• "It is one thing to work in a country that is partly free, " he said.

    CENTERFORSECURITYPOLICY: Russia's emerging autocracy

  • UNHDR, 125 countries, with 62% of the world's population, now have a free or partly free press.

    ECONOMIST: Liberty's great advance

  • More precisely, it may be partly free of tax, depending on your income and on how much of the bond proceeds go to tuition and fees.

    FORBES: Paying For College: A Tax Dodge For College Students

  • After the agreement came into force, Canada was thrown into a recession, partly because of free trade.

    BBC: Canada worries about US-EU free trade

  • Still, the impact of the permanent bailout fund was undeniable: All the euro-zone countries now will become partly responsible for their free-spending brethren.

    WSJ: As Ireland Flails, Europe Lurches Across the Rubicon

  • And one great advantage is that partly because most are free of union control, they can be closed down more easily if they are failing.

    ECONOMIST: Education

  • He ruled as a reckless populist, presiding over economic collapse, hyperinflation, corruption and a murderous guerrilla insurgency by the Maoist Shining Path and the smaller MRTA. He narrowly won the presidency again in 2006, partly by convincing Peruvians that he was a reformed character who believed in market economics and free trade, and partly because his challengers were even less convincing.

    ECONOMIST: New cabinet, old problems

  • Real Madrid's Angel Di Maria went and did what many are taught to do in those situations: He tried to delay the free kick, partly to waste time, partly to allow his teammates at the back to ready themselves.

    WSJ: Angel Di Maria's Delay Tactics Leave Real Madrid Seeing Yellow��Gabriele Marcotti

  • Hotmail's success was based partly on the fact that it was free viral marketing seems to work well when there is a free element to what is being marketed (as there often is with online services).

    ECONOMIST: Idea

  • Certainly, though, he often travelled free of the press pack, partly because his expense account was much smaller than his colleagues', partly (as he must have noticed, but does not here remark) because other journalists and presumably many officials assumed, perhaps wrongly, that he was a spy.

    ECONOMIST: African memoir: Bus rides | The

  • It is partly thanks to the success of Aqaba and the free trade agreement with the US that US President George W Bush recently announced plans to expand the free trade zone throughout the Middle East.

    BBC: Jordan hopes for economic upturn

  • Since Japan is struggling to free itself from a banking crisis caused partly by widespread connected lending (thanks to the system of corporate groups known as keiretsu, today's variant on the zaibatsu), Mr Ochi's preferences seem most peculiar.

    ECONOMIST: Japanese banking

  • When the colonialists were forced out, partly by a slave revolt, Haiti became the first free black republic in 1804.

    BBC: Quake-stricken Haiti bears scars six months on

  • Under a trade deal with the European Union called GSP-plus, Sri Lanka's garment exports (its second-largest source of foreign exchange) enjoy duty-free access to the EU. But GSP-plus hinges partly on human rights.

    ECONOMIST: Sri Lanka

  • The reason, says Professor Carl-Ludwig Holtfrerich of the Free University of Berlin, is that Germany returned to full employment more quickly, thanks partly to Hitler's own form of Keynesian stimulus: notably autobahn-building and rearmament.

    ECONOMIST: Charlemagne

  • Thanks partly to Mr Mwanawasa, Zambia has been viewed as a stable democracy with independent courts and a fairly free press.

    ECONOMIST: Hope and worry in Zambia

  • For example, the company's argument rests partly on the idea that disclosing a customer's name would impinge on the First Amendment right of free association.

    WSJ: FBI Secretive 'National Security Letter' Demand for Phone Records Faces Rare Challenge

  • Google has been so successful partly because it has created a kind of paradise for software engineers, which offers perks such as massages, free gourmet meals and the like.

    ECONOMIST: The internet

  • That's partly the fault of the government, which prohibits amateurs from using explosives powerful enough to blast the nose cone free when the rocket is whistling through the air at supersonic speeds.

    FORBES: "Let's Punch A Hole In the Sky"

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