively ended the Cold War.
Even so, whereas Carnegie’s theory makes some sense (which is why his essay is
remembered
so well more than a century later), it isn’t obvious that he was right to believe that successful business people are the best administrators of charitable foundations.
Rather than marking the beginning of a new phase of the euro crisis, the agreement may be
remembered
as the culmination of a long series of political compromises that, by correcting some of the euro’s worst design flaws, created the conditions for a European economic recovery.
They believe that free and fair elections represent their best chance of having a competent leader – someone like Patten, China’s former nemesis, who is
remembered
fondly in Hong Kong.
In broad terms, Ukraine seeks security and stability, and it should be
remembered
that our record here is strong.
Schmidt is
remembered
as a hands-on pragmatist, but above all as an accomplished crisis manager.
The Paris climate agreement will be
remembered
as a success only if we manage to shift our focus from talk to effective action.
The inventor of New Labour would like to be
remembered
as the man who squared the circle of sustainable economic growth and a reformed welfare state, the man who reconciled wealth creation and social cohesion.
Best
remembered
for his commitment to Realpolitik (the view, as Lord Palmerston put it, that “nations have no permanent friends or allies, they only have permanent interests”), Bismarck had to address whether unified Germany should be big or small – with or without Austria, and led jointly or by Prussia alone.
Iran, it must be remembered, cares as much about its image as it does about its nuclear achievements.
As a result, just as President George W. Bush will be
remembered
for the unraveling of Iraq, one of Obama’s central legacies is the mayhem in Libya.
The agreement on Syria’s chemical weapons struck by Russia and the US could one day be
remembered
as a spectacular breakthrough in the field of arms control.
But it is more likely to be perceived as a grand deception –
remembered
not for helping Syria’s people, but mainly as a sign of America’s growing international weakness.
But it may also be
remembered
as the start of a new era of progressive federalism and resistance, championed by state and local governments trusted by their citizens to help improve their lives and communities.
But 2012 will also be
remembered
as the year when structural changes in the Brazilian economy were consolidated.
While Poles are justifiably offended by use of terms like “Polish death camps” – they were German-run camps, located on occupied Polish territory, and should be
remembered
as such – the law amounts to a dangerous attempt to use history as a political tool.
Then he explained a better course of action, admonishing that “pique is no substitute for policy,” a line I always
remembered
– and had many occasions to use.
The Industrial Revolution is often
remembered
for its “Satanic mills”; but it was also a time of radical new thinking in economics, spearheaded by Adam Smith, John Stuart Mill, David Ricardo, Antoine Cournot, and many others.
If he is merely competent, he will likely end up handing over power to the Left, and thus risks being
remembered
as Uruguay's Kerenski.
But the CRA is empty symbolism, and that is how it will be
remembered.
Gligorov
remembered
looking up at his grandfather to correct him, and his grandfather placing his index finger over his mouth to silence him.
Meanwhile, the Communists took whatever food they could find, as one peasant remembered, “down to the last little grain,” and in early 1933 the borders of Soviet Ukraine were sealed so that the starving could not seek help.
With the current presidential term lurching to such a calamitous close that the incumbent is probably worried about being
remembered
as George Herbert Hoover Walker Bush, the correlation between presidential party and economic outcome demands some kind of explanation.
It should be
remembered
that when five countries – Belgium, France, Germany, Luxembourg, and the Netherlands – agreed in 1985 (in the village of Schengen, Luxembourg) to abolish border controls, they did not do so on a whim or because some politicians had a lofty vision.
But, owing to the financial and economic crisis, the current decade will be
remembered
as the decade of public debt, and in some countries or regions, maybe even the decade of permanent fiscal derailment if nothing is done.
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