Respondents
in sentence
205 examples of Respondents in a sentence
Entrepreneurs (8% of respondents) are the most enthusiastic, with 76% satisfied with reforms.
Czechs seem to be reverting to the politics of the interwar period, with most favoring some mix of state control and free enterprise: 61% of all
respondents
support a "social market" system, versus 28% who support a "free market" system and 11% who prefer the pre-1990 socialist system.
Polling after Fillon’s victory put his support at 26%, with Le Pen backed by 24% of
respondents.
The interviews recorded both subjective factors, such as how satisfied
respondents
are with their lives, and objective factors, like standard of living, health, and education, as well as participation in culture, community vitality, ecological health, and the balance between work and other activities.
In both booms, roughly 90% of
respondents
in the US expected an increase in home prices over the next several years, with large expected increases over the next 12 months, surpassing 15% in San Francisco in 2003.
In "glamour cities," newspaper articles feature stories of homes that sold well above asking price, and 45% of
respondents
in the 2003 survey reported selling at above asking prices in San Francisco.
Respondents
report that they are increasingly resentful of economic inequality and social segregation.
In the United States,
respondents
favor trade restrictions by a two-to-one margin.
Highly skilled and better-educated
respondents
tend to be considerably more pro-free trade than blue-collar workers are.
The survey also showed that although China's government ruled out universal suffrage in the 2007 and 2008 elections, over 40% of
respondents
still wanted democracy by then, with nearly 20% more wanting it by the next round of elections in 2011 and 2012.
In “Fear in the Voting Booth: The 2004 Presidential Election,” a study published in Political Behavior in 2007, researchers from Duke University and Michigan State University cited surveys in which 42% of US
respondents
deemed terrorism to be the most important issue in the election.
Only 18% of survey
respondents
singled out the economy, and just 3% mentioned other traditional domestic issues.
According to the study, 45% of survey
respondents
believed that the economy had worsened over the previous year, while only 24% thought that it had improved.
In addition, more
respondents
(47%) thought that the phrase “strong leader” better described Bush than his rival, then-Massachusetts Senator John Kerry – a genuine Vietnam War hero.
Almost three-fifths of
respondents
in the INSI/IWMF study who had experienced harassment said that they had reported incidents to their employers.
In a recent survey by the IWMF and TrollBusters, one-third of
respondents
said that they had considered abandoning journalism; those at earlier stages in their careers were twice as likely to say that they were considering work in other fields because of the threats and attacks they received, in person or online.
We asked
respondents
to indicate how much control they had over their lives and how optimistic they were about the future, using a scale on which ten indicated a highly optimistic sense of control and one a deep level of powerlessness and pessimism.
Across the Asia-Pacific region, 44% of
respondents
said that men make better leaders than women.
And 70% of Indian
respondents
– compared to just 21% of Australian
respondents
– agreed with the statement: “When a mother works for pay, the children suffer.”
Forty-six percent of the
respondents
said that the most likely outcome for Italy is an interim administration and new elections.
While the US Trade Representative (USTR), which compiled the Section 301 report, claims to have conducted many surveys, all
respondents
are anonymous, and their assertions are little more than hearsay – nothing that would be admissible in a court of law.
Among Iraqis, primary self-identification in national terms jumped from 23% of
respondents
in 2004 to 57% in 2011.
According to one poll, 67% of
respondents
disapprove of how the ruling coalition pushed the legislation through the Diet.
Similarly, some 51% of
respondents
disapproved of the laws on constitutional grounds, believing them to be in violation of Article 9 of the constitution, the provision that Abe would like to alter.
A recent survey by the German Marshall Fund found that 88% of European
respondents
want the EU to take greater responsibility for dealing with global threats.
In an opinion poll at the end of 2014, 68% of
respondents
said that Putin should be “Man of the Year.”
This should give some comfort to governments in the Arab world, where a 2012 survey of young people showed 72% of the
respondents
expressing greater trust in their governments.
In Georgia, the country where support for European and Euro-Atlantic integration has historically been the most solid, a recent poll showed that 31% of
respondents
supported joining Russian President Vladimir Putin’s pet project, the Eurasian Economic Union (EEU) – up from 16% just one year ago.
Nearly half of the
respondents
indicated that, when possible, they prefer to invest in technology or outsource to third parties and hire part-time workers, none of whom receive much additional training or have a stake in their company’s long-term success.
Economic conditions in the country were found good or excellent by 67% of respondents; 63% judged that they would be better off a year from now; 73% reported that they were unworried about losing their job.
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