Suggested
in sentence
1129 examples of Suggested in a sentence
He has casually
suggested
that the US should commit war crimes, such as pillaging countries’ oil resources and torturing prisoners.
He has also casually
suggested
defaulting on the national debt as a way to reduce it – a strategy he has employed with his companies.
Even Peru's most important newspaper, El Comercio , recently
suggested
that Toledo resign, leaving his first minister and cabinet to run the government.
Pay-or-Play CapitalismLONDON – When I led the British government’s Review on Antimicrobial Resistance (AMR) from 2014 to 2016, we
suggested
various ways to fund a market-entry reward for drug makers that develop new antibiotics and vaccines.
Mark Zuckerberg Has Lost Control of FacebookBRUSSELS – When Mark Zuckerberg, the chairman, CEO, and co-founder of Facebook, appeared before the European Parliament in May, I
suggested
to him that he had lost control of his company.
A recent study presented at the Baltic Development Forum
suggested
that, if Poland and the three Baltic countries become EU members in 2003 and continue their efforts to catch up economically with the rest of the Union, annual growth in their GDP can be 2-4% higher than the EU-average.
For example, in 1960, President Dwight D. Eisenhower’s advisers
suggested
that he should cut taxes in order to pave the way for his vice president, Richard Nixon, to be elected to the presidency.
Then, in the hours after the vote, exit polls
suggested
parity between his Likud party and the center-left Zionist Union, led by his chief rival, Yitzhak Herzog, with a slight edge for the right-wing bloc.
Three of the top ten ideas under “Economy & Jobs” are about imposing greater constraints on the big banks – and there is a sharp upward trend in support for Break Up Citigroup (full disclosure: I
suggested
this item for the website).
At the same time, it pointed to the need to increase food production to feed the extra two billion people expected to be alive in 2050, and
suggested
that more investment in agriculture in developing countries is required to improve productivity.
It will be no less difficult to leave behind unconventional monetary policies, as the US Federal Reserve recently
suggested
by signaling that it will normalize policy interest rates more slowly than expected.
Last August, German Foreign Minister Frank-Walter Steinmeier
suggested
that all interested countries in Europe should attempt to “re-launch” arms control in Europe “as a tried and tested means of risk reduction, transparency, and confidence building between Russia and the West.”
Some observers, not least hard-headed Israeli peace campaigners, have
suggested
a different approach.
Nor was this a propaganda ploy, as some
suggested.
DellaVedova’s comment
suggested
that the review process was merely political theatre.
British Defense Minister Liam Fox has
suggested
that Qaddafi could be targeted.
If, as Shakespeare suggested, a city is nothing but its people, the answer may lie in the characteristic patterns of connection, interaction, and exchange among residents.
Of course, this idea has been
suggested
before.
Some movement in just this direction was
suggested
by widespread international support for the humanitarian interventions in Bosnia, Kosovo, and East Timor.
Keynes
suggested
that only a very low or zero interest rate could ensure continuous full employment and distributional equity.
I
suggested
in the 1970’s that a tax be levied on citizens abroad.
Yale University's Robert Shiller has
suggested
that I believe that Europeans lack dynamism owing to a deficiency of entrepreneurial "spirit."
I have
suggested
that the organizational structure of the Continental economies limits their performance.
Chinese officials also
suggested
the possibility of banning exports to Japan of rare-earth elements – raw materials crucial for many Japanese manufacturing processes – and appear to have done so informally.
Jeremy Stein (no relation to Kara Stein), until recently a governor of the US Federal Reserve System, has
suggested
that forced “fire sales” of assets are one important way that risks are transmitted.
Nobel laureate Paul Crutzen has
suggested
another solution: manipulate the climate by releasing white sulfur particles high up in the stratosphere, where they would remain for several years, exerting a proven cooling effect on Earth’s climate without affecting human health.
In 2015, I asserted that the developed world should be able to accept at least a million refugees annually; later I reduced that global figure to 500,000, of which I
suggested
Europe could take 300,000.
When Democracy Fails the PeopleNEW YORK – Nobel laureate Amartya Sen famously
suggested
that famines do not occur in democracies, because accountable governments will do everything they can to avoid mass starvation.
Last year, Horst Teltschick, for many years foreign and security adviser to Germany’s Chancellor Kohl and now a successful businessman,
suggested
in a debate on why the West failed in Yugoslavia that the disaster might have been prevented by membership in the Union.
Our report also
suggested
that organizations should look to provide support to those who needed it, bearing in mind that individuals respond to and recover from trauma in different ways.
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