Responded
in sentence
804 examples of Responded in a sentence
So how has Europe, with its vital security interests at stake,
responded
to these developments?
The US has
responded
to Russia’s illegal annexation of Crimea by distancing itself from the “Budapest Memorandum,” the pact that US President Bill Clinton signed in 1994 committing the US to safeguard Ukraine’s territorial integrity in exchange for relinquishing its nuclear arsenal.
The fact that the Fed
responded
quickly prevented the 2001 recession from worsening.
The renminbi’s rise over the past month can be attributed to greater global liquidity since the start of the third quarter, as policymakers have
responded
to the eurozone’s sovereign-debt crisis and stagnating output.
Then, on November 7, Coca-Cola
responded
to the Oxfam campaign by declaring that it would have “zero tolerance” for land grabbing by its suppliers and bottlers.
Why Polish Judicial Independence MattersBUDAPEST – After some delay, Poland’s government, controlled by the Law and Justice (PiS) party, has finally
responded
to concerns raised by the European Commission about its legislative attack on judicial independence.
Equally predictably, the UK banking community
responded
by playing the “we’ll take our marbles and go home” card (“home” meaning New York, Honk Kong, Zurich – anywhere but London).
A Bank of England executive then
responded
with the “good riddance” card, saying that, “given the costs of carrying that financial system around, it may be a price worth paying.”
So far, pharmaceutical and biomedical research firms have
responded
to Eroom’s law by cutting R&D or moving it to less expensive sites in Asia, shifting their focus to less prevalent diseases, and sourcing innovation externally.
Germany – which Trump, with a straight face, has called a “captive of the Russians” – has
responded
to Trump’s actions, including his opposition to the Nord Stream 2 natural gas pipeline linking Russia and Germany.
UNICEF
responded
with Adjustment with a Human Face, which argued that children must be protected during economic crises.
If Florida is devastated by a hurricane, its governor would only make matters worse if he
responded
by abandoning trade with other states.
UN member states
responded
by voting overwhelmingly to condemn the decision.
Only 22%
responded
affirmatively when asked, “Do you think your voice matters?”
It
responded
by internalizing foreign competitors like Sony, Toyota, Bayer, Nestlé, and DaimlerChrysler - in effect turning them into US companies with US investors, loyalties, and even corporate cultures.
“That is not a European problem,” the Americans
responded.
Since January, when Switzerland
responded
to the euro’s depreciation against the dollar by abandoning its peg to the European currency, the country’s economy has experienced a downturn.
Likewise, Japan
responded
to its banking crisis by creating very large merged institutions, while the US repealed much of the depression-era legislation that restricted banking.
EU leaders have
responded
in kind.
Recall that Turkey made its first application to join in 1959, and that since 1963, the European Economic Community, the forerunner to today’s EU,
responded
with a delaying tactic: a request for a customs agreement.
India’s government
responded
promptly: “Our cooperation with Vietnam or any other country is always as per international laws, norms, and conventions,” it declared, stating that “cooperation with Vietnam in the area of energy is very important.”
For example, with a nominal-GDP target, the ECB could have avoided its mistake in July 2008, when, just as the economy was going into recession, it
responded
to a spike in world oil prices by raising interest rates to fight consumer price inflation.
Unfortunately, India
responded
to the November 2008 Mumbai attacks and other Pakistani provocations by tightening its visa restrictions and restricting other possibilities for cultural and social contact.
In many countries, governments in 2009
responded
to the collapse of housing bubbles by instituting policies aimed at supporting these speculative markets.
Overall, those who
responded
that they “strongly agree” that “Iraq would be a better place if religion and politics were separated” increased from 27% in 2004 to 41% in 2006.
Eventually, on the 50th anniversary of Japan’s defeat in 1995, Prime Minister Tomiichi Murayama
responded
with personal language of both “deep remorse” and “heartfelt apology.”
In fact, the European Commission has proposed largely appropriate responses to the crisis, and many member states, especially Germany and Sweden, have
responded
adequately.
In other words, every subject who received the active drug responded, and none of those who received the placebo did.
We
responded.
Rather than revisit the technical issues to which we already responded, I want to offer a few additional thoughts that might contribute to a broader perspective.
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