Resonated
in sentence
66 examples of Resonated in a sentence
I had just gotten together with my friends from high school a few days before watching the film and so the themes hit me and
resonated.
Everyone in this ensemble piece
resonated
perfectly to create this vivid story.
I don't agree with the reviewer who says it's not for "eastcoasters" since I live in NYC and felt that this film worked on many levels that
resonated
with me, in spite of the geographical differences.
And the loneliness that Alan Arkin portrayed as John Singer really
resonated
with me.
With developing countries finding it difficult to deter massive capital inflows or mitigate the effects – owing to economic constraints, like high inflation, or to domestic politics – the “currency wars” metaphor, coined in 2010 by Brazil’s finance minister, Guido Mantega, has
resonated
widely.
Hitler’s extreme nationalism
resonated
with many audiences, including young people who wanted to restore Germany’s lost territories and military might.
But de Gaulle’s vision of government
resonated
with the convictions of many French and, above all, with many public intellectuals.
“A land where we live well and happily,” the campaign slogan of Chancellor Angela Merkel’s Christian Democratic Union (CDU),
resonated
with them, as did the rather provincial and mostly empty messages of rival parties.
The government’s mishandling of the episode
resonated
around the world, and Australia’s previously good reputation plummeted.
Given that the US has experienced yet another year of weak performance, one might have thought that this growth opportunity would have
resonated
on the American side of the S&ED table.
Europe’s Opportunity in HollandeBRUSSELS – Rarely has an election
resonated
so widely across the European Union as the French presidential ballot has done.
Tito provided the only leadership model that
resonated
with him.
But whatever their motive, their decision has
resonated
widely.
Though initiated by the government, the guochi revival
resonated
in Chinese society.
His words were eloquent and
resonated
with people of conscience throughout Europe.
The changes
resonated
with the hopes of the time, and leaders responded.
It is easy to see why this message
resonated
in Eastern Europe.
Herzog’s broadside
resonated
across Europe, where for some time there has been considerable disquiet about “judicial activism” and what some see as an irreversible trend toward empowerment of the ECJ and other EU institutions.
The annexation of Crimea has made him popular at home, and his effort to weaken America’s global dominance, in part by seeking an alliance with China, has
resonated
favorably in the rest of the world.
His extreme views on homosexuality – he has likened it to bestiality and claimed that spending time in prison makes people gay – has
resonated
with a swath of the Republican electorate, making him a real contender in Iowa.
“Let’s take back control” was the Brexiteers’ winning slogan, expressing a sentiment that clearly
resonated
with the slim majority of British voters who supported withdrawal from the EU.
But the confidence-boosting effect of the earlier real-estate boom was far more powerful, because it
resonated
directly with many more people.
But, save for a gracious acceptance by South Korea’s then-President Kim Dae-jung in 1998, Japan’s apologies simply have not
resonated
much in the region, because they have regularly been accompanied by apparent side-stepping or backsliding.
Allusions to “Polish plumbers” coming to steal locals’ jobs, however unjustified and derogatory,
resonated
deeply, especially in France, and both the French and the Dutch ended up rejecting the ambitious constitutional project.
Still, to clinch her party’s nomination, she had to combat a strong challenge from Senator Bernie Sanders, a declared socialist whose political leanings are far left of hers, and whose message
resonated
particularly among younger primary voters.
The story Trump told of a “rigged” system
resonated
with voters more than anything they had heard from their political leaders in quite some time.
Perhaps, despite his appalling personal attributes, Trump’s positions on key issues
resonated
with the electorate.
Her passionate “messages for the suffering”
resonated
with Argentina’s poor in the way that Putin’s macho swagger appeals to a majority of Russians, mostly from the country’s hinterland and provincial cities.Evita and Putin also share a streak of pettiness.
The beating death of Vincent Chin, a Chinese-American who was mistaken for a Japanese, also
resonated
historically, recalling a pseudo-scientific article on how to distinguish the Chinese from the Japanese that Life magazine published in December 1941.
One theme that Bush found
resonated
with voters in his 2004 re-election campaign was that of the “ownership society.”
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