Rooted
in sentence
592 examples of Rooted in a sentence
But Sweden’s current political muddle is also
rooted
in longer-term changes, which to some extent reflect broader European trends.
This quiescence was at least partly
rooted
in demographics.
But Abe’s revisionism is
rooted
in a nationalist ideology, which is prone to justifying historical atrocities instead of drawing lessons from them.
A third challenge is
rooted
in Europe’s deeply held skepticism of financial markets.
Perhaps the biggest obstacle to initiating a trilateral dialogue is Chinese resistance to formal nuclear arms-control agreements, which is
rooted
in the memory of Cold War-era nonproliferation initiatives aimed partly at preventing China from developing its own nuclear deterrent.
Football was once a popular sport,
rooted
in local communities.
This phenomenon is likely
rooted
in the fact that, in accordance with West’s findings, the total number of human connections increases with city size.
The young candidate’s unexpected popular support is
rooted
within the ruling coalition: his adoptive father is a prominent Socialist senator (his biological father, a leader of the revolutionary left in the 1970’s, was killed by Pinochet’s political police).
Last year, a “risk on” mood prevailed in financial markets,
rooted
in unnaturally low perceptions of future volatility.
No wonder, then, that monuments to Stalin, too, are multiplying in Russian cities.Neo-medievalism is
rooted
in nostalgia for a social order based on inequality, caste, and clan, enforced by terror.
According to Putin, he
rooted
for Trump (but of course did not interfere on Trump’s behalf) because they shared a desire to improve bilateral relations.
In Europe’s case, these problems are
rooted
in a system with few escape valves and adjustment mechanisms.
This failure is
rooted
in electoral politics’ confinement to individual countries, which forces politicians to pretend that they can address economic issues with national policies alone.
The codependency construct is
rooted
in the psychopathology of human relationships whereby two partners, whether out of need or convenience, draw unhealthy support from each other.
Asia’s lagging capacity for innovation is probably
rooted
in its rote education: Asian students, when they have the opportunity, flock to North American and European universities.
Risk reduction, including preparedness, is also, first and foremost,
rooted
in responsive governance.
The more the EU is forced by Germany to become a union
rooted
in “stability,” the more pressing it will become for eurozone countries that cannot conform to the new, stricter rules to receive some sort of financial compensation.
The Global HomeHomes are the most local of investments,
rooted
to a particular place like a tree, and thus thriving or withering in response to local economic conditions.
AQAP is firmly
rooted
in this region as well, implying the possibility that local residents will seek its help in defending against an expected Houthi onslaught.
But the 2011 surge appears to be
rooted
in broader commodity scarcity than before.
American violence is
rooted
in history.
But those policies’ success was
rooted
partly in Japan’s problematic policy choices, including slow fiscal and monetary responses.
While Rousseff’s government is largely responsible for the recent bout of cyclical weakness and social upheaval, Brazil’s problems are
rooted
in a broader unwillingness to shake off the yoke of policies adopted during more than two decades of military rule.
The case against nuclear power is deeply
rooted
in concerns over safety in general and radiation in particular.
It is
rooted
in the post-World War II doctrine of “ordoliberalism,” which counseled that government should enforce contracts and ensure adequate competition but otherwise avoid interfering in the economy.
From independence through the Civil War, that suspicion was strongest in the American South, where it was
rooted
in the fear that the federal government might abolish slavery.
Ideological and political prejudices deeply
rooted
in history will have to be overcome to end the current stagnation.
They are longstanding, well organized, deep
rooted
in communities, and, above all, highly motivated – a winning combination anywhere.
The lack of progress on this front during the last two Commissions was
rooted
mainly in Germany’s Russian modernization project, which has shaped its approach to energy security.
What needed to be purged instead, postwar reformers believed, was a specific form of Japanese militarism,
rooted
in emperor worship, the samurai tradition, authoritarian “feudalism,” and so on.
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