Surveyed
in sentence
196 examples of Surveyed in a sentence
As revealed in the highly respected Quigley poll (which
surveyed
movie theatre owners on who their audiences were most likely to come and see), the biggest draws in the early 30s were friendly, earthy types whom audiences could relate to at a time of poverty and desperation.
Director Stuart Rosenberg was so dismayed when he
surveyed
the finished film that he had his name taken off the credits.
Tina knows from previous visits to Melanie's place that the comings and goings of her apartment can be easily
surveyed
from a picture window.
Scorsese has
surveyed
the mean streets of New York numerous times before, but here he creates a uniquely surreal atmosphere in exploring the setting from the dark side.
Earlier this year, I
surveyed
people who recently bought homes in four American cities.
Of the eight economic evaluations recently
surveyed
by the Institute for Fiscal Studies, a respected independent research institution, only one claims that leaving the EU would lead to significant economic gains.
Worldwide, one-third of employers
surveyed
complain that they are unable to find workers with the right skills for existing vacancies.
And almost half of all CEOs
surveyed
believe that “business will be the single most important actor in delivering the SDGs.”
When the Soviet Union was collapsing, Robert Shiller, Maxim Boycko, and Vladimir Korobov
surveyed
residents of Moscow and New York regarding their attitudes toward free markets.
In 2013, Dutch researchers
surveyed
186 companies listed on European stock exchanges that make use of conflict minerals.
Even in neighboring Canada, just 22% of those
surveyed
expressed confidence in Trump.
In a report by the Economist Intelligence Unit (EIU), 66% of executives
surveyed
were dissatisfied with the skill level of young employees, and 52% said a skills gap was an obstacle to their firm’s performance.
According to the EIU report, only 28% of secondary-school students
surveyed
said that their school was actively using ICT in lessons.
In Figshare’s 2017 open data report, 60% of 2,300
surveyed
researchers declared that they shared their data “either frequently or sometimes,” but only 20-30% shared “frequently.”
The Economist recently reported that economists it had
surveyed
predict that consumer prices in the US and Japan will actually fall for 2009 as a whole, while inflation in the euro zone will be only 0.6%.
In the first study, most of the middle-income individuals
surveyed
in Nigeria, Ghana, and Kenya plan to spend more on their children’s education in the next five years, even though up to 20% of them had minimal education themselves.
A total of 82% of Irish people
surveyed
earlier this year believed Ireland had benefited from EU membership, the highest score in Europe, where the average was 54%.
For example, when asked if there are too many immigrants in their country, 38% of the Americans
surveyed
agreed.
A plurality of Americans
surveyed
by the GMF, for example, said that illegal immigrants should be allowed to obtain legal status.
And yet recent research by the World Bank Group documented discrepancies between treatment of women and men in 102 of 141 countries
surveyed
– policies and practices that severely limit women’s economic opportunities.
Austria has dealt with the issue best, according to the SGI study: only 8.1% of temporary employees
surveyed
had taken temporary work because they could not find permanent positions.
Germany ranks a distant second, with 21% of those
surveyed
saying they would prefer a permanent position.
A 2001 study sponsored by the US National Science Foundation found that roughly half of people
surveyed
understood that the earth circles the sun once a year, 45% could give an “acceptable definition” for DNA, and only 22% understood what a molecule was.
For most of the people surveyed, the costs of voting – including lost wages from time off work, transport to the polling station, and the need to secure proper identification (such as a driver’s license or passport) – were simply too large.
According to the report – which
surveyed
some 70,000 Internet users in 36 countries – 29% of respondents said they were avoiding news altogether.
But he also ended up personally owning much of the land he had
surveyed.
More than 70% of the educational institutions
surveyed
by McKinsey believe that their graduates are ready for the job market; more than half of employers and young people disagree.
Fewer than half of the young people that McKinsey
surveyed
claimed to have even basic knowledge of average wages or the prevalence of job opportunities in their chosen field.
More than 80% of the 140 countries
surveyed
in UNEP’s “Inclusive Wealth” report registered a deterioration in their stock of natural capital.
However, this growth has not been inclusive: income inequality in cities is higher than the national average in all OECD countries surveyed, except Canada.
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