Tilting
in sentence
34 examples of Tilting in a sentence
And if you think the tilt is
tilting
us closer, no, it isn't.
The Sun is 93 million miles away, and we're
tilting
like this, right?
Video: (Music) DM: I can speed up the whole sequence by
tilting
the tempo one way or the other.
It's a Ronnefeldt
tilting
teapot.
The regional balance of power is already
tilting
in Iran’s favor.
Tempers cooled soon enough, but India was always regarded as
tilting
toward the Kremlin, hardly a recommendation for warm relations in American eyes.
Yet the crisis may be
tilting
Western policy outcomes in favor of globalization.
Moreover, there are signs that wage gains are now broadening out, with the balance
tilting
away from low wage-inflation industries such as manufacturing, health care, and education into higher wage-inflation industries such as finance, the information sector, and professional and business services.
Obama can lose these people, however, if he forgets that he is a reconciler, not a class warrior, and goes from
tilting
towards the poor to soaking the rich.
Its violations include maintaining nontariff barriers to keep out foreign competition; subsidizing exports;
tilting
the domestic market in favor of Chinese companies; pirating intellectual property; using antitrust laws to extort concessions; and underwriting acquisitions of foreign firms to bring home their technologies.
Too much focus on broad issues, such as rule of law and accountability, runs the risk that policymakers will end up
tilting
at windmills while overlooking the particular governance challenges most closely linked to economic growth.
An elected populist demagogue eliminates or weakens the checks and balances on his authority by undermining the independence of the courts and other bodies, severely restricting the freedom of the press,
tilting
the playing field to make elections easier to win, and delegitimizing and imprisoning political opponents.
The fact that he has picked the moderate Francois Fillon as prime minister indicates that he is interested in obtaining real results, and that he thus plans to take the evolutionary route rather than
tilting
at the windmills of revolutionary change.
Striking a balance between the conflicting imperatives of transparency and privacy will never be easy, especially when the political landscape is
tilting
toward ever-greater accountability.
Ma had been
tilting
his government’s policies increasingly toward China, concluding a bilateral framework agreement on economic cooperation.
With policies ranging from export subsidies and nontariff barriers to intellectual-property piracy and
tilting
the domestic market in favor of Chinese companies, China represents, in the words of Harvard’s Graham Allison, the “most protectionist, mercantilist, and predatory major economy in the world.”
Snubbed by the European Union, Erdogan is
tilting
the balance towards the latter.
Indeed,
tilting
at a supposed Keynesian propensity for consumption-led recovery is at best a distraction.
Ongoing democratization in regions that have known only dictatorship provides hope that the balance is
tilting
in a way that would enable it possible for at least one UN body should incarnate freedom.
Public debate is also confused by an “all-or-nothing” mind-set, with skeptics contending that if any portion of climate change is naturally caused (say, by the earth’s axis
tilting
over a period of millennia) then none of it can be anthropogenic.
Anemic growth, deflationary forces, and pockets of excessive indebtedness will hamper investment,
tilting
the balance of risk to the downside.
Taiwan’s New Balancer-in-ChiefTOKYO – Even as many of the world’s electorates – most notably in the United States – are
tilting
toward the extremes, voters in Taiwan have bucked the trend and chosen the middle road.
While trade agreements played a role in creating this inequality, much else contributed to
tilting
the political balance toward capital.
In key developing countries – notably China and India – the intellectual and policy landscape is
tilting
sharply toward self-reliance and inwardness.
But if currency wars are defined much more broadly to include central banks’ decisions to ease monetary policy with the side effect of depreciating their currencies, then the windmills at which Trump is quixotically
tilting
may not be wholly imaginary.
Instead of tapping into the talent pool of women in HR, business leaders are
tilting
toward hiring “strategic” HR executives from non-HR backgrounds.
Reminiscent of Don Quixote, Trump is
tilting
at windmills.
Tilting
at More than Windmills in South AsiaNEW YORK – “Tilt” is a word with a history in South Asia.
In his recent book The Economists’ Hour, Binyamin Appelbaum, an influential New York Times journalist, argues that economists are to blame for
tilting
too much of the world excessively toward profits.
By permanently
tilting
the economic playing field, these arrangements have long discouraged the investment and innovation needed for sustained growth.
Related words
Toward
Balance
Windmills
Favor
While
Political
Policy
Growth
Economic
World
Which
Under
Towards
There
Their
Policies
Playing
Other
Notably
Market