Sentence examples for in part to the aftermath from inspiring English sources

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Analysts credit that focus, in part, to the aftermath of the 1989 Exxon Valdez grounding, which spilled 11 million gallons of crude oil into Prince William Sound in Alaska.

The number of recorded hate crimes has more than doubled in the past five years and is likely to be related in part to the aftermath of the Brexit vote and the spate of terrorist attacks last year, according to the Home Office.

"There's been little serious research done on the matter, but I'd say it's entirely reasonable to make a case that many of the social ills of the 1920s and 30s which have been blamed on the depression, could also be attributed in part to the aftermath of the unbelievable trauma that generation had lived through as children".

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Perhaps mindful that the federal government is burdened with debt related in part to the financial crisis and its aftermath, the proposals say that banks will continue to be allowed to trade government bonds, including securities issued by Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac, Ginnie Mae and other government-sponsored enterprises.

Mr. Paparazzo attributes the slow sales in part to indecision in the immediate aftermath of the terrorist attacks.

Nobumasa Sugimoto, director of nuclear security at the government's new Nuclear Regulation Authority -- a group established in part to implement tougher rules in the aftermath of the Fukushima disaster -- offered a less sanguine view than Yoshida of the risks at Rokkasho.

Defending his remakrs, the billionaire candidate also went on to claim his policy was based in part on the aftermath of the Paris attacks.

He is a co-editor and contributing author of the just-published Innovative Community Responses to Disaster (Routledge), which was inspired in part by the aftermath of Hurricane Katrina.

In part two, the aftermath of the explosion shows that no amount of snow can douse the secrets and resentments that underpin the small community.

"American Niceness" was inspired, in part, by the aftermath of 9/11, when the question "Why do they hate us?" became such a popular refrain that George W. Bush included it in his speech to Congress weeks after the attack.

With this discovery, helped in part by the aftermath of the Whitechapel murders in the autumn of 1888, came the realisation of huge injustice at the heart of society.

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