Shared
in sentence
2427 examples of Shared in a sentence
At that point, the Thai people, buffeted by domestic polarization and regional challenges, will have to muster their once-famous negotiation skills to achieve a workable compromise based on their
shared
interests.
Rather than upholding national sovereignty at all costs, the expanded order sought to pool sovereignty and to establish
shared
rules to which national governments must adhere.
And the most fundamental of those issues is whether American grievances against China –
shared
by many of the advanced economies – are justified.
But the fruits of globalization and rapid growth have not been evenly
shared
– the rich become super-rich, even as a large fraction of the population remains destitute.
“Our group does not come to this problem with answers,” he conceded, only with a
shared
ambition to find them.
At the start of the 1990's, following communism's fall, the common experiences and the
shared
legacy of Czechoslovakia, Hungary, and Poland were behind the idea of creating the so-called "Visegrad Group," with the aim of coordinating the three countries' efforts to join the EU and NATO.
A colleague
shared
the story of a patient who told the porter pushing her on a trolley to the operating theater that she had been looking forward to the operation.
Historical precedents indicate that forcing disparate nations and states to unite under a single idea – whether communism in the Soviet Union, socialism in Yugoslavia, or a
shared
currency in the eurozone – generates centrifugal forces that can trigger the union’s collapse.
While terrorism is rightly viewed as an illegitimate means, nationalism is a rational, and often legitimate, goal, and it is
shared
by many people who are not terrorists.
Indeed, while the demands of millenarians can never be met, thus leaving repression as the only means to deal with them, nationalism may be (and often is) effectively addressed through political means: when the legitimate and more widely
shared
nationalist goals are met, the radical fringe often loses its wider appeal and withers away.
While deepening interconnections among the world’s economies have fueled growth, lifted millions out of poverty, and raised living standards, the benefits have not been sufficiently
shared.
Shared
among G-20 governments, this is very little money, and would be a remarkably good investment – especially given that antibiotic resistance currently costs the US health-care system alone about $20 billion per year.
This system recognizes that antibiotics are a
shared
and exhaustible resource on which the viability of a range of other pharmaceutical products and medical devices – from chemotherapy to joint replacements – depends.
It is comparable to approaches in sectors such as energy, water, or fisheries, where regulatory tools are used to ensure that
shared
resources and infrastructure are managed and replenished in the interests of both consumers and the producers whose businesses rely on them.
During a visit to South Korea last July, President Xi Jinping highlighted not only the two countries’ deepening economic relationship, but also their
shared
views regarding Japan’s wartime past.
This might seem to be an easier task, given the two sides’
shared
history and values.
We prosper spiritually when we feel part of a community, of a
shared
human enterprise.
In this effort, new forms of collaboration and governance, accompanied by a positive
shared
narrative, will be essential.
The Fourth Industrial Revolution can compromise humanity’s traditional sources of meaning – work, community, family, and identity – or it can lift humanity into a new collective and moral consciousness based on a sense of
shared
destiny.
In Ghana last month, I met ministers who
shared
with me impressive figures on how much progress the country has made in achieving the Millennium Development Goals (MDGs).
One silver lining of the recent putsch is that, after years of division, it has united Turkey’s democratic political parties around the
shared
goal of defending democracy against future internal threats.
But if national unity, based on
shared
commitment to democracy, ultimately prevails, Turkey’s political climate will improve, allowing for a resumption of the Kurdish peace process, further progressive political reforms, and new hope for future integration with Europe.
The main driver of excessive lending and leverage is a mistaken view of risk that is
shared
by everyone.
China rejects some of the same treaties that the US has declined to join, including the International Criminal Court Statute and the Convention on the Law of the Non-Navigational Uses of International Watercourses (the first law to establish rules on the
shared
resources of transnational rivers, lakes, and aquifers).
Our
shared
objective is clear: to ensure that Africa not only weathers the immediate storm, but emerges from it stronger.
If the Constitution is to guide Europeans through periods of change and yet unknown threats, its roots must reach the foundations of European history and identity as they are embodied in the
shared
culture that Europe's citizens freely acknowledge as their own.
That agreement would later develop into NATO, which, for four decades, enabled an alliance of independent democracies with
shared
values and market economies to withstand the Soviet threat – and which has safeguarded Europe to this day.
We are in a transition period: international interconnection is increasing, as the global economic crisis has shown, but the management tools and mechanisms to guarantee the smooth operation of governments are still not being
shared.
Alternatively, the data collected in some industries could become so widely
shared
across competing firms that they will all converge on a single price for each individual.
In fact, the new consensus is
shared
by most of Labour and the main opposition within Likud.
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