Revised
in sentence
227 examples of Revised in a sentence
By that autumn, when a real-time assessment of fiscal performance was carried out, it had been
revised
sharply downward, by 0.2%.
Members of parliament – who are not technicians – are understandably disturbed when they are asked to pass a
revised
budget in response to an updated estimate.
A slightly
revised
version of that legislation remains in force.
Militarily, Japan
revised
its law on the Self-Defense Forces to establish procedures for ballistic missile defense, with a strong focus on North Korea.
For example, for the EU-wide statutory audit that was completed in April, the European Parliament agreed to a
revised
directive and new regulation that should have been directly applicable in all 28 member countries.
Because many contracts are “sticky" (that is, not easily revised) in monetary terms, inflation and deflation would both inflict damage on the economy.
Pandering to BJP governments in Gujarat and Maharashtra, which claimed that, as “producer” states, they would lose out from a GST, Modi
revised
the bill to grant states the right to levy an additional 1% tax on outgoing goods.
In particular, national legislation must be
revised
to ensure that all women – whether they are carrying a baby with microcephaly or not – have full reproductive autonomy.
Every projection of growth has been
revised
downward.
On a macro level, the World Health Organization recently
revised
its estimate of the number of premature deaths due to air pollution to seven million annually.
The EU’s rules on how much capital banks must hold are about to be
revised.
At the same time, tax laws have been
revised
to make investors wealthier in the near term, discouraging long-term investment in research.
In Continental Europe, meanwhile, the rule of law appeared in the form of the civil-law tradition, which originated from Roman and Napoleonic codes that were
revised
periodically in response to regime change and revolution.
The rules of the game forged in the era of US supremacy will have to be
revised
to accommodate different interests and perceptions.
So it has devised a new strategy, aimed at creating a sense of transition: the constitution will be
revised
to designate a vice president as the president’s legitimate successor.
Lessons are being learned and investment strategies
revised.
Meanwhile, despite the promise of a
revised
Neighborhood Policy, the European Union has delivered only verbal condemnation of the violence.
If the world is characterized by ambiguity and unpredictability, then the economic theories of the pre-crisis period – rational expectations, efficient markets, and the neutrality of money – must be
revised.
Indeed, growth has slowed and GDP forecasts have been
revised
downward since mid-year in most countries.
Trump then claimed to have spoken to Putin by phone – a story he later
revised
to say that he had spoken with members of Putin’s inner circle.
Now Krugman is back with a
revised
and expanded version of his book, and, sadly, the timing is perfect.
Great Britain may be headed for a referendum on EU membership in 2017 unless certain terms of its membership are
revised.
In fact, the latest figures from the World Bank indicate that growth reached just 2.7% in 2011, and will slow this year to 2.5% – a figure that may well need to be
revised
downwards.
And labor laws would be
revised
to strengthen the role of unions.
The campaign-finance law was
revised
to provide additional government funding to parties that meet the quota, and to reduce the amount for parties that do not.
One explanation is that the published balance-of-payments data, now only preliminary, will be
revised.
Most recently, the US Commerce Department
revised
upward its estimate of GDP growth for the third quarter of last year, to 5% – the highest rate in 11 years.
But Europe risks being too servile in courting new alliances, fixated as it is on short-term gain – and bereft of any clear idea of how such alliances fit with the kinds of values that it believes should guide
revised
global governance.
The risk that the judges could rule the ESM illegal played no small part in efforts made in recent months by Chancellor Angela Merkel and President Nicolas Sarkozy to bind the EU to a
revised
and more intrusive economic governance framework, effected through an amendment to the existing treaties.
A decision is expected in the first half of 2005, but how the Pact will be
revised
remains uncertain.
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