Speaks
in sentence
585 examples of Speaks in a sentence
He who has the largest wallet
speaks
with the loudest voice.
No one
speaks
for the Syrian people in the Oval Office every morning.
If she
speaks
out for the Rohingya, her appeal among Buddhists, the vast majority of Myanmar’s citizens, may be dented enough to preserve the army’s grip on power.
The shocking assassinations of Shahbaz Bhatti, Pakistan’s minister for minority affairs, and the governor of Punjab province, Salmaan Taseer, ensured that anyone who
speaks
out on this topic can expect swift retribution.
In exile, I immediately identified with another capital of Dada, the “cosmic republic, that
speaks
all languages in a universal dialect,” as Johannes Baader put it.
The PiS’s wholesale refusal to admit any guilt or own up to mistakes
speaks
to a deep-seated immaturity.
Similarly, the Nobel laureate economist Amartya Sen
speaks
of our “multiple identities” – ethnic, religious, national, local, professional, and political – many of which cross national boundaries.
The title comes from the preamble to the UN charter, which
speaks
of striving “to promote social progress and better standards of life in larger freedom.”
But a key northern European quality
speaks
to one of Monti’s principal concerns: trust.
“Now I don’t expect diplomacy to be negotiated out in the open,” Menendez said in a recent speech, “but I do expect for someone who is the nominee to be Secretary of State, when he
speaks
with committee leadership and is asked specific questions about North Korea, to share some insights about such a visit.
Negotiation should address these causes no less than it
speaks
to interests.
China-bashing in the US
speaks
to a corrosive shift in the American psyche.
Mesic's astounding victory
speaks
volumes about the current mood of the Croat electorate.
In this sense, Venezuela’s experience
speaks
to all of Latin America.
President Bush should be made to understand that the US will find no true international support if America
speaks
incessantly about terrorism while doing almost nothing about the problems that really affect most of the world: poverty, lack of access to safe water and sanitation, vulnerability to disease, and climate change.
Holland
speaks
from a position of authority on this topic.
Indeed, it is a question that also
speaks
to the increasingly worrisome outlook for the global economy.
None of these governments openly
speaks
of socialism, much less Marxism.
Nonetheless, the historical record
speaks
for itself: since 1953, North Korea has not launched a large-scale military assault on South Korea, and has limited its threats against Japan to belligerent rhetoric.
They are interested in a candidate, male or female, who
speaks
to their life issues, and are turned off by a woman who assumes that they are just waiting, sheep-like, for a Joan of Arc figure who will serve “lesser” women as what Jungian psychologists call an “ego ideal.”
But how one-party states, particularly Marxist states, choose to “ideate” reality matters a great deal: it is how the system
speaks
to itself.
Kerry
speaks
of friends and allies, while Bush alienates many of them.
They don't want a president who
speaks
to God, but one who engages the world.
It
speaks
to ten-year default probabilities of less than one in 500,000; notes that even if the analysis is off by an order of magnitude, any risks to government are very modest; and appeals to the regulatory system in place at the time to minimize that their model missed risks.
What better advocate is there than one who
speaks
with conviction gained from personal experience?
As a result, despite the EU’s many successes, it still
speaks
with too many voices.
He
speaks
the language of populism, raising hopes for the vast majority of South Africans who daily endure the misery of poor housing, schools, and health care.
Another view held by a number of medical professionals, based on how Trump spoke in interviews in the late 1980s and how he
speaks
now – with a far more limited vocabulary and much less fluency – is that the president is suffering from the onset of dementia.
Little
speaks
for the latter scenario, but Russia has always been a country where hope dies last.
Economic prosperity
speaks
for itself.
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