Seeds
in sentence
428 examples of Seeds in a sentence
Even barring such a nightmare scenario in 2012, the summit sowed the
seeds
of future conflicts – over the emergence of a “two-speed” Europe and the false economic doctrine guiding the eurozone’s proposed fiscal pact.
If ISIS wants to plant
seeds
of division and chaos in the West – especially Europe, which ISIS considered to be the weak link – it has so far failed.
The UN has focused on getting
seeds
and fertilizers into the hands of small farmers.
Cluster
seeds
are already underway in the Los Angeles and New York metropolitan areas and, very significantly, in Japan.
For the supply of cotton
seeds
in India has increasingly slipped out of the hands of farmers and into the hands of global seed producers like Monsanto.
With the coming of globalization, seed companies were allowed to sell
seeds
for which the companies had certified their safety.
State regulation does continue to exist where
seeds
are concerned, but nowadays it is aimed at farmers, who are being pushed into dependency on patented, corporate seed.
By undermining the efficient allocation of capital and fostering mal-investment, CPI-focused monetary policy is distorting economic structures, blocking growth-enhancing creative destruction, creating moral hazard, and sowing the
seeds
for future instability in the value of money.
Fortunately, the
seeds
of this educational revolution are already sprouting.
One of the great challenges ahead is to find a way to bring these two countries’ savings into line, given the vast trade imbalances that many believe planted the
seeds
of financial crisis.
The wheat
seeds
were thus dressed with methyl mercury and sent to Basra in Iraq's south.
An aid cutoff to Ethiopia would nonetheless lead to a lot of death among impoverished people, who will lack medicines, improved seeds, and fertilizer.
By selecting particular villages and providing basic health care, bed nets to stop malaria, primary education, better seeds, and other agricultural assistance, the organization aims to show that well-designed, comprehensive aid plans can, at relatively modest cost, raise people out of poverty.
Before such hydro-engineering projects sow the
seeds
of water conflict, China ought to build institutionalized, cooperative river-basin arrangements with downstream states.
The UN Secretary General led a steering group last year that determined that African agriculture needs around $8 billion per year in donor financing – roughly four times the current total – with a heavy emphasis on improved seeds, fertilizer, irrigation systems, and extension training.
This investment pays off wonderfully, with research centers such as the International Rice Research Institute and the International Maize and Wheat Improvement Centre providing the high-yield
seeds
and innovative farming strategies that together triggered the Asian Green Revolution.
African countries search endlessly, and mostly fruitlessly, for the small amounts of funding needed for their purchases of fertilizer and improved
seeds.
Nonetheless, the
seeds
of a sustained period of more solid growth have been planted.
Imagine you own a patch of land and have made it valuable through careful farming practices – good seeds, irrigation, fertilizers, and bees to pollinate the crops.
These projects include lending programs for weather-resistant housing and drought- and salt-tolerant seeds, and they enhanced climate-change resilience.
But when we welcome diversity – and the debate and dissent that goes with it – we sow the
seeds
of stability and progress.
In time, these
seeds
of grassroots learning eventually blossomed into CIYOTA, a youth-led, volunteer organization that runs training initiatives as well as the COBURWAS school, named for the countries of origin of the children in the refugee settlement: the Democratic Republic of Congo, Burundi, Rwanda, and South Sudan.
By placing Ukraine’s energy needs in the hands of a shadowy company linked to international criminals, the agreement has planted the
seeds
of new and perhaps more dangerous crises.
With fertilizer, improved seeds, small-scale irrigation, rapid training and extension services, and low-cost storage silos, Haiti’s food production could double or triple in the next few years, sustaining the country and building a new rural economy.
With technologies like cloud computing, soil sensors, and weather drones changing how food is produced, packaged, and distributed, digital literacy is as important as arable land and high-quality
seeds.
Farmers have been unloading produce below cost, because no one has the money to purchase it, and the winter crop could not be sown in time, because no one had cash for
seeds.
Finally, Hu, Wen, and the rest of the top leadership have turned themselves into superb firefighters with an uncanny ability to, in Party parlance, “nip the
seeds
of opposition before they sprout.”
The right always saw the post-communist interlude as a type of locust years – a time when the
seeds
of reform withered.
Interventions like rural electrification, the provision of drought-resistant
seeds
and agricultural technology, and the expansion of micro-insurance are vital not only to rural populations’ welfare, but also to catalyze a new “Green Revolution,” without which city dwellers will face severe food shortages.
Such initiatives foster the flow of resources into agriculture – both for the agribusinesses needed to feed Africa’s growing cities, and for smallholders who need better seeds, fertilizer, and market roads.
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