Response
in sentence
4470 examples of Response in a sentence
In
response
to the domestic and regional crises generated by the Maduro regime, the US has put in place severe trade and financial sanctions, and Trump has reportedly floated the idea of invading Venezuela.
The problem is that subjective measures are much more difficult to study – not least because they are associated with high placebo
response
rates.
For example, the recent concept of “European reinforcement of African capabilities in prevention, crisis
response
and conflict resolution” (which is known as ‘Recamp’) openly calls for African ownership of this process.
Unfortunately, this appears to be the least likely
response
to the Islamic State’s recent attacks.
Faced with that reality, the climate agreement reached in Paris last month represents a valuable but still insufficient
response.
In
response
to rapid and bold stimulus measures, Japan’s economy is expected to grow at a rate of around 3% this year – one of the highest rates among advanced economies – and the Nikkei index rose 80% in the six-month period ending in May of this year.
Critics also point to the high risk of escalation resulting from such operations, including the possibility of a nuclear
response.
Tsipras’s
response
to these provocations has been clear and consistent: Greece should stay in the eurozone, and it needs a fresh financial start to do so.
They included Mokhtar Belmokhtar, who passed through all the phases of Algerian armed Islamist activism, from Afghanistan to the Sahel; and Abdelhamid Abou Zeid, who started as a political activist in the FIS party structure, took up arms in
response
to the 1992 coup, and then became a hardened hostage-taker in charge of one of AQIM’s Sahara brigades.
His position is a refutation of former Fed Chairman Alan Greenspan’s doctrine that the central bank should not adjust policy in
response
to financial-sector excesses, but instead should concentrate on reacting to any problems that subsequently arise.
Finally, there is the question of whether monetary policy is the right instrument to use in
response
to the risks arising from financial instability and, if so, how aggressively to use it.
Inevitably, the answers are colored by the United States’ experience in 1929, when the Fed tightened policy in
response
to what it perceived as excesses on Wall Street, only to plunge the economy into the Great Depression.
In response, the government has urged managers to publish their incomes and abolished the bank secrecy laws that were once considered sacrosanct.
But, ironically, attention has focused on the fact that some of the investment money was not spent as well as it might have been, and on the fiscal deficit that the downturn and the government’s
response
created.
Revisions to America’s strategic posture would be a reasonable
response
to Russian aggression and rule-breaking, particularly in Eastern Europe, and to China’s growing assertiveness on the world stage.
In recent years, large swaths of Central and Eastern Europe’s electorates have been mobilized by populist rhetoric, and the region’s governments have refused to cooperate with the EU’s collective
response
to the refugee crisis.
Khrushchev’s
response
was reminiscent of how he dealt with the Hungarian Revolution of 1956, a time when he was just consolidating his rule and needed to keep Kremlin hardliners at bay.
It scoffs at assertions that Russia would cheat by multiplying warheads on bombers or new rail-based missile carriers, arguing that the Kremlin would want to avoid America’s compensatory
response.
Empirical models that try to quantify the impact of exchange rate changes suggest that without an aggressive monetary policy response, a 40 % euro appreciation would knock 2.5% off European growth.
Putin’s desire to preempt such an outcome explains the Kremlin’s brutal
response.
An efficient supply-side
response
to this large and growing source of demand requires regulatory reform in many services, including finance, product safety, transport, and logistics.
The United States is still debating President Donald Trump’s equivocating
response
to violence committed by white supremacists and neo-Nazis in Charlottesville, Virginia.
Although the Fed traditionally controlled only the short-term federal funds rate, investors’
response
to a change in that rate depended on their expectation of how long the rate change would last.
The EU’s
response
to Brexit could well prove to be another pitfall.
A quicker and more concerted
response
might have limited the fall-out from the crisis, and thus its cost.
The ability to determine the principal genes that account for our variable
response
to prescription drugs has been advanced by a technique known as a genome-wide association study (GWAS).
The main side-effect of statins, which lower cholesterol in the blood, is severe muscle inflammation, and it can now be predicted with a simple genotype test, as can the
response
to Plavix, the second most commonly prescribed drug after statins.
In many such patients, doubling the dose of Plavix, and checking the platelet function with a point-of-care test to assure suppression, can override the lack of
response.
Moreover, someday we will know – via sequencing of the whole genome – about rarer genomic variations that are correlated with treatment
response
or side-effects.
Iranian President Hassan Rouhani publicly announced just last week that Iran could abandon the deal “within hours” in
response
to new sanctions.
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