Warnings
in sentence
374 examples of Warnings in a sentence
However, had the same lawmakers who are now deriding the CDC listened to pleas for more support and
warnings
of the consequences of poor funding over the past several years, perhaps the US would not be in the situation in which it finds itself today.
As the economics of climate change has become ever clearer,
warnings
from the global warming community have become shriller.
But
warnings
that the ratio of workers to retirees will fall from 2.1 to 1.3 overstate the case, because they arbitrarily define working age as ending at 65, and ignore the potential to increase retirement ages, as the Abe government is now doing.
A classic example was Winston Churchill’s
warnings
against Adolf Hitler’s ambitions.
Warnings
of a severe political backlash went unheeded.
It was this system of financial intermediation whose near-collapse in 2008 seemed for many to justify the ancient
warnings
of the perils of indebtedness.
Admittedly, there were warnings, but policy makers, particularly in advanced countries, did not follow suit.
Early warnings, commissioned by the G20, should be specific and the IMF should monitor whether policymakers give follow-up to the Fund’s advice.
They will no doubt be presented mainly as recommendations for small-print changes in the
warnings
on drug labels and in the instructions for the drug's use.
United by the Internet, many thousands of patients from all over the world began to describe experiences with anti-depressant drugs and problems brought on by withdrawal that bore little resemblance to the labels
' warnings.
As
warnings
about the “middle-income trap” underscore, history is littered with more failures than successes in pushing beyond the per capita income threshold that China has attained.
In 2004, for example, the United States Food and Drug Administration told drug manufacturers to print
warnings
on certain antidepressants about the increased short-term risk of suicide in adolescents using them, and required increased monitoring of young people as they started medication.
Kaufman scored an even bigger coup with his
warnings
about the dangers of the explosive growth of high-frequency trading, which is little understood by America’s main financial watchdog, the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC), and poses systemic market risk.
But the government then heeded influential economists’
warnings
of the risks of relaxing capital controls too hastily.
The media and official publications from the International Monetary Fund and other institutions have raised dire
warnings
about the impact of the Fed’s first move on financial markets and other economies.
The ECB acted despite a growing chorus of
warnings
that monetary stimulus is not sufficient to promote durable growth, and that it encourages excessive risk-taking in financial markets, which could ultimately threaten economic stability and prosperity (as it did in 2008).
Given
warnings
from US companies about the impact of a stronger dollar on their earnings – not to mention signs of declining inward tourism and a deteriorating trade balance – this is not guaranteed.
So far, these
warnings
have had only a limited effect in Ramallah, the seat of the Palestine National Authority.
Those in power did not take these
warnings
seriously.
Warnings
about competitive devaluations are misleading.
Bush ignored these
warnings.
They see the damage extreme weather events can inflict on homes, infrastructure, and livelihoods, and they hear climate scientists’
warnings
that conditions will only deteriorate.
Even as the UN issues stark
warnings
about an impending catastrophe in Yemen, the Saudi-led coalition is preparing an offensive to capture the coastline around the port of Hodeida – a move that the International Crisis Group has warned would aggravate Yemen’s humanitarian crisis.
These figures are only the early
warnings
of an emerging trend.
In this latest case, the junta-controlled news media failed to announce
warnings
about the approaching cyclone.
Yet governments have consistently failed to heed their own experts’
warnings.
Market regulators are interested in protecting investors, and have begun to issue
warnings.
Although these
warnings
have been sotto voce so far, I expect regulators will raise the volume soon, as the price gyrations continue.
Educating residents of low-lying coastal areas about the warning signs of a tsunami (tremors and a sudden recession in the ocean), establishing a warning system involving emergency broadcasts, telephoned warnings, and air-raid-type sirens, and improving emergency response systems would have saved many who were killed by the Indian Ocean tsunami.
The German sociologist Max Weber made his reputation with
warnings
of the dire consequences of further Polish immigration to Germany.
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