Rooted
in sentence
592 examples of Rooted in a sentence
This is a straight forward revenge flick deeply
rooted
in gritty 80's fare such as Death Wish and The Exterminator.
The main theme is the conflict between two ways of seeing the world which were deep
rooted
in the Japan of that period, a country subject to many transformations: the fight between loyalty to traditional values and personal interests.
The producers mention that the events portrayed are
rooted
in historical events.
Even as the disease burden in emerging-market cities shifts from infectious to chronic illnesses, urban populations remain vulnerable to epidemic disease, childhood diseases born of malnutrition, HIV/AIDS, malaria, tuberculosis, and mental disorders
rooted
in unemployment and poverty.
But the EU’s problem with both Turkey and Russia is about more than difficult personalities or inadequate policies; it is
rooted
in the European order itself.
There is also a macroeconomic element to the decline in productivity growth,
rooted
in deficient aggregate demand.
In the developed world, the problem is
rooted
in unprecedented political polarization, which has impeded comprehensive responses and placed an excessive policy burden on central banks.
While Mansour’s killing may be, as Obama put it, “an important milestone” in the effort to bring peace to Afghanistan, it also exposed America’s policy failures under the Obama administration,
rooted
in the desire not to confront either Pakistan or even the Taliban too strongly.
The neglect of mass education is
rooted
in India’s colonial history.
In short, China’s liquidity troubles are
rooted
in the recent buildup of leverage, which has triggered debt deflation.
But, because privatization took place before corruption was
rooted
out, it involved substantial abuses, which undermined popular support for private property.
Most developing countries argue that the problem is
rooted
in the provision of capital, with investors preferring to fill their infrastructure portfolios with low-risk projects, and insurance companies and banks facing overly restrictive regulations.
But, as my experience with entrepreneurial innovation has grown, I have realized that the response is
rooted
in the fact that most people are trapped in a specific doctrine, which obscures the innovative solutions that lie beyond its borders.
In other words, all of the migration that Europe currently faces is
rooted
in grave crises in its own neighborhood.
Confidence in the clean-tech sector's future is
rooted
in the need for sustainable solutions for a planet that is supporting an ever-wealthier population.
That is a surprising proposition, given that commodity bonds have an obvious latent market,
rooted
in real economic fundamentals.
Instead, Russians’ approval of Putin is
rooted
in the fact that there is no alternative.
Both movements are
rooted
in economic concerns.
To do so, they
rooted
the sovereignty of the US in its people – a truly novel concept.
The US Constitution may have been
rooted
in “the People of the United States,” but it was only after it was drafted that those people came to think of themselves that way.
But resistance to austerity in southern Europe is not
rooted
in general hostility toward sacrifice.
How, he wanted to know, could a country that prided itself on its deeply
rooted
democracy hand Hong Kong over to the world’s last big Communist tyranny, without asking its citizens for their opinion?
Foreign corrupt practices laws are
rooted
in the recognition that governance should cross borders, just as capital does.
Inertia in Saudi Arabia is deeply
rooted
in its two sources of legitimacy, oil and Islam.
The problems are
rooted
in the field’s incentive structure – a winner-take-all system in which grants, prizes, and other rewards go to those who publish first.
One is
rooted
in separation of powers: it could not be used in cases of impeachment, an issue that is handled by Congress.
The other is
rooted
in federalism: it could be used only for crimes “against the United States,” or federal crimes, not crimes prosecuted by one of the 50 US states.
The idea of a nation-state’s sovereignty is
rooted
in the seventeenth-century Treaty of Westphalia, which embraced non-interference by external agents in states’ domestic affairs as the guiding principle of international relations.
In fact, North Korea’s appetite for nuclear weapons is
rooted
more in aggression than pragmatism.
The first threat is
rooted
in North Korea’s pursuit of enhanced military capabilities through a ballistic-missile program and the development of weapons of mass destruction (nuclear, chemical, and biological).
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