confront造句91) He must confront a severe economic crisis: 7m of the country's 12m population are trapped in poverty.
92) The major issues that confront parents with caregivers are rivalries and maintaining the primacy of the family.
93) If you suspect that others also haven't read the papers always confront directly on the issue.
94) Campaigners hope that the spotlight thrown by the Etireno has forced the industry to confront some of these issues.
95) The City must also confront competition from new office development around its fringes and in the London Docklands.
96) To break the circle, we had to create new habits, confront our emotions and solve eating problems.
97) I wanted to grab people by the throat and confront them with this terrible situation that was being allowed to continue.
98) When consumers accustomed to choices confront public institutions that offer standardized services, they increasingly go elsewhere.
99) They're cowards - they don't have the guts to confront me personally.
100) I decided to follow him to his bedroom to confront him with this unacceptable behaviour.
101) We must now confront the rather more daunting problems of differentiating lexical units paradigmatically.
102) And that is going to confront the world with a painful moral dilemma.
103) The ongoing comedy of Conservative policy gives Labour the chance to confront the tax question head on.
104) If Kinnock chooses to fight to retain his leadership, he will have to confront the Trojan horse.
105) Charles was equally determined to confront the men who had so recently betrayed him.
106) The problem which the Phillips-Lipsey model then had to confront was one of measurability: not a directly observable magnitude.
107) But this remedy fails to confront the reality of a male youth culture nearly immune to all the blandishments of established society.
108) It forced me to confront a messy tangle of emotions.
109) For the first time Nizan was forced to confront the social reality of the process of schooling.
110) He had no idea what he would do when he actually saw Tony, but he knew he had to confront him.
111) It took courage for that man to confront a superior.
112) Creep down, armed with a poker, and confront the intruder?
113) As a nation, we are right to finally confront the stark reality of needless suffering among the dying.
114) It was an almost slapstick comedy in which Stalin and his cultural henchman Zhdanov confront Prokofiev and Shostakovich.
115) As the car moved off, the man strode into the road as if his intention to confront Elliott had simply been mistimed.
116) Although no one was home, police said the officers were expecting to confront armed and dangerous drug dealers inside the house.
117) Earlier there had been reports that actress Julie Walters was having to confront the fact that her child had leukaemia.
118) In order to participate meaningfully within the community members of this group must actively engage in the issues that confront them.
119) Because of their qualitatively larger economies and military resources, Washington and Moscow confront each other as super powers.
120) The threat had hung like a sword over his head for years and he wanted to confront it once and for all.