Similarly
in sentence
2170 examples of Similarly in a sentence
Both have
similarly
high and rising levels of income inequality.
Similarly, because Santos had wagered his presidency on reaching an agreement, the FARC insisted on concessions that previously would have seemed unrealistic.
Similarly, most people thought that Ronald Reagan lacked the requisite knowledge and intelligence for the office.
Similarly, the most promising areas for early international cooperation on securing cyberspace are problems posed by third parties such as criminals and terrorists.
Similarly, there will still be wars, fought with ever more brutal and destructive weapons.
Similarly, the two countries have a common interest in stabilizing mainland China’s relations with Taiwan.
They have only to point to the failed attempt to nominate Susan Rice, the US ambassador to the United Nations, to be Hillary Clinton’s successor as Secretary of State, or to the
similarly
gut-wrenching nomination of former Senator Chuck Hagel to be Secretary of Defense.
Similarly, resolving the crises that will inevitably emerge from the current rigid exchange-rate system will ultimately require Germany to agree either to debt write-offs or to large-scale government-bond purchases by the European Central Bank, which would flood the eurozone with liquidity.
While Zhirinovsky has long been a prominent member of Putin’s opposition, he has displayed
similarly
authoritarian tendencies, for example, by promising to establish a police state if elected President.
(Similarly, Mussolini was filmed bare-chested, harvesting corn.)
Similarly, accepting the right of non-violent Islamists to participate in public life does not mean giving up on the political and ideological struggle to defeat ultra-conservative, and in some cases totalitarian, conceptions of society.
A
similarly
honest and modern approach can also secure Medicare, without large tax increases on middle-income Americans.
Similarly, Yemen’s unity is far from assured.
Similarly, in the Philippines, financial liberalization, by and large, benefited large family-owned corporations, increasing their monopoly power by easing access to bank credit.
Similarly, enabling foreign investment in the telecommunications sector has lowered prices for landline and cellular services, while improving quality and coverage.
Similarly, banks have short-term liabilities (deposits) and long-term assets, which they cannot liquidate quickly without incurring great losses.
Similarly, Israel’s government has backed itself into a domestic policy trap of its own.
Similarly, there are concerns about transparency: many SWF’s do not reveal their investment strategies and how they operate.
Similarly, the refusal of Palestinian refugees’ claim to a right of return to Israel proper is understandable, logical, and just.
Similarly, oil and natural gas were to run out in 1990 and 1992, respectively; today, reserves of both are larger than they were in 1970, although we consume dramatically more.
That war is global, as
similarly
horrifying incidents in Pakistan, Afghanistan, and Somalia attest.
Similarly, it was much easier to win the war in Iraq than to win the peace.
Global climate-change negotiations have
similarly
ended in failure, and disagreement reigns concerning how to address food and energy security amid a new scramble for global resources.
Similarly, while there has been some impressive progress on health goals, an estimated $60 billion is still needed annually to cut mortality among children under five by two-thirds, reduce the maternal mortality rate by three-quarters, and lower the incidence of AIDS, malaria, and other major diseases.
Similarly, the claim that we are headed toward an inevitable clash of civilizations is sheer madness, propounded by people who think the worst of other groups but don’t really know them through personal contact or shared experience.
Economic outcomes were
similarly
unequal.
Similarly, the massive rise in the number of madrassas (religious schools) financed by Saudi and Gulf money – totalling roughly 64,000 and operating under the same fundamentalist Deobandi Islam that inspired the Taliban – is part of a clear effort to change Bangladesh’s culture of religious tolerance.
Similarly, there is a risk that new regulation may, either deliberately or as an unintended side effect, lead to re-nationalization of markets.
Similarly, Republicans glibly touted the Bush tax cuts - the equivalent of which President Bush's father, President George H. W. Bush, two decades ago called "voodoo economics" - as the acme of economic wisdom.
If China uses its G-20 leadership to push vigorously for change, it would not only improve its own chances of gaining more authority in the IMF; it would also gain favor with other emerging economies, which have been
similarly
frustrated by US (and European) leaders’ treatment of the issue.
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