Respondents
in sentence
205 examples of Respondents in a sentence
However, at non-venture funded companies and consultancies, several
respondents
were very happy with project management, and called out these people as a reason for their satisfaction.
However, when a dedicated project manager is unable to shield the team from requirements changing,
respondents
rated this approach as poor.
The CDC recently conducted a survey where they asked
respondents
simply to tell them whether they experienced significant psychological distress in the previous week.
In this case, this is nearly 30,000 U.S. respondents, and we find the same pattern.
OK, here what I found interesting was that taste is at four, and many
respondents
told me it's because of the taste of drinks, but also, in some cases, kissing is a big part of the clubbing experience.
Respondents
said that great sex hits all of the five senses at an extreme level.
One after another, our
respondents
told us that that doctor-patient relationship is a deeply intimate one — that to show their doctors their bodies and tell them their deepest secrets, they want to first understand their doctor's values.
It turns out that journalists who reported on that statistic ignored a question lower down on the survey that asked
respondents
how they defined "jihad."
And finally, there were 600
respondents
in that poll.
In one survey, about 90% of
respondents
said that it's okay to flip the switch, letting one worker die to save five, and other studies, including a virtual reality simulation of the dilemma, have found similar results.
Of the total
respondents
who admitted to appearance-based covering, 82 percent said that it was somewhat to extremely important for them to do so for their professional advancement.
Well, this is the question the Edge foundation asked this year, and four of the
respondents
said, "SETI."
It did not happen in or around Berlin as supposed by some
respondents
and was nothing to do directly with the Berlin Wall.
Of 442 respondents, 11% answered, "Yes, I worry a lot," 36% replied, "Yes, I worry a little," and 52% said, "No, I don't worry at all."
Thus, while most
respondents
said they were not worried, nearly half expressed some worry.
Although 81% of the
respondents
said fear of job loss had no effect on their decision to buy a house, of those who said it did, the number who said it encouraged home purchase outnumbered those who said it discouraged home purchase by a margin of two to one.
In a recent survey by the anti-corruption watchdog group Transparency International, 54% of Indian
respondents
said that they had paid bribes in the last two years, in interactions with police, bureaucrats, and even educational institutions.
The vast majority of
respondents
were from a migrant background, and a quarter were Muslims whose families had been in Germany for a generation or more.
For example, 66% of the
respondents
thought it unfair of flower-sellers to charge higher prices on holidays, when demand is much stronger and supplies may give out.
One team of economists has found that
respondents
“primed” by references to lobbyists or the Wall Street bailout display significantly lower levels of support for anti-poverty policies.
In addition, of those
respondents
who were employed, 90% reported some form of mistreatment at work, such as harassment, ridicule, inappropriate sharing of information about them by supervisors or co-workers, or trouble with access to toilets.
And, though a vast majority of
respondents
said that Germany is an attractive destination for skilled migrants, more than half thought that migration laws should be reformed.
Americans increasingly seem to recognize this, with 47% of
respondents
in the Pew survey supporting a more active role for Japan in Asian security.
A few years ago, the World Values Survey questioned
respondents
in scores of countries about their attachments to their local communities, their nations, and to the world at large.
For example, the percentage of
respondents
admitting to paying bribes in 2006 was 5% in Poland and 17% in the Czech Republic and Greece.
In Germany, only 6% of
respondents
think he is qualified to hold his current office, and 91% regard him as arrogant.
Similarly, 89% of
respondents
in the United Kingdom think Trump is arrogant, and only 50% still believe that the US and the UK have a special relationship now that he is in office.
In 2017, 71% of
respondents
globally considered government officials not credible or only somewhat credible, and 63% of
respondents
had the same dismal view of CEOs.
That survey showed that, while 27% of
respondents
had never engaged politically, 26% had attended an event and 34% had posted on social media.
Moreover, 68% of
respondents
said that they would participate in political action only if they had access to a safe and trusted platform that would protect them from victimization, intimidation, or reprimand.
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