Suggested
in sentence
1129 examples of Suggested in a sentence
In light – perhaps one should say darkness – of such images, it is sometimes
suggested
that animal welfare is exclusively a Western concern.
In September 2007, a year before warning signs gave way to a full-blown financial meltdown, Strauss-Kahn himself
suggested
that the IMF was in a “crisis of identity.”
He has
suggested
dispensing with NATO, declaring that US allies should have to pay for America’s protection.
The Kuchma regime’s vast wealth, stolen from ordinary Ukrainians,
suggested
that the reign of thuggery and deceit could go on forever.
The ECB’s shifting of refinancing credit via the Target system has therefore already hit the limit, three years earlier than the trend of the past three years would have
suggested.
The US delegation
suggested
a totally different scheme from the one being discussed.
Yet, at the CDF’s wrap-up session, Premier Li Keqiang suggested, a bit less decisively, that China is basically following the world economy in its transition to a new normal.
Some have
suggested
that the president’s departure is the result of his making too many waves with his anti-corruption agenda.
Beyond withdrawing from the Trans-Pacific Partnership, he has
suggested
renegotiating the North American Free Trade Agreement and threatened to impose high tariffs on Chinese imports.
It was
suggested
that a new Chechen capital be built.
In the United States, for example, a recent poll by Better World Campaign
suggested
that 57% of Americans view the UN favorably; but, according to a more recent Gallup survey, only 35% of Americans believe the UN is doing a good job.
Last year’s Brexit referendum on European Union membership
suggested
a Leave-Remain divide, with the Brexiteers narrowly ahead.
Yet it is far from certain that French voters will give him one in next month’s legislative elections: one recent poll
suggested
that 61% don’t want Macron to have a majority.
Some media coverage even
suggested
that the Europeans had made concessions.
The Department of Homeland Security has already considered creating a “cyber reserve” of computer experts, and a report by Booz Allen Hamilton, a technology and security firm,
suggested
similar efforts to provide the US with more cyber warriors in the event of an attack.
When Indian Prime Minister Manmohan Singh, who consistently advocates peace with his nuclear-armed neighbor,
suggested
last summer that Pakistan should “leave the Kashmir issue alone” and focus on its domestic challenges, the comment did not elicit the customary howls of outrage in the Pakistan media.
At last week’s NATO summit in Brussels, Trump not only persisted in demanding that all NATO member states immediately spend at least 2% of their GDP on defense; he also
suggested
that this spending should eventually reach 4% of GDP.
And, without saying so explicitly, he
suggested
that the time was right to go on a European buying spree at the right price.
This stance –
suggested
by America’s opposition to granting Palestine observer-state status at the United Nations – would amount to an admission by the US that it has given up on the creation of two states in the Middle East.
Many have
suggested
that if the UK were to leave, manufacturers would secure continued access to the European market by fleeing across the English Channel, costing the country millions of jobs.
When the Indian government
suggested
last year that the Himalayan glaciers were in better shape than the IPCC claimed, the IPCC’s chairman, Rajendra Pachauri, dismissed India’s objections as being based on “voodoo science.”
For years, it had been
suggested
that Gandhi – a son, grandson, and great-grandson of Indian prime ministers – was a “dynast” who was not up to the job of leading the country, and that even voters unhappy with the BJP would not necessarily vote for Congress.
In recent weeks European defense ministers
suggested
that increases in military expenditures should be excluded from the budget constraints imposed by the Euro stability pact.
Letting radical movements run their course, as some have suggested, is both reckless and dangerous, given the amount of damage they can do before they fail.
At the failed Camp David summit in 2000, Israeli negotiators
suggested
a $30 billion international fund that would make payments to genuine refugees.
Finally, the government has
suggested
that the industry should consider providing smaller portions, but existing vending and storage infrastructure is designed for 330ml cans and 500ml bottles.
In recent weeks, Bolton has
suggested
that talks with North Korea could follow what he calls the “Libya model” – a facile shorthand for a country that simply surrenders its nuclear program for little in return.
Moreover, negotiations with the European Union have been resumed, greater understanding with the Vatican is being fostered, and Castro himself has publicly
suggested
the possibility of dialogue with the United States.
It has been
suggested
that Africa’s rulers are concerned less with holding accountable those who have committed international crimes than with protecting themselves from prosecution.
Focusing on the US, Jeffrey Frankel of Harvard University has
suggested
the elimination of payroll taxes for low-income workers, a cut in deductions for high-income workers, and higher inheritance taxes.
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