Responded
in sentence
804 examples of Responded in a sentence
Obama’s administration understands this, and has
responded
with what it calls a “multi-partner strategy.”
The military
responded
with an all-out assault on Islamist groups in the city, killing an estimated 10,000-20,000 people.
When the Zeelanders refused to pay, the French
responded
by centralizing what had been until that point a rather de-centralized Dutch fiscal system.
Israel's President Ezer Weizmann, a former pilot, responded: "You must have serious enemies if you need these helicopters.
German Gref, Russia's young minister of Trade and Economics,
responded
to a sympathetic question about his parents being prisoners in the Gulag by saying, "So what, all were prisoners then."
Yet Ukrainian authorities have not adequately
responded
to CPJ’s questions about their investigation of these allegations.
When American diplomats complained about Jewish settlers’ forcible intrusion into Palestinian neighborhoods, Israeli Prime Minister Binyamin Netanyahu
responded
that Jerusalem was not a settlement, but the capital of Israel.
They find that US districts where the economy was severely hit by Chinese exports have
responded
by replacing moderate representatives with more radical politicians – either from the left or the right.
Unsurprisingly, they have generally
responded
to the news with disappointment and skepticism about the Chinese political model.
The Chinese also
responded
furiously to the passage of a US naval warship through disputed waters in the South China Sea last month, a move that the foreign ministry called a “provocation” that “severely undermines China’s sovereignty and security.”
Moreover, the government provided strong leadership and official agencies
responded
rapidly, ensuring, among other things, a rapid cleanup of the rubble.
And Bahrain has
responded
to Iraqi criticism of its political repression by halting its national airline’s flights to Baghdad, Beirut, and Teheran, all perceived to be Shia demons.
At the G-20 summit in Turkey, however, Putin struck a markedly different tone, extending an open hand: “We proposed cooperation on antiterrorism; unfortunately our partners in the United States in the initial stage
responded
with a refusal… [But now] it seems to me that everyone is coming around to the realization that we can wage an effective fight only together… If our partners think the time has come to change our relations, then we will welcome that.”
When she recently delivered a careful speech on foreign policy, Trump
responded
by calling her a “world-class liar.”
In other words, two left-wing governments have
responded
to the same public health problem in very different ways.
Without hesitation he
responded
that it was the smooth introduction and easy acceptance of the common currency.
The African Union also
responded
promptly.
The collapse of credit made matters worse; and firms, facing high borrowing costs and declining markets,
responded
quickly, cutting back inventories.
And throughout the region, regimes have closed off channels for political expression, and
responded
to popular protests with increasing brutality.
At the time, King Mohammed VI wisely
responded
to protesters by offering constitutional reforms and elections.
The Chinese foreign ministry
responded
by praising Modi’s “positive remarks.”
US Secretary of State John Kerry’s heat-of-the-moment comment that a military strike on Syria could be avoided if all chemical weapons were turned over was a diplomatic gift to Russia, and it
responded
with alacrity.
So, when confronted with a growth slowdown caused by structural factors, many countries
responded
by lowering interest rates and stimulating credit.
Many economists have
responded
to the failure of their discipline’s core premises by retreating into empirical investigation.
The US has
responded
to these developments by trying to create a liberal order 2.0, and by pursuing a strategic pivot to salvage the status quo in Asia.
China’s government
responded
to this by encouraging manufacturers to move into the country’s vast hinterland, where wages are much lower.
In 2011, the government, fearing contagion from Tunisia and Egypt, where long-established dictatorships had just been toppled,
responded
to the spread of protests by public-sector workers by raising their salaries by 100% – retroactively to 2008.
In Kyiv, Ukraine’s parliament
responded
by calling for international monitors to help protect the plants as the cash-strapped government attempts to boost its own efforts.
At the same time, such moments remind us that future generations ultimately will judge us not on the basis of what we accumulated – whether personally, as organizations, or as states – but by the impact we had on those around us, and by how well we
responded
to their needs.
Without the joint-depreciation option, central banks
responded
to the 2008 crisis with interest-rate cuts that were unprecedented in scope, size, and speed, as well as massive purchases of long-term securities (so-called quantitative easing, or QE).
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