Sentences with Europe, Sentences about Europe
1. I traveled around Europe.
2. A cold front swept over Europe
3. Brasil is not a country in Europe.
4. Africa is exporting beef to Europe.
5. I think that economic patriotism is the very foundation of a European vision.
6. Your worst class is history, yet somehow, you know everything about Eastern Europe.
7. I do not share the half-in, half-out attitude to the EU of some in Britain. Britain’s place is in Europe.
8. My mom used to have a lot of European cinema playing in the house, so I’d catch bits and pieces of films.
9. Democracy is one of the core values of the Council of Europe, together with human rights and the rule of law.
10. Europe, which gave us the idea of same-sex marriage, is a dying society, with birthrates 50 percent below replacement.
11. I want you to remember when our White House reflected the best of who we are, not the worst of what Europe has become.
12. In remembering the appalling suffering of war on both sides, we recognise how precious is the peace we have built in Europe since 1945.
13. The need for peace in Northern Ireland goes well beyond political stability. It now speaks to regional Europe and even global stability.
14. I grew up watching all these crazy movies, European movies and stuff, and I guess that I always laughed at things that were a little more offbeat.
15. Peace and abstinence from European interferences are our objects, and so will continue while the present order of things in America remain uninterrupted.
16. In 1977 we played America and Europe three times, and Japan – my marriage suffered as a result. My then wife took the kids to Canada to be near her parents.
17. I know a lot of Eastern Europeans, and because of what they have been through and what they have seen, they have an attitude where they are not easily fooled.
18. The American attitude is ‘We’re the best’. That’s why the NBA guys who come from other countries, the Europeans, all sort of stick together away from the game.
19. Of course, the simple explanation of the fact is that marriage is the most important act of man’s life in Europe or America, and that everything depends upon it.
20. My sisters and I were fortunate to travel through Asia and Europe at very young ages. We confronted extraordinary beauty in Athens and unspeakable poverty in India.
21. It’s really necessary for the United States to continue to give strong leadership to the Middle East peace process, supported by European countries at the same time.
22. Speaking from my experience as a person involved for a long time in building the European Union, it is important to have patience and efforts to build a community of nations.
23. I am hoping this is my year to have children. I understand that I am possibly more European in my views of marriage. I am not going to say I’m not going to get married, but it’s not my priority.
24. Our forces saved the remnants of the Jewish people of Europe for a new life and a new hope in the reborn land of Israel. Along with all men of good will, I salute the young state and wish it well.
25. I envy the sensibility in Europe, appreciating beauty in women as they age. I’m going to go that way. I might dye my gray hair for a bit, but beyond that the buck stops. I’m not having any work done.
26. Compared to America or Europe, God isn’t a big part of our lives here. I don’t know anyone here who goes to church when he’s had a rough divorce or is going through depression. We go out into nature instead.
27. Canadians tend to be a bit more religious than most Europeans – though not more than the Poles or Ukrainians. Most important, their attitude to immigration and ethnic minorities is more positive than that of most Europeans.
28. Americans are the most generous country on the planet. I’ve worked in Europe, I’ve worked in Australia. There is no where else where you get absolutely no attitude for being a foreigner. If you do your job well, they embrace you.
29. After all, I long to be in America again, nay, if I can go home to return no more to Europe, it seems to me that I shall ever enjoy more peace of mind, and even Physical comfort than I can meet with in any portion of the world beside.
30. I’d love to go back to Europe in the ’20s and ’30s, for the beginning of the Psychoanalytic Movement, and Freud and Jung, and all that was going on with discoveries in quantum physics. The whole nature of reality was changing and being challenged.
31. The threat today is not that of the 1930s. It’s not big powers going to war with each other. The ravages which fundamentalist political ideology inflicted on the 20th century are memories. The Cold war is over. Europe is at peace, if not always diplomatically.