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?
" ... "Far-right populism and anti-Semitism are spreading all over Europe and the world," the Lebanese millionaire told the Swiss newspaper Le Matin Dimanche, “I did not want these objects to fall into the wrong hands and to be used by people with dishonest intentions.” ... "
" ... Alas, emissions continued to rise after 2015. While the European Union carried forward the good spirits of cooperation and climate action, many countries fell victim to the spread of populism and economic nationalism. Their myth-based policies further undermined cooperation and often destructed accomplishments made so far. Even most of the countries who had pledged to adhere to the Paris Agreement failed to make sufficient progress. Centrist policy makers viewed climate action as a political liability associated with enormous social and economic costs. ... "
" ... Both in Trump's following in the United States and in the rise of populism in Europe, we are witnessing a profound challenge to the cosmopolitan dream, the dream that the peoples of the world can put aside their differences and live together peacefully in a multicultural society. We are seeing the friction that results when tribal identity gets challenged by the leveling effects of globalization. ... "
" ... Few areas have been put under as much strain in 2020 as supply chains, with rapid change forcing companies to adapt their plans on a week-by-week, or even day-by-day basis. However, the situation only accelerated a transformation journey that was well underway, with companies looking to reduce the disruption risks posed by geopolitical uncertainty and economic populism, while benefitting from wage and cost convergence. For startups and VCs, this represents an opportunity. ... "
" ... Which brings us to Argentina. The once prosperous South American country is experiencing yet another stretch of economic turbulence. Readers can likely guess what’s brought the turbulence on, but just in case, the New York Times Daniel Politi recently reported that “the possibility of the return of left-wing populism” has investors worried, with capital flight the result. In concert with investors rushing “to the exits,” Politi reports that “the currency has plunged anew.” In Argentina, a collapsing peso is as common as Super Bowl wins are for the New England Patriots. The peso is seemingly always in decline, or threatened by decline. That the peso is perpetually imperiled or collapsing is indicative of something bigger. ... "