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91. The question now, given that there is bound to be further consolidation of equity trading in eastern Europe, is where that liquidity will go.
92. It imports arms from eastern Europe and exports them to Basque guerrillas.
93. With investors pulling out of riskier markets, the move was a bid to support its currency, the forint, and raised the possibility that other central banks across Eastern Europe could follow suit.
94. At the twilight of the Cold War, Bush's Eurocentrism was right and appropriate: Europe was, after all, where the action was as Eastern Europe shattered and as war broke out in the Balkans.
95. Election observation took shape in the post-Cold War years, as a number of regions, in particular Africa and post-communist eastern Europe, held multiparty elections for the first time.
96. Last year, Havel joined with other pro-American Eastern European leaders to call on Obama not to ignore Eastern Europe during the "reset" with Russia.
97. An FAO-EBRD meeting in London in March highlighted significant untapped agricultural production potential in Eastern Europe and the Commonwealth of Independent States (CIS).
98. Borscht is a very common dish in Germany and Eastern Europe.
99. The nation states of Eastern Europe finally sloughed off their totalitarian regimes.
100. Export India , Russia , Iran , Bangladesh, Africa , Eastern Europe and other countries.
101. In 1990s, China, Eastern Europe and the former Soviet Union pushed a new trend of Economic Transition in global area.
102. In 1989 LOT became the first carrier in Eastern Europe to fly western-made Boeing 767.
103. The effects of a global economic slowdown would ripple into south - eastern Europe.
104. Ronald Reagan's efforts on arms control and embrace of perestroika not only improved relations with the Soviet Union(sentencedict.com), but empowered dissidents throughout Eastern Europe.
105. Vampires have popped up in cultural folklore for thousands of years, though the fanged-and-coiffed version we know comes from the 18th and 19th-century myths of Eastern Europe.
106. There is also much pinot blanc planted in Eastern Europe.
107. The hall of Toners hospital is stone-built, but timber and varieties of fired or mud brick were more common materials: in many parts of Eastern Europe churches were made of wood.
108. The gap in attitudes between the global middle class and the poor seems greater in most of eastern Europe and Spanish-speaking Latin America than in, say, Egypt, India and Brazil.
109. It--and they're not to be confused with the modern Hasidim who live in Brooklyn and who come from Eastern Europe.
110. The UN's forecasts for eastern Europe and sub - Saharan Africa are especially dark.
111. Central and eastern Europe is under the greatest strain, having binged on international borrowing in recent years.
112. Slow cooked meat and vegetable dishes are popular, taking the form of casserole or stew in the US, a ragout in France, or a goulash, the traditional stew of Hungary, in Eastern Europe.
113. It would destabilise the euro—for some euro members, such as Ireland and Greece, are not in much better shape than eastern Europe.
114. Eastern Europe shows that worker-owned factories can be as inefficient as state-owned ones.
115. This was the challenging answer to the flimsy British network of guarantees in Eastern Europe.
116. Yanking Polish and Slovakian tax rates up to western European levels would almost certainly reduce investment in central and eastern Europe, and result in a fresh economic downturn in that region.
117. A Jehovah's Witness played Ping - Pong with a blackjack player from Eastern Europe.
118. Product main exportation: Canada, US, Eastern Europe, Western Europe and so on.
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