• Implausibly, Larry Weinbach has brought it back, with a focus on service and consulting.

    FORBES: CEOs for the next century

  • Official bad debts recognised so far for property and infrastructure credit are implausibly low.

    ECONOMIST: Indian banks

  • It was written in a hand that was said, implausibly, to resemble the captain's.

    ECONOMIST: The Dreyfus affair: Pointing fingers | The

  • It would take an implausibly large swing of around 8% for the Tories to form a government.

    ECONOMIST: Psephology

  • Or you could make implausibly heroic assumptions about economic growth and a rise in the tax base.

    BBC: Scottish independence: not whether, but how?

  • The Social Democrats claim (not implausibly) that the Kohl government has run out of steam and failed to control spending.

    ECONOMIST: Germany��s economic conjurors

  • The two works have almost nothing in common, except that both show clumps of unlikable people behaving implausibly in confined spaces.

    NEWYORKER: Home Movies

  • He claims, implausibly, to have known nothing of his closest adviser's doings.

    ECONOMIST: Peru

  • His advisers insist, perhaps implausibly, that they can match the FSLN's spending programmes even without Venezuelan aid, by cutting out corruption and inefficiency.

    ECONOMIST: Daniel Ortega and the swamps of opportunism

  • He had checked two more bags full of books, reading material, a Compaq computer and, implausibly, a dot-matrix printer for his Compaq computer.

    FORBES: How Bill Buckley Got Me Into Magazines

  • Chile's foreign minister suggests, pretty implausibly, that the general will now be tried at home, if only Britain were to let him return.

    ECONOMIST: Jack Straw and General Pinochet | The

  • Some professional investors put money with feeder funds linked to Bernie Madoff, for example, even though statistical analysis suggested his performance record was implausibly smooth.

    ECONOMIST: Buttonwood

  • On this account, they may, as they have been threatening, formally launch their army into Congo (until now, they have implausibly denied their active involvement).

    ECONOMIST: Heading for an African war

  • Greece contends, implausibly, that it requires no additional loans from the euro zone, yet at the very least it needs the benevolence of the ECB.

    ECONOMIST: Charlemagne

  • Those figures are implausibly high but the direction is surely right.

    ECONOMIST: America��s jobs crisis

  • All six candidates are running implausibly on a unity ticket.

    ECONOMIST: The Tory leadership

  • The nose bridge was implausibly long, del Toro said.

    NEWYORKER: Show The Monster

  • They believe (implausibly, in my view) that ObamaCare, Dodd-Frank, and other Obama economic policies were a dramatic move in the direction of socialism that pose a fundamental danger to the American economy.

    FORBES: Optimism and Pessimism on the Right

  • When most people think of Singapore, if they do at all, they think of an order-obsessed Asian version of Wall Street or London's Canary Wharf, only with implausibly clean, sterile streets and no crime.

    WSJ: Wealth Over the Edge | WSJ.Money Spring 2013

  • He claims (implausibly, say some suspicious liberals) that he did try, albeit unsuccessfully, to persuade Mr Delors not to let French farmers hold the future of world trade in the Uruguay round to ransom.

    ECONOMIST: Pascal Lamy, free-market Frenchman?

  • Maybe it is the implausibly youthful face, or the tattered square of dirty, reflective cloth taped to his mudguard or the white, towelling sport socks he has pulled over his cleats in place of overshoes.

    BBC: No place like home for triathlete Alistair Brownlee

  • His surface is so smooth, his movements so easy and fluid, his voice so consistent and well-pitched that he can seem like an actor playing a politician, too implausibly effortless to be doing it for real.

    NEWYORKER: The Conciliator

  • Mr Ignatieff triggered the election by joining other opposition parties to bring down the government over its refusal to divulge how it arrived at implausibly low estimates of the cost of controversial new prisons and jet fighters.

    ECONOMIST: Canada's general election

  • In his fiction, the ratio of smart to stupid is far more advantageous than it is in real life, but this is a minor complaint, gladly passed over for the pleasure of reading pages of implausibly brilliant speech.

    NEWYORKER: Noble Savages

  • The Republicans had argued, not implausibly, that hiking taxes on anyone was risky given the anaemic recovery (although others rejoin that the government could have spent the proceeds from taxing the richest in ways that would have helped the economy more).

    ECONOMIST: Taxes, benefits and the deficit

  • But Benjamin Swinburne, a media analyst at Morgan Stanley, is forecasting a surprisingly strong rebound in advertising, especially on television, because dealers' spending on car and truck ads has fallen implausibly low: down by 65% in the first quarter of 2009 compared with the same period last year.

    ECONOMIST: The recession in advertising

  • Senators are encouraged not to spend precious time worrying about an accord that the United States Navy strenuously supports, the Bush administration wants promptly ratified, various mining and energy interests and environmental groups (however implausibly) agree is desirable and the bipartisan Senate Foreign Relations Committee unanimously approved a couple of years ago.

    CENTERFORSECURITYPOLICY: Reading the LOST compass

$firstVoiceSent
- 来自原声例句
小调查
请问您想要如何调整此模块?

感谢您的反馈,我们会尽快进行适当修改!
进来说说原因吧 确定
小调查
请问您想要如何调整此模块?

感谢您的反馈,我们会尽快进行适当修改!
进来说说原因吧 确定