In the area of music, however, a sea change is in order.
2
Police support groups, however, say the officers were only maintaining public order.
3
In order to achieve this result, Brazil decided to adopt new methods.
4
An administration official said the new executive order would likely exclude Iraq.
5
Not this yes yes I must and orderorderorder follow done.
1
Moreover, today's positive market effects demand further qualification beyond the health crisis.
2
Dr McCracken said the services will help ease demand for crisis services.
3
However, he said high demand would keep values from falling too far.
4
Therefore, companies offering content will be in demand in the near future.
5
Earlier this year leading doctors raised concerns about increasing demand on hospitals.
1
If there's free space in the volume group, simply issue the command:
2
Neither the right words nor the right conditions are at my command.
3
Haven't heard anything about 'submitting' through my own 'chain of command' yet.
4
One said cheekily, ''Tis the only ship Jake 'ere'll ever command, sir!'
5
Changes in command necessitated adjustments that could give rise to new problems.
1
Background: Medical schools' instruction of skills is often found to be inadequate.
2
The purchase should be approved by Oct. 15, the government instruction said.
3
To know wisdom and instruction; to perceive the words of understanding; 3.
4
The instruction was issued to the National Roads Authority late last month.
5
Do the animals confront us for weekend entertainment or for serious instruction?
1
The aesthetic imperative has spread new economy values beyond just knowledge workers.
2
It was the moral imperative: Someone Is In Pain: Therefore You Help.
3
The problem cuts to the heart of the imperative for social stability.
4
Long-term re-evaluation is, however, considered imperative to ascertain and ensure knowledge retention.
5
They confirmed why it was imperative that the government prioritised crime reduction.
1
Earlier this year, the Commission proposed a directive to address this problem.
2
EU finance ministers today agreed a directive aimed at fighting money laundering.
3
The measure was first introduced into the 2014 EU tobacco products directive.
4
This directive was opposed at the time by several states, including Ireland.
5
Since 2009 the EU has adopted the sustainable use of pesticides directive.
1
The compulsion to try just-one-more-thing to fix a problem before going home.
2
However, for obvious reasons, they felt no compulsion to share their secret.
3
There shouldn't be a technology-driven compulsion to work in a certain way.
4
It just doesn't happen without serious derangement-orsome kind of magical compulsion.
5
There was some pleasure in the power, and a certain compulsion too.
1
A final effect of Europe's activism may be in US legalnorms.
2
His ability to ignore moral considerations, legalnorms, and basic human compassion makes him both a dangerous and resourceful foe.
3
Bosnia-Herzegovina: Bosnia-Herzegovina has admitted ignoring legalnorms to hand six Algerian-born men to US forces, who then flew them to the controversial Guantánamo Bay prison.
4
The Foreign Ministry in Moscow issued a statement denouncing the "unprovoked action", which ran counter to the UN Charter and other international legalnorms.
5
At Turner's sentencing, Persky bizarrely praised Turner for having "complied with social and legalnorms sort of above and beyond what normal law-abiding people do".
Ús de imperative sentence en anglès
1
The subject is usually omitted in the imperativesentence; but, when it is expressed, the sentence is in the transposed order.
2
We call the first a +Declarative sentence+, the second an +Interrogative sentence+, the third an + Imperativesentence+, and the fourth an +Exclamatory sentence+.
3
(2) The ImperativeSentence;
4
+Period+.-Placea period after (1) a declarative or an imperativesentence, (2) an abbreviation, and (3) a number written in the Roman notation.