Thirty
in sentence
727 examples of Thirty in a sentence
Thirty
African governments have ratified the ICC’s governing statute, and several of the Court’s 18 judges hail from Africa, as does a substantial portion of its staff.
A typical Corporatist economy might contain
thirty
or so corporations – foods, heavy industry, textiles, chemicals, etc. – each encompassing raw materials, production, distribution, and retailing firms.
If you gave him the choice of the life he led as the finance-prince of Europe or a life today low-down in the income distribution but with
thirty
extra years to see his great-grandchildren, which would he choose?
Around 180,000 US troops were prepared to invade; plans existed for a bombing blitz bigger than that over Kosovo
thirty
six years later.
“It took
thirty
years before I found out,” McNamara said, “that there were already nuclear arms on Cuba: 162 charges, of which 90 were tactical nuclear weapons.”
The latter category includes an increasing assault on civil liberties within the United States that now compares to that of Richard Nixon’s administration more than
thirty
years ago.
Thirty
years ago, I participated in similar East/West debates.
Thirty
years of stable growth without serious crises have made people less aware of the negative consequences of overheating and bubbles.
So the US spends around
thirty
times more on the military than it does on peaceful development aid for the poorest countries.
World Order 2.0NEW YORK – For nearly four centuries, since the Peace of Westphalia in 1648 ended the
Thirty
Years’ War in Europe, the concept of sovereignty – the right of countries to an independent existence and autonomy – has formed the core of the international order.
Trumpism Down UnderSYDNEY –
Thirty
years ago, a colleague of mine in the British government who had ministerial responsibilities in Africa and Asia hung the world map in his office upside down.
Thirty
countries sent delegations.
Thirty
years of brutal dictatorship have destroyed the very concept of justice in Iraq.
Thirty
years of macroeconomic upheaval in Latin America can be boiled down to a simple lesson: governments throughout the region are too large compared with their ability to raise revenue through normal types of taxation.
Who would have predicted
thirty
years ago that British soccer fans would have cheered for a London team full of Africans, Latin Americans, and Spaniards, coached by a Frenchman?
CAMBRIDGE –
Thirty
years ago, China had a tiny footprint on the global economy and little influence outside its borders, save for a few countries with which it had close political and military relationships.
Thirty
years later, Osama bin Laden was killed by United States Special Forces.
Not only is the decline of previously accepted social and financial regulations reflected in the relative, but important, drop in wage income as a percentage of GDP – and therefore consumer spending – in all developed countries in the last
thirty
years, but also the deliberate abolition of controls allows the banking sector to do as it pleases.
Inflating this political damage is the fact that,
thirty
years ago, the US and the then Soviet Union renounced effective defense against strategic nuclear missiles.
Thirty
years from now, we will wonder how we ever got along without our seemingly telepathic digital assistants, just as today it’s already hard to imagine going more than a few minutes without checking the 1980s mainframe in one’s pocket.
Thirty
years later, they return to their birthplace.
The fighting ended (with the Peace of Westphalia in 1648) only after Germany lost a quarter of its population in the
Thirty
Years’ War.
Yet left to their own devices, cod are thought to live for at least
thirty
years.
The play is set during Europe’s
Thirty
Years’ War, which devastated Europe in the first half of the seventeenth century, ending only with the Peace of Westphalia in 1648.
Indeed, we have seen more religious wars than at any time since the end of the
Thirty
Years War in 1648.
Water immersion in a tub could last up to 12 seconds, no more than two hours a day, for up to
thirty
days in a row.
Thirty
years on, shareholders have broken definitively with this system.
Just
thirty
years ago, people like Stanford University's Paul Ehrlich were telling us that the Malthusian Angel of Death was at the door.
Just what would a European Council with
thirty
heads of state and government be like?
Anatomy of ThatcherismLondon –
Thirty
years ago this month, Margaret Thatcher came to power.
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