Worry
in sentence
1546 examples of Worry in a sentence
Or it may be that the greatest happiness of all comes from not having to
worry
about stuff like this.
In the past, countries had to
worry
that a rising fuel tax could become built into uncomfortably high inflation rates.
Another lesson is that we should not
worry
too much about shifting political majorities.
Houses in the AirOver the past six months, attention and
worry
have shifted from America’s enormous trade deficit to its surging property markets and real-estate bubble.
One possibility is that they
worry
about borrowers’ credit risk, though this would have to be extremely high to justify the complete cessation of long-term lending.
A second possibility is that banks
worry
about having enough resources to meet their own creditors’ demands if they lock up funds in long-term loans.
My questionnaire asked: "Do you
worry
that your (or your household's) ability to earn as much income in future years as you expect might be in danger because of changes in the economy (someone in China competing for your job, a computer replacing your job, etc.)?"
Of 442 respondents, 11% answered, "Yes, I
worry
a lot," 36% replied, "Yes, I
worry
a little," and 52% said, "No, I don't
worry
at all."
Thus, while most respondents said they were not worried, nearly half expressed some
worry.
Republicans also oppose bailouts, but
worry
about excessively loose monetary policy and too much discretion for the US Federal Reserve outside real emergencies.
Yes, the US should
worry
about its soaring public debt – and about the rising pension and health-care costs that are fueling it.
Of course, Americans should
worry
just as much about the quality of education and infrastructure – not to mention the natural environment – that they are leaving to future generations.
One
worry
is about what the philosopher Margaret Olivia Little calls "cultural complicity."
Market pressures compound this
worry.
Perhaps the hardest
worry
to pin down is what Harvard political theorist Michael Sandel calls "the drive to mastery."
Many
worry
about an upsurge in inflation, though, given the outsize slack in the global economy – and the likelihood that it will persist for years to come – that is not high on my watch list.
Americans – at least white, male Americans – did not have to
worry
about tradeoffs between security and opportunity, because the US offered the advantages of both.
Fears of a shadow-bank-induced credit bubble now top the
worry
list, reinforcing longstanding concerns that China may succumb to the dreaded “middle-income trap” – a sustained growth slowdown that has ensnared most high-growth emerging economies at the juncture that China has now reached.
But if Trump sticks to his protectionist promises, we will no longer have to
worry
about US-Brazil rivalry within the same trade agreement.
If you
worry
about financial Armageddon, it is indeed metaphorically the time to stock your bunker with guns, ammunition, canned food, and gold bars.
The real worry, however, is not just falling commodity prices, but also massive capital outflows.
Some people
worry
that Obama might be good for American soft power, but not for its hard power.
In light of regional trends, the military may be right to
worry.
Some
worry
that governments could manipulate their GDP statistics so that they will have less to pay.
It is his administration’s potential impact on global politics and the natural environment that should
worry
us far more.
This is especially true for an asymmetric peace process between a democratically elected government and an unaccountable non-state actor, which doesn’t have to
worry
about upcoming elections, opposition political parties, the press, or a skeptical public.
Finally, persistently low interest rates can cause people to
worry
about their retirement funds, spurring them to save more.
On the other hand, the
worry
in some parts of Asia is that young people entering the work force with strong technical training lack sufficient experience “thinking outside the box.”
Some
worry
that it may even undermine the Fed’s political independence.
As China enrolls countries as members of its Asian Infrastructure Investment Bank and doles out billions of dollars of aid during state visits abroad, some observers
worry
that, when it comes to soft power, China could actually be taking the lead over countries like the United States.
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