Respond
in sentence
1653 examples of Respond in a sentence
Small local organizations are often in the best position to understand and
respond
to the needs of girls and families.
At protests calling on politicians to
respond
to climate change, a cry has rung out: “No coal, no gas, no nukes, no kidding!”
Instead, America’s NAFTA partners will
respond
strategically to limits on their exports, adjusting their trade relationships with each other and with others, in order to mitigate the impact of US import controls.
Reportedly, in the run-up to the rocket launch, the North Koreans refused to
respond
to China’s pleas that they stand down.
Corporate officers
respond
to incentives and opportunities.
I suspect that European leaders will not
respond
eagerly.
Then there is the question of how emerging-market policymakers
respond
to the turbulence: Will they raise rates to stem inflationary depreciation and capital outflows, or will they cut rates to boost flagging GDP growth, thus increasing the risk of inflation and of a sudden capital-flow reversal?
He does not
respond
to European pressure, even though Ukraine would gain political leverage from closer EU ties.
Former President Bill Clinton has said that he regrets his failure to
respond
adequately to the genocide in Rwanda in 1994, although he was not alone.
It is hard to gauge whether the Italian government that will emerge from the ongoing negotiations will be ready to
respond.
Opponents will
respond
that abortion is, by its very nature, unsafe – for the fetus.
Not bound by procedural rules or legal strictures, the G20 could
respond
quickly when needed.
Our responsibility here is twofold: to put growth back on track, but also to
respond
immediately to the human tragedy that has hit our youth.
Normally, if a country’s fiscal capacity is weakened, it could
respond
by coordinating monetary and fiscal policy.
While it would be counterproductive to
respond
to anger with more anger, the EU does need to send a clear message that its partnership with Turkey is highly valuable, but not unconditional.
Judging by China’s reform progress in recent years, and the current government’s repeated promises to deepen those efforts, I am confident that the country’s leaders will
respond
to the recent crash by reaffirming the financial-reform agenda.
President Lyndon Johnson, when deciding to escalate US intervention in Vietnam, drew an analogy with Munich, when the failure to
respond
to Hitler’s aggression had catastrophic consequences.
Similarly, the ECB might consider not only how monetary accommodation allowed governments to run large budget deficits in the 1920’s, but also how central bankers’ failure to
respond
to the financial crisis of the 1930’s fed political extremism and undermined support for responsible government.
For some time after 2005, it was possible to argue that all of this was hot air, and that fast, decisive action to
respond
to genocidal atrocities would remain as unlikely as ever.
This old debate is at the core of today’s profound divisions over how Europe should
respond
to its debt crisis.
To be sure, eurozone member states also needed the courage to
respond
to the crisis of confidence confronting the common currency with concerted action for tighter control of national budgets and improved cooperation.
But how would the EU
respond?
Justice Without Borders for VenezuelaTIRANA – As Venezuela’s humanitarian catastrophe worsens by the day, governments in the region and beyond ponder how to
respond.
Domestic Chinese firms, too, need to
respond
to these pressures.
If they
respond
to youthful anger and idealism and move too far to the left, they could lose essential votes in the center.
The Morocco OptionRABAT – Three years after the Arab Spring revolutions, the democratic world appears more confused than ever about how to
respond.
All SWFs can
respond
to global political events by quickly withdrawing funds invested abroad.
In this case, the Libyans did not
respond
by withdrawing a large amount of funds, but that could happen in the future.
But whether Jay Powell’s Fed would
respond
as creatively as Bernanke’s in 2008 – providing “back-to-back” loans to non-member banks in distress, for example – is an open question.
Will Trump
respond
like FDR in 1933, reassuring the public that the only thing we have to fear is fear itself?
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