Repeatedly
in sentence
1001 examples of Repeatedly in a sentence
The interests of the West and Nigeria
repeatedly
clashed, but Nigeria always stood its ground.
After all, they point out, the embassy question comes up every six months, when the president has to sign a new waiver to keep the embassy in Tel Aviv – a process that, from their perspective,
repeatedly
stokes political tension.
Moreover, Russia’s efforts to gain monopoly control of the gas pipeline networks across Eurasia pose a direct danger for China, because monopolists can not only gouge their consumers, but also shut off supplies for political purposes, as Russia has done
repeatedly
over the past two decades.
While the US vehemently complains about Russian and Iranian influence in Syria, America and its allies have
repeatedly
violated Syrian sovereignty.
After all, Islamic militants have
repeatedly
tried to assassinate Musharraf.
But the nominees presented by the LDP government of Prime Minister Taro Aso (who is now Abe’s finance minister) were
repeatedly
rejected by the Diet’s upper house, which was controlled by the opposition Democratic Party of Japan.
Nevertheless, efforts to eliminate them have failed repeatedly, not because of a lack of policy analysis, but because of the political power of the rural states.
David Davis, May’s former minister responsible for negotiating Brexit with the EU, used that phrase
repeatedly
in Parliament, and it was then taken up enthusiastically by May herself.
Austerity had failed repeatedly, from its early use under US President Herbert Hoover, which turned the stock-market crash into the Great Depression, to the IMF “programs” imposed on East Asia and Latin America in recent decades.
Given the amount of distress brought about by excessive debt, one might well ask why individuals and countries have
repeatedly
put themselves into this situation.
If there is a moral hazard, it is on the part of the lenders – especially in the private sector – who have been bailed out
repeatedly.
Commodity markets have
repeatedly
proved vulnerable to expectations that prices will fall.
The current conflicts with North Korea (where he has called for preemptive military action) and Iran (where he has
repeatedly
proposed regime change by force) are no exceptions.
On the contrary, since the crisis began, Russia’s leaders have
repeatedly
contradicted their previous statements, backtracked, reversed decisions, and denied easily verifiable facts.
A fact-finding mission established by the OPCW in April 2014 found “compelling confirmation” that a toxic chemical – most likely chlorine gas – was used “systematically and repeatedly” as a weapon in villages in northern Syria.
Abbas has
repeatedly
described peace as a strategic choice for the Palestinians.
This is particularly true with regard to President Donald Trump, who has
repeatedly
attacked the media – often wrongly, to be sure – for its coverage of his administration.
African countries are at particular risk: Jihadist groups have
repeatedly
demonstrated their ability to exploit disorder and weak state structures.
But, as the Nobel laureate economist Joseph Stiglitz has
repeatedly
pointed out, the neoliberal obsession with unfettered markets failed to account for the distributive costs of efficiency gains.
But a new issue risks bringing about a similarly problematic outcome: By
repeatedly
repressing financial-market volatility over the last few years, central-bank policies have inadvertently encouraged excessive risk-taking, which has pushed many financial-asset prices higher than economic fundamentals warrant.
Since he became president in 2003, Hu Jintao has
repeatedly
warned that China’s economy is overheating, and his government has recently acted accordingly, raising interest rates last October, imposing a new tax on home sales in June, and revaluing the Yuan in July.
For example, after
repeatedly
invoking “shovel-ready” projects to pass his February 2009 stimulus bill, Obama later admitted “…there’s no such thing as a shovel-ready project.”
Obama seems to have conveniently forgotten that his first term budgets
repeatedly
estimated growth above 4% for the next several years.
Turkmenistan’s president, Gurbanguly Berdymukhamedov, has
repeatedly
and publicly announced his reformist intentions.
For hundreds if not thousands of years, European countries made war
repeatedly
with each other.
But studies have
repeatedly
failed to establish any meaningful correlation between welfare provision and refugees’ choice of destination.
More recently, the US called for regime change in Syria, but then did little to bring it about, even after government forces, ignoring American warnings,
repeatedly
used chemical weapons.
Both the Democratic and Republican parties are practitioners of populism, American-style: they
repeatedly
cut taxes, increase the public debt (which doubled from 35% of GDP in 2007 to 74% of GDP at the end of 2015), and generally blame somebody else for the slow US growth that arises from low saving and investment rates.
After Fidel Castro’s forces overthrew the Batista regime in January 1959, the new government
repeatedly
sought to postpone repayment.
And, in the case of Israel and Palestine, relatively minor disagreements have been sufficient to derail the peace process
repeatedly.
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