Thirty
in sentence
727 examples of Thirty in a sentence
The
Thirty
Years War, fought over religion, laid waste to the Continent, killing one-third of Germany's population.
The amoral approach has been Europe's main tradition since the
Thirty
Years War.
More than
thirty
years after the disappearance of the long dictatorship of Francisco Franco, Spain finds itself confronted by the shadows of a past it has deliberately chosen not to confront.
The first industrial applications of the dynamo began in 1890, but one needed to wait some
thirty
years before seeing the effects of that then “new technology” on the productivity of enterprises.
Thirty
years ago, Indonesia and Nigeria - both dependent on oil - had comparable per capita incomes.
Yet Botswana averaged 8.7% annual economic growth over the past
thirty
years, while Sierra Leone plunged into civil strife.
Thirty
years ago, when the first elections to the parliament were held, almost two-thirds of the electorate voted, but over the years, participation has dropped steadily.
Thirty
years ago, the Afghan mujahedin were mistaken for friends of the West when they fought their country’s Soviet invaders.
Thirty
years ago, The Day After galvanized a president.
Thirty
years after the Islamic revolution, Iranians are growing demonstrably less religious and more liberal.
Thirty
countries already use nuclear power and many of them, including China, Russia, and India, plan major expansions in their existing programs.
But this useless reaction to the laws of the global market economy hides the fact that Germany’s problems are largely a result of an overblown welfare state and extremely aggressive union policies over the last
thirty
years.
The Law of the Sea’s Next WaveLONDON –
Thirty
years ago, the Cold War was at its height and the United Kingdom had just clawed its way out of recession.
My research over the past
thirty
years focused on the economics of information.
In other words, US foreign policy spending is
thirty
times more focused on the military than on building global prosperity, global public health, and a sustainable environment.
Thirty
years ago, the West wanted nothing more than for China to become a capitalist economy.
Thirty
countries – half of them in Africa – do not have a single radiotherapy machine.
While this sounds like political fiction in a world where children still die from starvation, reprogenetics sounded like science fiction only
thirty
years ago.
Thirty
years later, the major contradiction China faces is that between “rising demand for higher standards of living and the constraints imposed by insufficient and unbalanced economic development.”
Thirty
years after the National Revolution of 1952 Bolivia’s per capita income remained basically the same, with poverty steady at over 50% of the population.
Rethinking the Fight against HIVCOPENHAGEN –
Thirty
years ago, the world got its first inkling of impending catastrophe when five young gay men in Los Angeles were struck down by the illness that became known as HIV/AIDS.
Thirty
years after the discovery of HIV/AIDS, we have seen impressive scientific and policy advances.
The Middle East is in the early phases of a modern-day
Thirty
Years’ War, in which political and religious loyalties are destined to fuel prolonged and sometimes savage conflicts within and across national borders.
Indeed, this group is reminiscent of the young twenty and
thirty
year olds who took power in Estonia in 1991 and successfully led that former Soviet country into EU membership.
Worse, it became a means to justify centuries of atrocities, and triggered the
Thirty
Years’ War, the deadliest religious conflict in European history.
Thirty
percent of its population of 230 million is below age 15, so Indonesia's economy needs to grow at 8% simply to absorb the new workers.
Thirty
years ago, Australian vessels, with the government’s blessing, killed sperm whales off the West Australian coast.
The result was the
Thirty
Years’ War, the most violent and destructive episode in European history until the two world wars of the twentieth century.
On the Natolin campus, post-graduate students, representing more than
thirty
nationalities, live in what they themselves often describe as a “golden cage.”
Thirty
years ago, Harvard professor Ezra Vogel published Japan as Number 1: Lessons for America, a book that celebrated Japan’s manufacturing-fueled rise to become the world’s second-largest economy.
Back
Next
Related words
Years
Which
Would
About
Minutes
Their
There
Twenty
After
Thousand
Could
Three
Later
Movie
First
Miles
Other
Forty
Still
Hundred