Sympathy
in sentence
566 examples of Sympathy in a sentence
But, despite deep popular sympathy, not a few Israelis – on both the left and the right – opposed the exchange of one soldier for a thousand or more Palestinian prisoners, some of whom perpetrated terrorist attacks that killed dozens of people.
The Agony and the ExodusBRUSSELS – The tragic exodus of people from war-torn Syria and surrounding countries challenges the world’s reason and
sympathy.
My short speech on Hungarian television attracted more than a million viewers, and social media platforms were flooded with outpourings of
sympathy
and support.
He underwent several operations, barely survived, and benefited from a surge of
sympathy.
What
sympathy
does the US agenda deserve, when President Bush has ladled out tax cuts of hundreds of billions of dollars to the richest people in the world.
It would eventually stir up mass
sympathy
for the caliphate throughout the region, thus providing ISIS with a propaganda victory and further inspiration for alienated young Muslims in Europe and elsewhere to fight the "Crusaders" and the Muslim "traitors" aligned with them.
Indeed, he even praised the democratic movements that buried the Soviet Union and its sphere of influence, and he expressed no
sympathy
for the twentieth century’s revolutions, which he called “deep wounds” that humanity inflicted on itself.
For this reason, Russian suspicions against the "Partnership" concept are perfectly understandable, and even President Yeltsin’s outburst at the Budapest CSCE Summit deserves some
sympathy.
On the other hand, fish – cold, slimy, and unable to scream – arouse little sympathy, although, as Jonathan Balcombe argues in What a Fish Knows, there is plenty of evidence that they feel pain just as birds and mammals do.
The solution seems to lie in some variation on the “Responsibility while Protecting” idea first proposed by Brazil (with China and Russia privately showing some sympathy), which would require some form of ongoing monitoring and review of military mandates.
I have little
sympathy
for the extremists on either side of this issue: those who think that global warming is a hoax, and those who use fears of an impending Armageddon to push for heavy-handed government regulation of the economy.
In 1998, the whole world, which was then enjoying a global boom, looked at Russia with
sympathy.
A fall in US stock and bond prices, which are also out of line with past experience, could cause European asset prices to decline in
sympathy.
(Though, to their credit, many French football followers, from President Nicolas Sarkozy down, expressed their
sympathy
for Ireland after Henry’s handball.)
Actually, one can have some
sympathy
for a president with an aide who wants to have it both ways, as Cohn did – letting his apparent anguish be known without acting on it.
They, too, must be allowed to feel those ties of “unity resulting from feelings and sympathy.”
Yet the pattern seen in the UK is oddly familiar: in the United States, Republican voters disregarded the pundits and nominated Donald Trump as their party’s presidential candidate; in France, Marine Le Pen, the leader of the far-right National Front, elicits little
sympathy
among experts, but has strong popular support.
Now mainstream politicians from the governing party are openly making the case for Britain leaving the European Union, or at least radically changing its relationship with it – which may amount to the same thing – with the
sympathy
of some of our nation’s leaders and far wider support among the public.
But, in the wake of Taiwanese society’s outpouring of
sympathy
for Japan, he has adjusted his stance.
There is, in fact, little
sympathy
for the Greek position in other eurozone countries, where similar referendums would undoubtedly show overwhelming public support for the continuation of the austerity policies imposed on Greece.
And it is good that people feel empathy, or at least sympathy, for those who are less fortunate.
A wounded America appreciated the spontaneous demonstrations of
sympathy
and solidarity that poured across the Atlantic after September 11 th .
China thought their extradition necessary to undercutting international
sympathy
for Uighur independence seekers.
In Israel’s early decades, when the left was still in power there, much of the Labour Party was in
sympathy
with Zionism.
But it is becoming increasingly easy to rouse their
sympathy
for their fellow citizens through Twitter, YouTube, and Facebook.
Why is it so hard to feel
sympathy
for a developing country that can’t pay its debts?
Some might counter that the holdout hedge funds that sued Argentina deserve no sympathy, either.
So I have no
sympathy
for David Irving’s absurd denial of the Holocaust – which he now claims was a mistake.
Meanwhile, the president tries to undermine public faith in the investigation by attacking it routinely, to some effect, all the while picking fights with America’s closest allies and displaying
sympathy
for the world’s autocrats.
Jacob Bronowski proposed that “Newton is the Old Testament god; it is Einstein who is the New Testament figure…full of humanity, pity, a sense of enormous sympathy.”
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