Traditionally
in sentence
559 examples of Traditionally in a sentence
One agency where large-scale graft and corruption was
traditionally
rampant was the Department of Public Works and Highways.
What’s more, political Catholicism still appeals to many French voters, and the Church itself wants to lure Catholics away from the National Front and back into its more
traditionally
conservative fold.
Traditionally, Muslim scholars achieved status by mastering socially useful knowledge, which was Islamic law.
Income and class cleavages, in contrast to identity cleavages based on race, ethnicity, or religion, have
traditionally
strengthened the political left.
Traditionally, the volume of bank deposits that constitute the broad money supply has increased in proportion to the amount of reserves that the commercial banks had available.
The batsman usually knows and
traditionally
should “walk” – leave the ground – if he knows that he is out.
Traditionally, EU heads of state and governments try to help one another with their domestic political problems.
But sharing the benefits of globalization with the losers is
traditionally
regarded as a national responsibility.
Anti-malaria efforts
traditionally
focus on distributing insecticide-treated bed-nets and drugs to vulnerable residents of a region.
Traditionally, this would have been a task entrusted to the Right.
In this region, mass protests have
traditionally
been a weapon of last resort.
For AIPAC – which has
traditionally
relied on a broad coalition of social and political forces in the US that view Israel’s security as both a moral cause and a vital national interest – this is not any old defeat.
Moreover, an increased focus on long-term investment will help resolve the conflicts
traditionally
associated with addressing climate change and building infrastructure.
Even when compared to Singapore –
traditionally
dismissed by Hong Kong residents as an excessively taxed authoritarian city-state, compared to their own low-tax laissez-faire economy – Hong Kong comes up short.
The transatlantic partnership,
traditionally
the backbone of the conference, has seen better days than these.
This has caught academics off-guard, because they have
traditionally
treated knowledge as something pursued for its own sake, regardless of cost or consequence.
Cartels, anti-competitive invoicing practices, senselessly closed professions, and a bureaucracy that has
traditionally
turned the state into a public menace would soon discover that our government is their worst foe.
Indeed, policies
traditionally
considered “business friendly,” such as tax credits and lower tax rates, can be bad for business in the long run if they limit governments’ future ability to invest in areas that increase innovation-led growth.
Central banks in Asia and the Middle East have
traditionally
held their reserves in dollars.
Citizenship tests are an integral part of this program; and, in the eyes of critics, they resemble “loyalty oaths” and other intolerant measures
traditionally
associated with the anti-communist witch-hunts of McCarthyism in 1950’s America.
Robotics has already made significant inroads in electronics assembly, with sewing trades,
traditionally
many countries’ first entry point to the global trading system, likely to come next.
Putin has usurped authority not just from his more knowledgeable colleagues, but also from the prime minister, who has
traditionally
served as Russia’s chief economic policymaker.
Another promising opportunity are investments in the riskiest stage of the development process for new drugs: the phase between basic research and human clinical trials, which has
traditionally
struggled to attract funding.
The Arab position has
traditionally
been that Israel cannot be offered the fruits of peace, such as recognition and normal relations, before it has paid its full territorial price – that is, a complete withdrawal from occupied Arab lands and the creation of a Palestinian state.
In the asset management industry, there have
traditionally
been two types of investment strategies: passive and active.
In particular, politicians need to be willing to confront teachers’ unions, which have
traditionally
resisted reforms that introduce competition and accountability.
Firms that
traditionally
borrowed on the financial markets avoided these high rates by relying on their own profits.
Rising debt levels are already forcing them to cut public spending,
traditionally
the main engine of economic growth in the region, and start dismantling universal subsidies.
Traditionally, states’ rights were invoked by southern states to defend slavery, and then nearly a century of Jim Crow (the legal framework for racial segregation), from federal interference, thereby preserving southern business owners’ and farmers’ control of their black labor force.
It also empowers
traditionally
disadvantaged groups, particularly women.
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