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Example sentences for "economics"

Lexicographically close words:
ecologists; ecology; economic; economical; economically; economies; economise; economised; economising; economist
  1. Since she had a natural instinct for economics he'd encouraged her, rightly foreseeing it as a discipline vital to Japan in the twenty-first century.

  2. She had several articles lined up; she'd finally axed a stormy year-long affair with a colleague in Economics named David Mason; and she was scheduled to begin a book on intelligent robots.

  3. Among the more recent discussions of economics in Chinese history is Chi Chao-ting, Key Areas in Chinese Economic History, New York, 1936.

  4. These features throw considerable light upon native economics with reference to the constitution of the family.

  5. Their bearing upon the economics of the household (pp.

  6. This has induced me to think that it would perhaps not be without some interest for the American student of economics to cast a glance at the rural conditions which have finally resulted in that tremendous calamity.

  7. Had everything gone smoothly, the Bank would nevertheless have effected no actual change in the economics of the village.

  8. Having suffered shipwreck in their revolutionary course, the peasantists came to the conclusion that scientific investigation of the economics of the village was the most essential preliminary for any rational political action.

  9. The question of divorce is, therefore, partly in the field of economics and has to do with the general welfare.

  10. I repeat that it is a question in economics and morals.

  11. It was the Honorable Bertram Condley, Secretary of Economics for the President of the United States.

  12. The Secretary of Economics had indicated, by his precise enunciation of tovarishch, that the man was a Russian--or at least a citizen of one of the Soviet satellites.

  13. My title comes from a degree in economics and political science, not in physical science.

  14. Questions relating to recipes, and those pertaining to culinary science and domestic economics in general, will be cheerfully answered by the editor.

  15. It is a question of economics and ethics more than of wrinkles.

  16. This book consists of a number of Studies in Economics and Industrial and Social Problems.

  17. Lord Maitland was the eldest son of the Earl of Lauderdale, and became a well-known figure both in politics and in scientific economics after he succeeded to the peerage himself.

  18. Economics of King Jurgen Now Jurgen's curious dream put notions into the restless head of Jurgen.

  19. Student at Girton College, Cambridge; Research Student of the London School of Economics and Political Science.

  20. And there is that evil notion which still afflicts economics that when two trade one must lose.

  21. If economics was not interesting, sociology was available; and it could be democratized to any degree desired.

  22. So in government, we must have a state which will be not only just but merciful; which will concern itself not only with militant economics but also with human well-being.

  23. Before going further into the employer phase of the practice, the economics of tipping in individual instances will be an interesting study.

  24. Mr. Gompers in this chapter from his book has shed much light on the ethics, economics and psychology of tipping.

  25. As an employer the government, of all employers, should set an example of true democracy, should practice sound economics and ethics in the relations it permits between its employees and the public.

  26. Even if the public should have to pay more for food, lodging and other service, if tipping is abolished, an immense advance in sound economics and democratic ethics would be made in eliminating the double-payment system.

  27. It will be interesting to examine the ethics, economics and psychology of tipping to determine whether the American people receive a value for this expenditure.

  28. Self-respect and sound economics flourish in such an atmosphere, whereas, if values are hazy and compensation is indirect and irregular, as it is under the custom of tipping, the bickering that follows degrades manhood.

  29. Then just very, very slight criticism, not politically, but sort of in the sense of economics that the people were not getting the best products, they were all for export.

  30. Did your son tell you whether he had discussions with Oswald concerning politics and economics and things like that?

  31. The way to improve our dramatic art is to reform the economics of our theatre business.

  32. No very deep knowledge of economics is necessary to perceive that this must become, in the long run, a ruinous business policy.

  33. Illustration] Beginning Tuesday, June 29th, regular lectures in Spanish and economics were held in a splendid room in the National Library of Venezuela placed at the disposal of our group.

  34. On Friday, August 20th, we landed in New York, and thus came to an end the first university field work in economics directed towards the expansion of American foreign trade.

  35. The machinery of home economics instruction for adults is even now being erected, is even now being operated.

  36. Home economics will not narrow women's education but in the end will enlarge it.

  37. Home economics is no attempt to drive women back into home seclusion.

  38. So we come back to our old statement and vary it in phrase but not in effect by saying that home-economics courses, totaled, do not give a technique so much as an outlook.

  39. But it does mean something, this Home Economics disturbance.

  40. At the University of Missouri the first crop of graduates in home economics was gathered in the spring of 1910.

  41. Surely we can now say with unanimous consent that Home Economics has revealed itself to be not a species of sex education but a species of vocational education.

  42. Richards, of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, whose skill as scientist and vision as philosopher made her the most authoritative personality in the American Home Economics Association.

  43. A precisely similar conviction arises with regard to those "domestic applications of the physical and sociological sciences" which a full home economics course adds to an "academic" education.

  44. So much for the "money sense in expenditure" which a full home economics course adds to "academic" education.

  45. Day, who subsequently left Missouri to organize a department of home economics in the University of Kansas, is a novel type of New Woman in that she has earned the degree of Doctor of Philosophy in "Woman's Sphere.

  46. We come thus face to face with the final development of the home economics movement.

  47. For this reason alone, even if the gap between girlhood and motherhood did not exist, the machinery of home economics instruction for adults would have become necessary.

  48. Whatever ordinary men did in the field of economics was sure to be wrong and to check the flow of goods upon which the well-being of society depended.

  49. After the News heeler left him on the evening in question he read economics uninterruptedly for about half an hour; then he took a cigarette from his case and lit it.

  50. This abstraction criticism stands for the entire "economics industry", and will continue to do so while it has an insufficiently perceptive and complex understanding of localised realities.

  51. The IMF's deadly sin, yet to yield its grapes of wrath, is not to understand that economics is a branch of psychology and should be at the service of humans and society.

  52. That economics is a branch of psychology is becoming more evident by the day.

  53. The second fallacy is the assumption underlying both rational and behavioural economics that human nature is an "object" to be analysed and "studied", that it is static and unchanged.

  54. The kind of economics it discusses is one of authority, monitoring, and, dare I say it, intervention.

  55. The result is economics students who never heard of Milton Friedman or Kenneth Arrow and students of medicine who offer sex or money or both to their professors in order to graduate.

  56. The result should be a series of ethnically homogeneous states - viable, cohesive, peaceful and able to concentrate on economic warfare rather than on the economics of war.

  57. The reference to economics as a branch of psychology is spot-on.

  58. Perhaps they should be dealt with more appropriately within the academic discipline of psychology, but then economics in a branch of psychology.

  59. This is why professors of economics who studied under Socialism can never teach Capitalism in the truest sense of the word.

  60. The practice of economics is also murky, and our criticism of it too will remain justified as long as policies that are illogical, impractical and unethical are produced and enforced.

  61. It is his economics that have made the trouble.

  62. Possibly the first germ of the solution appeared a generation ago in a sentence in Marshall's "Economics of Industry.

  63. In support of the general thesis Walker says: "Discussions in Economics and Statistics," (Vol.

  64. He was educated at the university of Vermont and at Johns Hopkins University, and afterwards became professor of economics and statistics at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology.

  65. Bow, in his The Economics of Construction in Relation to Framed Structures (1873), materially simplified the process of drawing a diagram of stress reciprocal to a given frame acted on by a system of equilibrating external forces.

  66. It seems to us, in short, a case where narrower duties and economics have been allowed to crowd broader ones out of sight.


  67. The above list will hopefully give you a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "economics" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this word.