Home
Idioms
Top 1000 Words
Top 5000 Words


Example sentences for "international relations"

  • Sidenote: Translations in international relations} The American provisions as to translations apply with especial importance to international relations.

  • In the future world the misuse of power, as implied in the term "power politics," must not be a controlling factor in international relations.

  • The new condition of affairs thus created has presented many serious and complicated problems, both of internal rehabilitation and of international relations, whose solution it was realized would necessarily require much time and patience.

  • Of course, it is in this latter, aggressive or excursive, issue of the well-to-do bias in favor of investment and invested wealth that its most pernicious effect on international relations is traceable.

  • The recent history of Germany is a striking example of the effect of a naval policy on international relations.

  • What degree of unity this will engender between France and Great Britain, if the old system of international relations continues, it is not hard to guess.

  • Those of us who now favor a league or federation of states as a means of preserving peace perpetually may well study the crisis to which a similar system had come in the development of international relations in 1820.

  • If they do otherwise, the whole game will become a pirate’s game, and good faith will disappear from international relations.

  • Although the ministries of foreign affairs and foreign trade are the governmental operating agencies in the field of international relations, in theory and in fact the State Council is the supervisory body.

  • In a plenum of the Central Committee of the Bulgarian Communist Party in July 1973, the party leaders touched on issues of international relations.

  • The foreigners on their part had been buoyed up under their grievances by the hope of a readjustment of international relations, which had been provided for in the treaties of Tientsin and Peking.

  • The same agency was destined in later days to unravel many tangled skeins in China's international relations.

  • The president of the council represents the republic in international relations.

  • The permanent powers were exercised by the president, who was by virtue of his position the head of state, and focused primarily on the representation of the republic in international relations.

  • A refusal to prolong the term of the ultimatum would render nugatory the proposals made by the Austro-Hungarian Government to the powers, and would be in contradiction to the very bases of international relations.

  • To foretell the result of the gigantic struggle in international relations is obviously impossible.

  • To Germany a reception would have meant a shifting of international relations to the disadvantage of the country: in other words, would have meant the risk, almost the certainty, of war.

  • Products which bring about radical changes in the domain of international relations, as well as in the political economy of the people, and which in old times took hundreds of years to ripen, come to maturity in a few months.

  • This is a great gain for the future, for, with the world nearly all parcelled out, economic considerations, which are almost in all cases adjustable, are now the most weighty factors in international relations.

  • He was doing his best to help bring about that day when, in Gladstone's famous words, "the idea of public right would be the governing idea" of international relations.

  • All this field of international relations--you fellows regard it as a bore.

  • The part that the wives of diplomats and statesmen play in international relations is one that few Americans understand.

  • This is the state of affairs at present in international relations, owing to the fact that no international government exists.

  • Such a system would not promote peace, any more than it does at present in international relations.

  • Another direction in which there is urgent need of the substitution of law and order for anarchy is international relations.

  • This tendency has struck almost all authorities who have investigated scientifically modern international relations.

  • A word or two as to the role of "friendship" in international relations.

  • In the development of international relations, in case of the threat of war or of actual war, it was regarded as an unfriendly act for outside Powers to tender good offices or to mediate in the cause of peace.

  • If adopted, it legalized the mastery of might, which in international relations, when peace prevailed, had been universally condemned as illegal and its assertion as reprehensible.

  • This failure to lift the necessary agency of international relations out of the rut worn deep by centuries of practice is one of the deplorable consequences of the peace negotiations.

  • The Japanese understood the position of juniority in international relations: to their intense humiliation, they confessed themselves China's junior during the Ashikaga period.

  • For many years the Foundation has sought to increase public understanding of international problems by an objective presentation of the facts of international relations.

  • The Party has met and overcome obstacles in practical politics, international relations, working administration, internal unification, and national defense.


  • The above list will hopefully provide you with a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "international relations" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this group of words.


    Some common collocations, pairs and triplets of words:
    acre farm; constitutional right; fear from; found among; found out; general movement; half tablespoonful; historical materialism; international affairs; international agreement; international boundaries; international commission; international copyright; international markets; international politics; international relations; international service; international trade; international traffic; mythical origin; obiter dicta; only three; still earlier; then governor; thin strip; went downstairs