Senses
in sentence
561 examples of Senses in a sentence
All Britons will have their work cut out for them to convince their friends around the world that they have not taken leave of their moderate
senses.
So, unfortunately, even if Europe came to its
senses
and emerging markets showed greater enthusiasm for liberal trade, we may not see a big global deal until the next decade.
There is hope that the popular protests of June will help bring Wade to his
senses
and allow the Senegalese to continue choosing their governments through transparent elections.
In what
senses?
One
senses
in British and American media coverage of the Yellow Vest protests a degree of schadenfreude.
Nowadays, most of the West
senses
the arrogant presumption at the heart of that old belief.
The “enemy” would quickly come to his or her senses, and the public, unfamiliar with those imprisoned, would quickly lose interest.
Yet the global economy is not delivering sustainable growth in two basic
senses.
With respect to global warming, it’s time we came to our
senses.
The Fed will raise interest rates when it
senses
that the economy is nearing full capacity and that inflation – wage inflation, in particular – is accelerating.
Information would become free, in all senses, and this would pose an existential threat to regimes based on the control of knowledge, including those that had previously tried to close themselves off from the outside world.
One
senses
something like the making of an American-Asian dominated universe.
Gurus of the old school claim that all this profitless prosperity cannot last; soon, if not very soon, the stock market will get back its
senses.
The initial reaction in Europe was that Putin either was bluffing or had taken leave of his
senses.
What this suggests is that the U.S. stock market has taken leave of its
senses.
But Alckmin believes that people will come to their
senses
in October and choose a president who has the experience, competence, and moral character to guide the country’s return to prosperity.
So, after a totally flawed plan that would have given money to Greece too late – only when the country risked a refinancing crisis – and at market rates that would make its debt unsustainable, the EU regained its
senses
and designed a new scheme that is closer to typical IMF conditionality: tranched support with some early front-loaded support and a semi-concessional interest rate.
It was Cullis-Suzuki who brought a low-key conference to its feet – and started to bring a skeptical world to its
senses
– when she said that the environment was too important a matter to be entrusted to adults.
At least within the bubble of EU institutions in Brussels, one
senses
a newfound confidence.
It is a map of interconnected concepts and word
senses
that reflect relationships such as those that exist between the concepts of “bill” and “kill.”
These proposals are practical in two
senses.
The conditions that enabled the regime to recover from the self-inflicted disasters of Maoism and to prosper over the last four decades have largely been replaced by a less favorable – and in some
senses
more hostile – environment.
The virus reportedly alters some patients’
senses
of smell and taste, but there is no reason why it should numb our sense of humor.
Whether the country’s private-sector creditors are deploying a negotiating tactic or simply being pigheaded, one can only hope that they will soon come to their
senses.
Getting NATO Back on TrackSTANFORD – US President-elect Joe Biden’s nomination of Lloyd Austin, a recently retired four-star general, as Secretary of Defense is a further welcome sign that America has come to its
senses
and will, after January 20 next year, no longer seek to punish its friends and reward its enemies.
For liberals, a dominant view is that, thanks to Trump’s mishandling of the COVID-19 pandemic and the economic crisis it unleashed, Republican and Trump-leaning independent voters are coming to their
senses.
First, the Kantian “critique,” which separated the noumenal from the phenomenal realm, limited our knowledge to the latter, and posited that we can know phenomena only to the extent that our senses, understanding, and reason allow.
In fact, the European Union is suffering from a deficit of confianza in both
senses.
There is evidence that central banks are coming to their
senses
with regard to climate change.
'To-day it will end, you'll see,' said Mary Nikolavna in a whisper, but so that the invalid, whose
senses
were very acute, was, as Levin saw, sure to hear her.
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