Stake
in sentence
944 examples of Stake in a sentence
Moreover, many European countries have direct interests in Libya, and thus had a clear
stake
in the outcome.
Yet this is what is at
stake.
In Afghanistan, Gabon, Iran, Pakistan, and elsewhere, fundamental Western interests – though very different depending on the case – are at
stake.
Probably the best way to make Europe credible is to
stake
out a position that is genuinely bold, one that both advances its interests and upholds its deeper values.
No one wants to be the one to stop the party – especially if their job is at
stake.
America’s Global ElectionNEW YORK – Most people around the world will not be able to vote in the United States’s upcoming presidential election, even though they have a great deal at
stake
in the result.
Finally, there is a profound moral issue at
stake.
Hezbollah, which claims it is fighting for Lebanese independence and sovereignty, also bears responsibility for unacceptable aggression, placing the lives of innocent Israelis and Lebanese at
stake.
A fundamental issue is at
stake.
But the principle at
stake
is simple: A parent company must be held responsible for overseeing the actions of those representing it.
Again, an important American diplomatic interest is at stake, but there is not much the US can do about it.
At
stake
is NATO and the future of European-American relations.
Indeed, the rest of the world’s
stake
in American success is nearly as large as that of the US itself.
But these potential gains will be realized only if US President Barack Obama gives India the attention it deserves, and if both countries broaden the strategic
stake
by involving their private sectors in issues that governments alone cannot resolve.
Nonetheless, China's
stake
in the outcome of the current crisis is big enough to make it a party to a wide range of exchanges, formal and informal, bilateral and multilateral--all with the objective of promoting change without upheaval on the Korean peninsula.
Even countries that have refused to sign the treaty have a
stake
in its survival, with or without the ban treaty, given the serious global security implications of its unraveling.
The world has a large
stake
in which scenario prevails.
Despite the considerable progress that developing countries have made in integrating themselves into international trade and finance channels, there is still much work to be done to ensure that they share the burden of maintaining the global system in which they have a rapidly growing
stake.
Lying at two ends of that monetary triangle, the eurozone and China have acquired a geopolitical
stake
in helping each other.
The issue at
stake
in the referendum is not inconsequential, but it should not decide the fate of Europe.
We all have something at stake: our future.
Clearly, much is at
stake
in the ongoing reform process.
But, while the scientific community – including academic and professional institutions, agency heads, managers, and editors – is often reluctant to handle cases of misconduct rigorously, the reputation of science as a whole is at stake, not just that of a person, institution, journal, or national science entity.
By contrast, vast tracts of disputed land are at
stake
in the resource-rich Himalayan region.
But it must go further, demanding that any treaty should include a provision for surveillance and sanctions; that a country’s right to veto intervention be limited according to the amount of time that has passed and the issue at stake; and that measures to protect populations be decided upon by majority vote.
Either way, with the future of the global economy’s principal growth engine at stake, the effects will be felt worldwide.
In 2004, Russia’s state-owned Vneshtorgbank acquired a controlling
stake
in Armenia’s Armsberbank.
The following year, Vneshtorgbank purchased a controlling
stake
in the privatized United Georgian Bank, Georgia’s third largest.
Europe’s policy for Iran is not regime change, but when human rights and democracy are at stake, we cannot simply close our eyes.
A year later, a new referendum approved the Nice Treaty, after it became clear that Ireland’s EU membership was at
stake.
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