Separates
in sentence
108 examples of Separates in a sentence
This allows the SSDC to avoid the bottlenecks in partner countries that one sees under the standard ODA model, which
separates
aid from trade and private investment – and thus impedes countries from exploiting their comparative advantages.
True, it requires great skill to walk the narrow line that
separates
effective deterrence from reckless action.
But a thin line
separates
orderly adjustment to changed conditions from market over-reaction.
Turkey’s TestPRINCETON – As the world watches the obliteration of the Syrian city of Homs and the crisis spills into neighboring Lebanon, it is time to ask what
separates
great powers from small powers.
Regardless of whether the UK ultimately
separates
politically from the continent, the coming year will mark a turning point for Europe.
The distance that
separates
the West from countries that rely on sham elections is not only geographic, religious, or cultural; it is chronological.
But what
separates
us from Saakashvili is that we understand that history, geography, and economics dictate close ties to Russia.
These two systems operate side by side, but the border that
separates
them has gradually become more porous, and the open breaches in it have become ever greater.
Yet there is little substance to British Europhobia: nothing fundamental
separates
the United Kingdom from the rest of the continent.
Yet, as Chinese Deputy Foreign Minister Zhou Wenzhong put it, “Business is business, and China
separates
business from politics.”
China’s strategic interest in the line that
separates
India from a restive Tibet and the troublesome province of Xinjiang is straightforward.
The four islands sit at the southern tip of the Kuril Islands chain that
separates
the Sea of Okhotsk from the Pacific Ocean.
What
separates
developing countries from developed countries is not only the gap in resources, but also a gap in knowledge.
The Nuclear Regulatory Commission in the United States generally
separates
unplanned nuclear “events” into two classes, “incidents” and “accidents.”
A third possibility is that society’s most distinctive ethnic or racial cleavage aligns with the divide that
separates
the masses from the propertied elite.
Nothing but the thinnest membrane of denial
separates
the notion of scientific immortality through priority of discovery from this deeper, older, and wholly non-scientific dream of escaping one’s own inevitable death.
Both sides need to engage in the vital enterprise of turning the border that
separates
them into a benign space of transnational development and stability.
But a fine line
separates
it from the “creative destruction” that is essential to purge a post-crisis system of its excesses.
What
separates
developing countries from developed countries is as much a gap in knowledge as a gap in resources.
It called for beefing up Taiwan's defense in the face of mainland China's missile threats and for building a peaceful framework of relations across the strait that
separates
Taiwan from the mainland.
Of course, crossing the Green Line that
separates
the Greek and Turkish parts of the city is nothing like crossing Berlin’s infamous Checkpoint Charlie.
A nearly unbridgeable mental gap now
separates
Russians and Caucasian young people.
What
separates
these central bankers from the herd is their readiness to jettison the myth of independent monetary policy, to accept that money is the most political of commodities, to challenge the sanctity of cash, and to concede that defeating the Great Deflation requires a progressive policy agenda.
The war-on-terror concept stands in the way of recognizing this fact because it
separates
“us” from “them” and denies that our actions may shape their behavior.
Developing countries where policymakers are cognizant of these effects are more likely to close the knowledge gap that
separates
them from the more developed countries.
But for now the two sides are not prepared to resolve what
separates
them.
China recognizes, too, that what
separates
less developed from more developed countries is not only a gap in resources, but also a gap in knowledge.
India believes that static warfare and a battle of attrition would substantially interfere with terrorist infiltrations across the Line of Control that
separates
Indian Kashmir from that controlled by Pakistan.
The second unknown concerns what, exactly,
separates
the major parties in this contest.
Fortunately, there is more that unites manufacturing and services than
separates
them.
Back
Related words
Which
Other
There
Their
Countries
Great
Distance
Under
Thing
System
Sides
Resources
Political
Nothing
Knowledge
Would
World
Together
Things
Second