Caution! The site can't guarantee, that text has age permission. The site is not recommended, if you are less than 18 years old.
The site shows example sentences for English words. How the word or phrase could be used in a sentence?
" ... Is President Trump's decision to impose tariffs on steal and aluminum, which will surely embroil our country in a needless and enormously costly trade war, a high crime and misdemeanor under the Wiki definition? What about his statement that a trade war is "good" and "easy to win"? ... "
" ... Norquist: It’s not clear whether Donald Trump has ever read Hayek. But his tax cuts are straight out of the Ronald Reagan/Art Laffer/Milton Friedman playbook. His de-regulation goes further than all previous presidents combined. His judges will strengthen and repair America’s commitment to the rule of law for a generation. And his unwillingness to be dragged into every stupid idea some European intellectual thought up—windmills, solar to replace real energy that really powers a national economy—has been a godsend. Those who wish to embroil America in every war in every quadrant of the globe have no ally in Trump. Trump knows that war is the enemy of liberty and fiscal prudence. Free trade and immigration are issues where Trump departs from President Reagan and Adam Smith. But as President Trump said before the coronavirus crisis—we are running out of workers in the United States. And the higher wages and jobs growth he delivered reduced the grumpiness of American voters who no longer lash out at immigrants and foreign competitors suspected of stealing their jobs. Trump’s tax cuts, de-regulation, sound legal system and respect for property rights delivered growth to America before the virus and will return when the virus is behind us. Trump’s growth silenced the concerns that drive protectionism and tariffs and stoke fears of immigration. Yes, the wall will be built. America will gain control of its borders, but it will maintain large and open doors. Immigration is our strongest competitive advantage over China, Japan, Russia and most of the world. And yes, our trade agreements need to ensure that our intellectual property is not stolen and reduce the ability of governments anywhere to subsidize trade and disadvantage foreign competition. ... "
" ... So why the PUP euphemism? The manufacturers of many spyware programs have legal departments that historically frightened many Antivirus makers and threatened to embroil them in expensive court cases and legal battles in civil court. The cry from these manufacturers for their nasty shady-ware is that the EULA (End User License Agreement) discloses that data might be re-used or re-sold. That isn’t good enough, though, and it’s especially not good enough from a company that is supposed to help us sort the black from the white as well as to parse the grey in between. For this reason, I much prefer calling it what it is: privacy-violating, spyware and adware unless it can be demonstrably proved otherwise. ... "