Spring
in sentence
1183 examples of Spring in a sentence
Stalin pursued collectivization despite the massive resistance that had followed when Soviet authorities first tried to introduce the policy the previous
spring.
Dying peasants harvested the
spring
crops under watchtowers.
That was certainly true of the finance ministers who gathered in Washington, DC, this month for the IMF’s annual
spring
meeting.
Not limited by borders, it can
spring
up anywhere.
Sarkozy can preempt a long-standing proposal of the Socialists in the run-up to this spring’s presidential election.
But the capacity to do so will be tested in three more important elections – in France, Germany, and Italy – by next spring, and those who want the EU to survive will need to fight hard, and on many fronts.
This spring, it conducted a nuclear test and a series of missile tests, accompanied by a stream of bellicose rhetoric.
Moreover, if this spring’s sharp rhetoric from the Kim regime is followed by provocations against South Korea like those that occurred in 2010, South Korea could respond forcefully, and China might be drawn in.
With public perception a crucial factor in winning the war, and the Taliban poised to launch a large military initiative next spring, failure to adopt a successful local strategy could signify the last chance the international community will have to build a secure and stable Afghanistan.
To illustrate, he posted the diagram below, showing how business confidence collapsed in Greece during the late
spring
of 2015, and picked up again only after my resignation from the finance ministry.
But they are even more severe to India’s west, with Pakistan heading into elections (one hopes) in the
spring
of 2013, and NATO troops withdrawing from Afghanistan.
Exactly 25 years ago, in the
spring
of 1989, Poland and other countries of what was then known as the “Eastern Bloc” took the first steps to break free from their forced alliance with the Soviet Union.
The US and its regional allies tried to nudge Assad from power in the
spring
of 2011, thinking that he would fall quickly like Egypt’s Hosni Mubarak and Tunisia’s Zine El Abidine Ben Ali.
The most for which one can hope is that sanctions enhance the chances of regime change by reawakening popular protest, thereby triggering an Iranian version of the Arab
Spring.
This surge in discrimination against Christian communities in countries where they have lived for many centuries can be explained largely by increasing Islamist militancy and the rise of political Islam in the wake of the Arab
Spring.
Those who are persecuting Christians should recognize that the Arab
Spring
should benefit all Arabs.
This was a key factor behind the Arab
Spring
revolts; and, as protests in Chile, Brazil, Israel, Turkey, and India have shown, social tensions stemming from inequality are mounting around the globe.
Israel’s Nuclear Option in IranLOS ANGELES – Revelations in former President George W. Bush’s recently published memoirs show that he declined an Israeli request to destroy Syria’s secret nuclear reactor in the
spring
of 2007.
According to Bush’s memoir, in the
spring
of 2007, Prime Minister Ehud Olmert made a blunt request of the US president regarding Syria’s reactor: “George, I am asking you to bomb the facility.”
If the Internet is no longer a space for freedom of expression, the public will look for other platforms that can guarantee it – a yearning for openness that has been the hallmark of the Arab
Spring.
The Limits of Economic OptimismWASHINGTON, DC – As the annual
spring
meetings of the World Bank and the International Monetary Fund commence, the world’s economic future appears brighter than it has in some time.
The proposal may get a boost when Abdullah meet President Bush in Texas later this spring, but its early survival depends first on its reception at the upcoming Arab summit in Beirut.
Saudi Arabia vs. the Arab SpringPRINCETON – Saudi Arabia is widely perceived as leading the counter-revolution against the Arab
Spring
uprisings.
Populism Bites BackLONDON – This spring, British Prime Minister Theresa May’s Conservative government is being reminded of just how powerful – and long-lasting – the unintended consequences of policies can be.
To name a particularly notorious example, 50 years ago this spring, Enoch Powell, a Conservative member of parliament, delivered his abhorrent “rivers of blood” speech, in which he warned that, within 15 or 20 years, “the black man will have the whip hand over the white man.”
The Remaking of the Middle EastJERUSALEM – The Middle East’s descent into extreme violence – with mass killings of Muslim Brotherhood demonstrators in Cairo followed closely by Bashar al-Assad’s use of chemical weapons in Syria’s civil war – has dashed the hopes raised by the Arab
Spring
in 2011.
Climax will likely come next spring, but the countdown will begin at the European summit in Dublin on October 5.
Above all in France, because there is a real possibility that the present conservative government could be thrown out of power by a socialist victory in the parliamentary elections in the
spring
of 1998.
Likewise, a victory for the far-right nationalist Le Pen next
spring
would signal France’s rejection of Europe.
One key trigger of the Arab
Spring
uprisings – rising food prices – was directly connected to the region’s worsening water crisis.
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