Retired
in sentence
402 examples of Retired in a sentence
He could have still
retired
like he wanted.
Fedora had already
retired
before but experienced a comeback a few years ago before disappearing from the silver screen, this time for good.
She did marry around this time and
retired
to raise a family (she had 4 sons).
"A Strange Adventure" was directed by William Witney, the first of a few J.D. films he did, ("The Young and the Wild", "The Cool and the Crazy") just before he
retired.
Indeed, middle-aged people who thought that they would be unemployed for a few months have now realized that they were, in fact, forcibly
retired.
Such a reduction happens not only when unemployment goes up, but also when the number of those who do not participate in the labor force grows: students,
retired
people, the unemployed who are discouraged and stop looking for work and so abandon the labor force.
In particular, they have been monitoring the body count of senior North Korean officials who have suddenly retired, disappeared, or died in automobile accidents.
Why should a Frenchman or Italian in his early sixties work today, when in the 1990's he could have
retired
in his mid-fifties with 80% or more of his last working-age salary?
While Trump continues to succumb to Vladimir Putin’s blandishments
(retired
US intelligence official James Clapper recently remarked that Putin, a former KGB agent, is a great case officer in his handling of Trump), US relations with Russia are deteriorating.
And very recently,
retired
General Mauro Enrique Tello Quinones, one of the most decorated officers in the Mexican army, was abducted, tortured, and killed less than a week after assuming a new position as anti-drug chief in the resort city of Cancun.
Since the end of the Cultural Revolution, the CCP has adhered to the implicit rule that members of the Politburo Standing Committee, sitting or retired, enjoy immunity from criminal prosecution.
But the defeated have typically
retired
quietly, and never faced formal corruption charges.
In other words, one in a thousand voted for them, although they claimed to speak for that state’s
retired
and elderly people – over 30% of the population.
Retired
people need life annuities – contracts that offer a stable income stream for as long as they live – to insure against the risk of outliving their wealth.
Djukanovic is a perfect figure to lead the opposition because, as a Montenegin, he poses no threat to the career ambitions within Serbia of Draskovic, Djindjic, and
retired
General Momcilo Perisic.
As John Limbert, the erudite Iran scholar and
retired
US diplomat (taken hostage in Iran for 444 days) once reflected on the 1979 Iranian revolution, “Our liberal-minded Iranian friends proved to be helpless in political turmoil....[T]hey could write biting editorials,” but lacked the stomach to “throw acid, beat up opponents, organize street gangs...and engage in the brutality that wins” in political uprisings.
Georgia’s democracy exists in its head, but not yet in its body: citizens still spurn politics as a dirty pursuit, abandoning the ground to those who should have been
retired
long ago.
That is not unexpected, because the largely
retired
Medicare population is less vulnerable to macroeconomic fluctuations than is the working-age population.
There is still no US ambassador in Seoul, and Joseph Yun, US Special Representative for North Korea Policy,
retired
this month.
Another feature of such summits – the trading of lists of “must do” and “can do” items – also should be
retired.
Trump’s new chief of staff,
retired
General John Kelly, could still impose discipline within the White House; but it is all but impossible that he will be able to rein in the president himself.
And that increasingly bizarre behavior came even before the news broke, on December 1, that Trump’s first national security adviser and close campaign aide,
retired
General Michael Flynn, had agreed to plead guilty to one count of lying to the FBI in exchange for his cooperation with the investigation.
After losing their relatively well-paying jobs, many older workers have either
retired
prematurely or gone into much less attractive occupations.
Pires
retired
from office without even a house to his name; he worked for the people, not to amass personal wealth.
"To be heard"-- that is something of which the
retired
Khrushchev could only dream.
And Jaising has another brave young attorney to champion: a former law intern who has alleged sexual harassment against
retired
Supreme Court judge Swatanter Kumar.
Indeed, strained by decades of governmental failure to curb massive unemployment, the French are nowadays often perceived as having
retired
from the political sphere to concentrate on their lives and leisure.
Symbols matter, too: the term “human resources,” for example, should be retired, because a great enterprise is a community of engaged human beings, not a collection of detached capital.
The CEO’s of many, if not most corporations, public and private, are
retired
military officers – many fairly young.
The other reactor, unit one at the South Ukraine Nuclear Power Station, remains in operation, though all indications suggest that it should be
retired.
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