Respondents
in sentence
205 examples of Respondents in a sentence
Yes, 71% of Gallup
respondents
feel they pay too much in taxes; they can’t wait for their rebate checks and are set to go shopping.
After laboring over subtleties of translation and possible extraneous associations that might bias respondents’ answers, we arrived at a set of virtually identical questionnaires in both Russian and English.
For example, GDT asked in 1990 if
respondents
agreed with the statement “The press should be protected by the law from persecution by the government.”
And, in a recent Morgan Stanley survey, 71% of
respondents
stated that they are interested in sustainable investing.
To be sure, a major barrier to incorporating ESG criteria into investment decisions remains: many investors – including 54% of the
respondents
in the Morgan Stanley survey – believe that doing so could lower the financial rate of return.
By the time the Annenberg Center for Public Policy asked the same question in 2015, the percentage of such
respondents
had grown to two thirds, and a staggering 32% could not name a single branch.
Compared to
respondents
in the other Middle Eastern countries, Saudis were less religious overall, and their attitudes toward democracy and arranged marriage also indicate a moderate undercurrent.
To be sure, in all four countries, religiosity is widespread, with more than 90% of
respondents
collectively reporting that they believe in God, in life after death, and in heaven and hell.
Respondents
were nearly evenly split on the question of arranged marriages, with half supporting the idea that marriage should be based on parental consent, while 48% preferred love as the basis of matrimony.
Polls showed that 56% of
respondents
agreed that Clinton should have been prosecuted.
The
respondents
most often viewed China not only as a market opportunity, a research-and-development base, and an export base, but also as a high-end manufacturing base, a regional-headquarters site, and a service base.
How to Protect Workers Without Trade TariffsNEW HAVEN – According to a Washington Post/Schar School poll of Americans published on July 11, only 39% of
respondents
approved of US President Donald Trump’s imposition of tariffs on foreign countries, while 56% were opposed.
Half of the
respondents
believe that how one earns money is irrelevant, and a third said they would readily give or take a bribe.
In a survey of Americans conducted in January 2015, an overwhelming majority of
respondents
(78%) said that, “if nothing is done to reduce global warming,” the future consequences for the US would be “somewhat serious” or “very serious.”
Indeed, nearly 50% of
respondents
said that they thought that insufficient force had been used.
And, in the comprehensive National Asian American Survey 9% of
respondents
reported being unfairly denied a job or fired, and 12.9% alleged that they had been unfairly denied a promotion at work.
Survey
respondents
are now more positive about the economic and cultural effects of immigration, and fewer people now name immigration as one of the most important issues facing the UK.
Lastly, the image of immigrants that survey
respondents
have in mind may have changed in recent years, now that EU migration and the Windrush generation have dominated the media coverage.
Only about one-third of survey
respondents
said they rely on independent work because they cannot find conventional jobs or need supplemental income to make ends meet.
Last autumn, the Special Eurobarometer 467 survey showed that 75% of
respondents
viewed the EU positively.
Though a majority of
respondents
think their children’s lives will be more difficult than theirs own, two-thirds believe that the EU offers hope for Europe’s youth – an increase of six percentage points from 2016.
The share of younger
respondents
(ages 15-39) who view the EU positively is particularly high.
Even in Greece, which has restored GDP growth, a majority of
respondents
now supports the EU.
Most confidence indices today are based on survey questions that ask
respondents
to assess the economy today or in the near future.
In a 2013 survey of economists by the University of Chicago, 75% of the
respondents
agreed that, “because the US has underspent on new projects, maintenance, or both, the federal government has an opportunity to increase average incomes by spending more on roads, bridges, railways, and airports.”
In a recent survey, more than half of the
respondents
expressed a willingness to pay more for gasoline to finance improvements in roads, bridges, and mass transit.
In an August opinion poll, only 28% of
respondents
supported leaving the EU; in a May survey, as many Italians wanted “more Europe” as wanted “less Europe.”
When asked by the latest Gallup Balkan Monitor poll to say whom they trust, most
respondents
expressed faith in the Church, the EU, and the United Nations, but were deeply suspicious of national institutions, including those that are elected.
In all but one of the 34 countries where households were surveyed, a majority of
respondents
reported that inequality has risen in just the last few years.
His approval ratings are historically low for a new president, around 40%, with roughly 55% of
respondents
disapproving.
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