Succeed
in sentence
1600 examples of Succeed in a sentence
To succeed, however, it will need to integrate the European energy market by harmonizing national-level policies.
To succeed, the Bank must broaden its toolkit beyond country-specific loans – the key instrument on which it has relied for seven decades.
As people wonder if the United States-NATO surge in Afghanistan which began last month will succeed, all of South Asia is asking even more troubling questions: Who runs Pakistan?
To
succeed
in the workplace of tomorrow, students will need new skills.
To succeed, educators – and the universities we inhabit – must evolve.
And of course, we will hardly be able to engage in meaningful negotiations with the Americans on cyber issues unless we
succeed
in establishing a united stance within the European Union.
As one of the Leave campaign’s leaders, justice secretary Michael Gove, who is now seeking to
succeed
David Cameron as Prime Minister, bluntly put it: “people in this country have had enough of experts.”
If they succeed, Rice and the Bush administration will be remembered not just for the endless tragedy of Iraq, but for making a serious contribution to Middle East peace.
But can the Middle East conference set to take place in Annapolis, Maryland
succeed?
Until the transition is complete, we depend on each other: no one can
succeed
alone.
But, in the absence of global coordination, the world is stuck in a rut, acting out its own global version of the “prisoner’s dilemma” – a universe in which no major economy can
succeed
on its own, yet none trusts any other enough to attempt cooperation and coordination.
On January 25, the WHO Executive Board will shortlist three candidates; and in May, the World Health Assembly will elect one of those candidates to
succeed
Margaret Chan.
By illuminating opportunities for human cooperation, such a framework would provide a useful foundation for political and economic systems that
succeed
where existing arrangements have failed.
Whether this strategy will
succeed
in obscuring the government’s record of failure in the minds of voters remains to be seen.
And, while they did bring nuclear safety to the fore and agreed to cooperate and share information with each other, efforts to meet this region-wide challenge cannot
succeed
without bringing Taiwan into the discussions.
If no recession is imminent, the Fed may
succeed
in raising rates three times by the end of the year, to around 2%.
Misled by this confusion, Venezuelans and Bolivians enthusiastically support the rebirth of state companies, without realizing that this only wastes resources that could have been spent better and more efficiently elsewhere, since few state companies ever
succeed
in ridding themselves of bureaucratic inefficiency or corruption.
Only collective efforts can meet common challenges; the more global the response, the more likely that it will
succeed.
Completing the transition to a low-carbon future is perhaps the preeminent challenge of our time, and we won’t
succeed
without expanding renewable-energy production.
If we succeed, some of the biggest obstacles that the world faces – from poverty to climate change – could become a bit more manageable.
Indeed, unilateral policies can never
succeed
in a global world defined more and more by shared concerns rather than national interests.
The election of Annegret Kramp-Karrenbauer to
succeed
German Chancellor Angela Merkel as party leader reflects this sentiment, as it amounts to a bid for continuity.
The policy most likely to
succeed
right now would be analogous to that implemented by the Fed in 1979 and 1933, Great Britain in 1931, and Shinzo Abe today.
To succeed, Moon will have to reexamine carefully the effectiveness and feasibility of his campaign promises, identify the most promising measures, and avoid the most obvious pitfalls.
But if the JOBS Act does not succeed, we should not abandon the idea, but try to modify it.
It may also mean giving the EU the power needed to
succeed
at what it is already in charge of doing.
To succeed, countries increasingly need a highly skilled and educated workforce.
But one of Turkey’s most remarkable successes since 2003 has been to break the intolerable link between a child’s household circumstances and his or her chances to
succeed
in school.
But they can
succeed
in delivering benefits only if they are crafted wisely, enforced effectively, and studied well.
To succeed, however, several obstacles must be overcome.
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