Solution
in sentence
3195 examples of Solution in a sentence
The Chinese have devised a novel
solution.
Equitable progress is the only sustainable long-term
solution
to India’s entrenched problems – whether corruption, poverty, caste wars, or religious conflict.
This is not a new idea, but it is a
solution
that has not yet stuck.
Buy-downs may prove to be the
solution
needed to ensure adequate and stable assistance to education in developing countries.
Progress in reducing emissions is an important part of responding to climate change, but it is not the whole
solution.
For those who think we can do better, one
solution
is to make bets on our predictions.
The
solution
is to take bets far more seriously, to expand them, and to design them to be capable of settling debates to the satisfaction of most reasonable observers.
As a result, the possibility of a two-state
solution
is more remote today than at any time since the start of the peace process 25 years ago.
No institutional
solution
is purely neutral in its effects on relative incomes – and it is relative income and wealth around which political debate typically revolves.
For some, we are forever living in 1938, or rather, 1942, when the Nazis approved what Hitler called “the final
solution
of the Jewish question.”
Then, in order to develop a more comprehensive
solution
that keeps countries stable and ensures that refugees receive adequate protection, deeper collaboration among governments, as well as with the private sector and civil-society organizations across the region, is needed.
Even if all of this is achieved, a truly sustainable
solution
to the refugee crisis will not come until Syria is at peace, and order is restored in failing states across the Middle East.
The obvious solution, which economists have long advocated, is an increase in America’s gasoline taxes.
My preferred
solution
would be accountability.
The main US focus must be on finding a fair
solution
to the Israeli-Palestinian question and to the Iraq crisis.
The practicable
solution
is more effective coordination among the relevant institutions.
The simplest
solution
is to remove the Fundamental Rights of Part II from the body of the text, and give them the status the Social Chapter had in the Treaty of Amsterdam: a declaration of intentions appended to the Treaty.
If this preferred
solution
proves unacceptable, an alternative would be to strengthen Article II-52, to state clearly that the twelve "social rights" of Part II apply to the Union, but not to the member states, even when these are implementing Union directives.
By providing Japan with a diplomatic carte blanche, the US may find itself hostage to Japanese interests, with the result that Japan becomes part of Asia’s security problem, not part of its
solution.
Could it work in the existing European Economic Area (the so-called Norwegian solution)?
They saw their current leaders as part of the problem, not part of the
solution.
Both he and Christofias remain committed to finding a solution, despite the difficulties they face.
The election result nonetheless underscores the fact that time is running out to find a
solution
to the Cyprus problem.
They would share Jerusalem as a capital, and find a mutually acceptable
solution
to the enormously sensitive issue of the return of Palestinian refugees.
No Israeli leader since has shown anything like his far-sighted vision, commitment, and capacity to deliver a negotiated two-state
solution.
While we are all working to assist in finding an Afghan-led political
solution
to this conflict, the fighting is not going to stop immediately.
Excessive currency volatility is not in America’s interest, not least because large exchange-rate depreciations in emerging markets would amplify the effects of globalization on US jobs, wages, and inflation, particularly as weaker foreign currencies make outsourcing a more economically viable
solution.
Yet it is dangerous to believe that the world has found in this new-model Coalition of the Willing the
solution
that it was seeking in today’s increasingly chaotic post-American order.
The most obvious
solution
is to increase the number of permanent members from five to eight or nine (including Germany, Japan, India and possibly Brazil) and to change the voting rules, so that two or three permanent members--rather than just one--are needed to block an action.
But coal is not the
solution.
Back
Next
Related words
Problem
Would
There
Which
Their
Political
Could
Problems
Crisis
Countries
Other
About
Should
People
Government
Conflict
While
Economic
Global
World