Uproar
in sentence
116 examples of Uproar in a sentence
But the
uproar
caused by these decisions reinforces, rather than dispels, doubts.
But imagine the
uproar
against a tax on all capital goods: Woe betide those who would diminish domestic productivity and competitiveness!
Then, in late May, President Sergio Mattarella caused an
uproar
by blocking the appointment of the Euroskeptic economist Paolo Savona as the country’s new minister of economy and finance, suggesting that the single currency may yet be a central issue in the future.
This global
uproar
is a testament to how three decades of Western feminist challenges to leadership have changed the world for the better.
Fortunately, his decision was reversed by the government after public
uproar.
Because the DSM’s influence extends far beyond the United States, the introduction of this change has caused an international
uproar.
The Chinese regime could have withstood such embarrassment, just as it could have survived an international
uproar.
The frenzied campaigning for the constitutional referendum began in
uproar.
The immediate
uproar
is over the exceedingly generous pay and promotion package that Wolfowitz awarded in 2005 to his girlfriend as compensation for leaving the Bank to pave the way for his arrival.
In 2005, the creation of a so-called “Takeshima Day” by a local government in Japan triggered a public
uproar
in South Korea.
Julian Assange’s Misrule of LawMADRID – The
uproar
surrounding Ecuador’s grant of political asylum to WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange has obscured huge inconsistencies.
After the US government had decided to bail out the investment bank Bear Stearns and to backstop the mortgage-finance agencies Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, a congressional
uproar
led President George W. Bush’s administration to vow not to inject any public money into Lehman Brothers, another ailing investment bank.
The
uproar
was so potent that, for the first time in Russia’s post-Soviet history, the election results were annulled.
The fact that the
uproar
has extended to India illuminates the many ways in which one can view abortion – even from a religious perspective.
The
uproar
and outrage were such that, in an unusual turn of events, the Kremlin quickly ordered that Golunov be released, instead of facing years in prison, as people in his position have come to expect.
Nowhere was this more apparent than in the
uproar
over the February 7 announcement that the Wuhan-based doctor Li Wenliang, whom the local authorities accused of “rumor-mongering” when he attempted to warn his colleagues about the coronavirus back in December, had died of it.
The profound
uproar
that marked those fleeting moments of relative cyber-freedom – the two weeks, from late January through early February, when censors lost their grip on the popular narrative – should be deeply worrying to the CPC.
That is all the more reason for tech firms and governments to get ahead of the curve before an especially ugly incident causes an even larger public uproar, prompting broader and blunter regulation that unnecessarily limits technology’s undeniable benefits.
This is exemplified by the
uproar
among American white nationalists over black professional athletes who kneel during the national anthem to protest police violence.
The move to drop the charges against Flynn led to the resignation of the case’s lead prosecutor and an
uproar
among established lawyers, both Republican and Democrat, who called on Barr to resign.
Otherwise, the popular
uproar
against “elites” will intensify, and social and political polarization will continue.
After an uproar, he took that back, although only partly.
That first attempt came amid the
uproar
following the meeting between US President Donald Trump and his Russian counterpart Vladimir Putin in Helsinki last July, when Trump appeared to side strongly with Putin against America’s own intelligence services on Kremlin interference in the 2016 US presidential election.
They made little noise in the midst of the chatter from door to door, in the coming and going of women in a constant
uproar
of calls and replies, of objects borrowed, of youngsters hunted away or brought back with a slap.
It was a terrifying
uproar
of interior cataclysms, a remnant of the ancient battle when deluges overthrew the earth, burying the mountains beneath the plains.
Only, thanks to the nationality of the ship victimized by this new ramming, and thanks to the reputation of the company to which this ship belonged, the event caused an immense
uproar.
Given this, no one will be astonished at the
uproar
provoked by this accident involving one of its finest steamers.
My article was hotly debated, causing a fine old
uproar.
Pertinent to this, I'll ask you if the Nautilus's running afoul of the Scotia, which caused such a great uproar, was the result of an accidental encounter?"
Frances had continued by herself, striving to exclude the uproar, and vainly endeavoring to summon resolution to meet the dreaded result.
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