Suffers
in sentence
421 examples of Suffers in a sentence
It
suffers
from some of the things so common in fantasy films: Simplified storyline, too many things fall into place for the characters, generally directed at children when it doesn't need to be to include them.
It is when Rory
suffers
a near-fatal heart attack that the film really gets it's biggest interest (although there are moments of good chat before), and all characters are brought together to rediscover themselves.
Because it was made only a few years after talking pictures debuted, it
suffers
from a few defects that were related to the technology--such as an over-reliance on long shots--making the film look a bit "stagy".
This movie clearly
suffers
from a syndrome that was quite common the world of 80's horror cinema; namely the identity crisis.
This disease seems to have contaminated Japan as well now, since I really think Ringu 2
suffers
from it.
This movie
suffers
from what many modern (post 2000) slacker comedies are stricken with: the "Anything Goes" syndrome.
Whirlygirl
suffers
primarily from a bad script and poor direction.
This movie
suffers
from the same problems as School Daze, only amplified.
The cinematography in this film isn't bad, although it
suffers
from being shot on video.
But May’s effort to present a Hobson’s Choice
suffers
a fatal flaw: almost nobody believes that she would dare to inflict chaos on British businesses and voters.
He
suffers
from what author Ian Hughes has recently called “a disordered mind,” filled with hate, paranoia, and narcissism.
Indeed, according to the American economist Irving Fisher’s long established “debt-deflation” theory, when an over-indebted economy
suffers
a shock, the joint effects of debt and deflation can trigger a downturn.
Such facts have long been cited as evidence that the EU
suffers
from a democratic deficit, with citizens inadequately engaged with European-level governance.
Prime Minister Barak’s position
suffers
from a very brittle coalition, and he has recently lost his parliamentary majority.
Brazil’s trade in goods also
suffers
from the country’s inadequate transportation and communications networks.
In fact, the EU’s Stability and Growth Pact
suffers
at least as much from a flawed design as from lack of enforcement (it should never be forgotten that as late as 2007, Ireland and Spain looked like paragons of budgetary virtue).
As a result, France
suffers
from growing inequality, high and still-rising unemployment, constant corporate restructurings entailing layoffs, threats to public services and social welfare programs, and a general feeling of insecurity.
India’s financial system
suffers
from few of the creative and risky derivative instruments that caused such problems in the West.
Mini-grids can ensure that consumers retain access to power when the grid
suffers
interruptions.
In Haiti, which still
suffers
from underdevelopment, political turmoil, and the effects of destructive hurricanes, Ban appointed former US President Bill Clinton as his Special Representative to help deal with the country’s plight.
It
suffers
from endemic malaria, which is like a SARS pandemic that lasts for centuries, not for a few months.
It
suffers
from a climate prone to massive droughts and from soils depleted of nutrients.
It
suffers
from the fact that most of its population lives in the rural interior, without paved roads to reach ports and facilitate access to international trade.
Aside from a few countries in West Africa, it
suffers
from a serious shortage of energy resources, whether coal or oil or hydroelectric power.
It
suffers
from less inequality than many advanced industrial countries (though more than Canada and the northern European countries), and it has had a longer-standing commitment to environment preservation.
China
suffers
from under-consumption and possible over-investment, and needs to strike a balance between the state-owned sector and private enterprise.
If too many lifelong inhabitants are driven out by rising housing prices, the city itself
suffers
from a loss of identity and even culture.
One in every four dogs
suffers
from separation anxiety, most often from being left alone for long periods of time during the workweek.
But this approach
suffers
from a fatal fallacy: if booms are fueled by underestimation of risks, and regulation is made more sensitive to the estimation of risks, booms will be bigger and busts deeper.
Consider Pakistan, which has the world’s fastest-growing nuclear arsenal and
suffers
relentless jihadi terrorism and separatist violence.
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