Surged
in sentence
139 examples of Surged in a sentence
After the Industrial Revolution, the human incidence of cavities
surged
because suddenly we had technological advances that made refined sugar cheaper and accessible.
But the creatures
surged
out in a gruesome cloud.
While the clan welcomed the Argonauts with open arms, the monsters
surged
down from the mountains and hurled rocks at the docked ship.
In the 8th century CE, Vikings
surged
across the misty seas.
Anger
surged
in me to see the ruin of Hanoi after the 12-day bombard.
Some workers toiled 12-14 hours per day, yet inequality
surged.
Of course, their fear is not irrational, as Pasok, a long-established left-wing party in Greece, found out when the far-left, anti-austerity Syriza Party
surged
to victory in January.
Environmental damage has been staggering, the gap between rich and poor has been growing, and urbanization – with all its attendant problems – has
surged.
Since 2008, credit has
surged
from 125% of GDP to more than 210% of GDP, enabling investment to increase from 42% of GDP to nearly 48% last year.
Opinion polls show that support for the EU has
surged
in many member states since the UK’s referendum.
As growth in the real economy continued to stagnate, angry populism surged, resulting in Brexit and President-elect Trump.
Ireland and Greece, once the two poorest countries of Europe have
surged
economically, with Greece coming close to the European average and Ireland having already taken its place among the richest.
In Argentina, gradual fiscal adjustment seemed like a plausible strategy until US interest rates spiked and the dollar
surged.
Capital flows to emerging economies
surged
from 2002 to 2007, collapsed briefly during the 2008 global financial crisis, and then
surged
again from 2009 to 2011.
While global goods trade has stalled and cross-border financial flows have fallen sharply since 2007, flows of digital information have surged: Cross-border bandwidth use has grown 45-fold over the past decade, circulating ideas, intellectual content, and innovation around the world.
Is the US dollar still dominant, has the Chinese renminbi taken over, or has some other currency
surged
to global preeminence?
Yet the dollar, a symbol of American financial power, has
surged
rather than declined.
The surplus has
surged
for one reason: prudence.
China’s current macroeconomic situation shares many similarities with the situation that it faced in 2007 and the best part of 2008, when, owing to strong investment and export demand, GDP growth
surged
significantly beyond its potential.
But China did not bluster as Tsai
surged
in the polls.
Intra-regional trade flows have
surged
during the last decade, but they have been concentrated in parts and components that go into finished products assembled in China for export to developed countries.
As inequality across countries has declined, inequality within countries has
surged
– to the point that the reversal of priorities was probably inevitable.
In response to the new monetary stimulus, the London stock market
surged
and the UK pound slid further.
In China, it
surged
from 6% in 1978 to 14% in 2015.
After 1918, nostalgia for the old empire
surged.
Without backing from an established party – like Berlusconi, Macron created his own movement – he
surged
from relative unknown to President of the Republic in a matter of months.
At the same time, the contribution from investment
surged
from 2.3 percentage points of GDP growth in the first quarter of 2013 to 5.9 percentage points in the second quarter.
From 2002 to 2007, and again after the global financial crisis in 2008-2009, capital flows to emerging economies surged, as global investors searched for yield in conditions of slow growth and recession in developed countries, low interest rates, and ample liquidity.
And over the last half-decade, Japan’s expatriate population has
surged
to 2.4 million, an increase of 500,000 foreigners.
Of course, these figures
surged
occasionally during that period, such as after the September 11, 2001, terrorist attacks; but the overall decline is considerable.
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