Rhetoric
in sentence
1149 examples of Rhetoric in a sentence
Even Putin's predictable presidential
rhetoric
reveals a desire to initiate a real fight against terrorism.
Indeed, parallel to the Syrian drama, the
rhetoric
in the confrontation between Israel and Iran over the program has become dramatically harsher.
Is it really so surprising that certain people might mistake this
rhetoric
for a call to arms?
But they seem to show that, despite sharper
rhetoric
in Sino-US relations, China has continued lending to the US in order to keep its export machine going and avoid booking large foreign-exchange losses.
Yet, despite the harsh rhetoric, when Miss Bardot and Mayor Basescu met, they parted with a kiss.
But hyperbolic
rhetoric
about invasions misses the complexity of the cultural change taking place all around us.
But why did Obama fence himself in with such
rhetoric
in the first place?
The result is usually heated debate and passionate rhetoric, but little concrete action.
By then, the FA had dropped its old
rhetoric
on foreign debt, and was proposing investment incentives for the local private sector and foreign investors alike.
The much larger deficits and debts (add several portions of nationalist
rhetoric
and a generous helping of foreign-policy inexperience to the mix) could easily prompt a surge in risk aversion and a sizeable increase in long-term interest rates – which would undermine much of the rationale behind self-financing infrastructure investments.
For Latin America, a return to the facile
rhetoric
and self-defeating policies of populism would be the most dangerous side effect of Trump’s victory.
In the
rhetoric
of the political right, competition brings only winners.
His promotion could be a major step up from Wen, who emphasized
rhetoric
and strategy more than implementation.
Of course, lofty
rhetoric
and ambitious intentions will mean little unless Europe’s leaders commit to the sustained implementation of concrete initiatives.
Populist
rhetoric
poses a direct challenge to the EU and its tradition of procedural and rules-based governance.
MacArthur’s
rhetoric
is stirring; some would say overblown.
To maintain his domestic image as a strong leader, he must stick to his nationalist
rhetoric
and policies.
Others, typically old-line communist parties, have retained much of their traditional rhetoric, but this is largely for electoral consumption.
The old rhetoric, after all, still resonates powerfully with the most destitute parts of the electorate: minimum wage workers, the long-term unemployed, and all those who feel that anything would be better than what they have now.
The middle class has lost its faith in the old rhetoric, and wherever the left, by some chance, comes to power, reality quickly sinks in.
Should he return to the old Lula
rhetoric
and watch capital flee the country, or try "modernity" and disappoint many of those who voted for him?
Only by employing the
rhetoric
of commitment to mobilize the troops while devoting careful attention to the center's concern with methods can the left hope to return to power.
Of course, neither sector is an example of free-market economics, but that is partly the point: free-market
rhetoric
has been used selectively – embraced when it serves special interests and discarded when it does not.
Perhaps one of the few virtues of George W. Bush’s administration is that the gap between
rhetoric
and reality is narrower than it was under Ronald Reagan.
For all Reagan’s free-trade rhetoric, he freely imposed trade restrictions, including the notorious “voluntary” export restraints on automobiles.
This mixture of free-market
rhetoric
and government intervention has worked particularly badly for developing countries.
Unfortunately, McKinnon’s policy advice has not been popular among mainstream American economists and policymakers, who prefer the short-term political advantages afforded to them by free-market
rhetoric.
Populist
rhetoric
notwithstanding, there is strong evidence to suggest that trade boosts incomes and living standards, by increasing productivity and reducing prices for firms and consumers.
Despite his thundering
rhetoric
and tweets dubbing North Korean dictator Kim Jong-un “little rocket man,” the new US president did not start any wars, whether on the Korean Peninsula or in the South China Sea.
She wants a strong mandate to “negotiate for Britain,” and that means crushing what one tabloid – in the typically incendiary
rhetoric
of Brexiteer populism – described as “saboteurs” of the national interest.
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