Remembered
in sentence
1077 examples of Remembered in a sentence
Unfortunately, not everybody in Republika Srpska believes that the genocide at Srebrenica should be
remembered.
Indeed, Lin’s story, it should be remembered, grew out of a huge labor dispute between the NBA’s billionaire owners and its millionaire players over division of the league’s nearly $4 billion in annual revenues – more than many countries’ national income.
To borrow the title of a 1982 Australian film, 2017 will probably be
remembered
as the year of living dangerously, at least in terms of globalization.
Just as Paul Volcker had the courage to tackle the Great Inflation, Jerome Powell may well be
remembered
for taking an equally courageous stand against the insidious perils of the Asset Economy.
Dark Days for ChildrenNEW YORK, STOCKHOLM – The year 2016 will probably be
remembered
for military and political events, but it should also go down in history as one of the worst years for children since World War II.
China’s massive infrastructure investment, funded largely through LGFVs, will most likely be
remembered
for its critical contribution to the country’s economic modernization.
June 4, the day Peoples’ Liberation Army troops drove the students and their supporters from Tiananmen Square, is
remembered
in the West as a tragic example of state violence against unarmed citizens, and a memorial to the suppressed yearnings of the Chinese people for freedom and democracy.
June 12, 2008, will have to be
remembered
as the day that made European history.
Einstein may have drawn US President Franklin Roosevelt’s attention to the possibility of making nuclear weapons, but he is chiefly
remembered
for his profound ideas about the nature of the universe.
Otherwise, the event will be
remembered
as yet another meaningless gathering – one that left tens of millions to suffer in the clutches of the world’s deadliest infection.
At his death, Lambert was
remembered
as a man of great “temperance.”
Trump’s UN HypocrisyDENVER – US President Donald Trump’s first address to the United Nations General Assembly will be remembered, above all, for its bizarre language, and its descriptions of North Korea as “depraved,” Iran as “murderous,” and Cuba and Venezuela as “corrupt.”
China’s Best Hope2008 will not be
remembered
chiefly for noble or heroic acts.
He will be
remembered
for accepting the painful secession of Eritrea in 1993, rather than prolong the civil war, and for his efforts to reach an agreement with Egypt over the use of the Blue Nile waters.
He will be
remembered
as an African leader of major historical significance: visionary, despotic, and indispensable.
Of course, Merkel will be
remembered
as the chancellor of the “peace dividend” and, possibly, as the last chancellor of the post-war (West) German party system.
If the negotiations succeed, he will be
remembered
for his historic role in bringing peace, and will likely stand a better chance of realizing his presidential ambition, having gained parliamentary support for revising the constitution from the Kurdish Peace and Democracy Party.
If it does, Merkel will be
remembered
as the architect of a new German society.
Let us hope that the North Korean athletes’ journey from Pyongyang to PyeongChang bears diplomatic fruit, and that “the Peace Games,” as Moon calls them, will be
remembered
more for the North’s presence than for the final medal count.
In fact, Netanyahu
remembered
his father’s efforts in his address to the US Congress last March.
If he does, he will probably be
remembered
as one of Colombia’s most successful and influential presidents, and can look forward to a continuing career as a regional and international statesman.
US President Barack Obama may not be in office when the fire ignites, but if things do go terribly wrong, he may be
remembered
as another statesman who, like Neville Chamberlain, was blind to the consequences of his peaceful intentions.
And Trump’s inauguration on January 20 may someday be
remembered
as a watershed moment for Europe.
And, as with his predecessors, his administration will probably be
remembered
more for its scandals and mistakes than for its achievements, especially over the long run.
Jimmy Carter is often
remembered
as a mediocre president.
Distrust between Iranians and Arabs is even older than the Shia-Sunni divide; and, in an era that will most likely be
remembered
as one of weakened leadership throughout the region, Arabs view the nuclear talks as being about something far more fundamental than arms control.
The terrorist bombings in Madrid and London and elsewhere will also be remembered; but it is “9/11” that has become the catchphrase, almost like “August 1914.”
Kofi Annan’s AchievementCANBERRA – Kofi Annan deserves to be
remembered
as a near-exemplary United Nations secretary-general (SG).
He
remembered
the impoverished backwater that Singapore was in the 1920’s, and now he saw the gleaming city that free enterprise – together with Lee Kwan Yew’s quasi-authoritarian leadership – had wrought.
Fifteen people were killed and many more injured in what is
remembered
as the Peterloo Massacre.
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