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rhythmical sense English

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rhythmical sense English » English

sense of rhythm

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If you are a high-net-worth investor, a sovereign wealth fund, or a central bank, it makes perfect sense to hold a modest proportion of your portfolio in gold as a hedge against extreme events.
But, at the same time, a wave of idealism swept across the wreckage, a collective sense of determination to build a more equal, peaceful, and safer world.
In short, he was a modern Jew in the best sense of the word.
He was, in the true sense of the word, a self-made man, whose pluck, ambition, drive and inner belief in his destiny carried him to the pinnacle of his achievements.
In Latin America and elsewhere in the developing world, the IMF imposes accounting frameworks that not only make little sense, but result in excessive austerity.
This makes sense.
Science fiction sometimes limits rather than expands our sense of what is possible.
It makes much more sense to tax things that are bad, like pollution, than things that are good, like savings and work.
But it makes far more sense to use the force of markets - the power of incentives - than to rely on goodwill, especially when it comes to oil companies that regard their sole objective as maximizing profits, regardless of the cost to others.
They see new players (say, Spain) rising to shape EU policy, particularly foreign policy, and sense that their traditional leadership is being challenged.
But the reverse is also true: a deep-rooted sense of democracy--precisely what globalization lacks--seems necessary to support economic efforts.
Security is useless without freedom, but freedom makes no sense without security - both national security and economic security.
In essence, the form of government we seek within Germany and across Europe is built on a sense of moral discourse and moral decision-making rather than on the supposedly eternal truth of some abstract political concept.
During World War II, European monarchs kept a sense of hope and unity alive among their subjects under Nazi occupation.
It thus seemed to make sense that even in the eurozone, banking supervision remained largely national.
Here, too, it makes sense to have the ECB in charge as a neutral arbiter with respect to these opposing interests.
It is always risky to speculate about hidden motives; nevertheless, systematic disparagement of Israeli society and culture undoubtedly encourages the sense that anti-Semitism, too, is a permitted prejudice.
Moreover, land for peace never made sense from an economic point of view.
Is it any wonder, then, that so many rational people are trying to make sense of a political reality that really has become unusually opaque?
Without legitimacy, no government can rule with any sense of confidence.
Nor would it be proper, where the gravity and scale of crimes materially differ, to charge all sides in a conflict in order to preserve a false sense of parity.
Remittances are already believed to be falling, which makes sense: immigrants in rich countries are and will be disproportionately hurt by slowing economic activity.

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