Suggested
in sentence
1129 examples of Suggested in a sentence
Somebody else must have
suggested
this to Burt Reynolds as the rest of his directing in this movie is deplorable.
Someone
suggested
the 'Skipper' was asked to leave a 'West Indies' port, hence the cruise.
There was an enormous amount of confusion regarding her character and at one point it was
suggested
that she played a major role in Sean Penn's character's (Thomas Janes) past, although this may have been a projection of Jean Janes' suspicious fantasy.
Many have
suggested
there may be something, lost in translation and that is a fair point but my own feeling is that the film makers simply overstretched themselves a little.
She
suggested
a movie titled WALTZING ANNA.
A friend of mine
suggested
this film to me, saying; "Jackhammer Massacre is the scariest, goriest film I've ever seen."
Then I
suggested
them to choose one.
This one isn't as well-written as the earlier films in the series, and the isolation, while nicely
suggested
psychologically, fails to cast the spell of hopelessness and despair it ought to.
The Israeli government recently
suggested
that Iran would reach the nuclear threshold within nine months, and Iran could become a major issue in the long run-up to the US presidential election in November 2012.
The White House staff member who discussed it with the CIA then
suggested
changing the sentence so that it stated that the British reported that Saddam Hussein had sought to buy uranium from Africa.
A recent study by India’s Strategic Foresight Group entitled The Cost of Conflict in the Middle East
suggested
that the past 20 years of conflict have cost WANA countries some $12 trillion.
Likewise, the New York Times led with Barra’s father, and its headline
suggested
that she was “born to” her role, as if ambition and hard work had nothing to do with her ascent.
Greece’s new Socialist government is hampered by campaign promises that
suggested
the money was there to solve the problems, when in fact things turned out to be far worse than anyone imagined.
If a eurozone country even
suggested
that it might withdraw from the euro and the EU, the resulting capital flight would devastate its economy.
Richard Haass, the president of the Council on Foreign Relations,
suggested
recently that the US “could already be in the second decade of another American century.”
The early post-referendum evidence suggested, to the surprise of many – or at least to many of the experts – that Gove was right and they were wrong.
They
suggested
that a UK freed of burdensome EU regulations could offer a more business-friendly environment and lower corporate tax rates, and thus become a magnet for foreign investment.
Since a common diagnosis of the problems generated in the financial services business holds that human greed is to blame, a German think tank recently
suggested
that people with a genetic proclivity to high dopamine levels should be barred from taking leading positions in financial institutions.
It is not, as one benighted analyst suggested, “A 20% improvement (reduction) in heart attacks plus a 30% improvement (reduction) in diabetes incidence equals a 50% improvement.”
Not once, however, has the President
suggested
that these problems might be addressed through the UN human rights treaty system - a system through which Iraq has committed to abide by the very principles it is accused of violating.
“Reform”
suggested
a loosening of central controls on economic life, undertaken in a spirit of pragmatism and gradualism, as an antidote to Mao Zedong’s ideology of “revolution.”
The historical parallel here is not, as is often suggested, with the Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe, but with the Marshall Plan, which provided real incentives, not lofty rhetoric and hortatory appeals, for integration and democratic consolidation.
What about – as Michael Gove, Cameron’s justice minister, has
suggested
– establishing a free-trade zone with Bosnia, Ukraine, and Albania (the “Albanian model”)?
In response to China’s capability to project power many hundreds of miles from its borders, the US (as I have
suggested
for the last 25 years) should develop a long-range bomber capable of penetrating sophisticated defenses and delivering great force.
Meanwhile, London Mayor Boris Johnson
suggested
removing children from radicalized parents.
Its leaders have
suggested
that Greece should leave the euro, and that the EU mechanism for bailing out struggling countries should be dismantled.
Shortly before the current Iraq war, when Bush administration economist Larry Lindsey
suggested
that the costs might range between $100 and $200 billion, other officials quickly demurred.
Some analysts have
suggested
that the use of mobile phones could bring down the cost of surveys by up to 60% in some East African countries over a ten-year period.
In early September, Nikki Haley, the US ambassador to the United Nations,
suggested
that to torpedo the deal, Trump could simply argue that Iran’s other misdeeds were damaging enough to merit sanctions.
At the Washington Summit last November, the EU
suggested
a basic principle: all markets, all territories, and all actors putting the global financial system at risk should be monitored.
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