Exact(1)
Though it has bounced back, the high rate of long-term unemployment suggests the economic crisis may echo for longer, especially in deprived areas like Scotland's west coast.The last of Mr Salmond's predictions is a shift in demographics.
Similar(59)
The shock of what occurred in 1994 may echo through the world's courtrooms for years to come.
A chorus of wifely dissatisfaction may echo throughout history, yet the reasons for the dissatisfaction have changed critically.
Cymbeline, who banishes Posthumus and treats his daughter cavalierly, may echo Lear's rashness, but he lacks the essential ingredient for tragedy: an inner life.
The WikiLeaks legacy may echo that.
The Trump era may echo that.
The water may have receded back to the banks but the aftershocks of this disaster will echo for months in the snow-laden valley.
While your actions may be tiny, inconsequential and short-lived, the spirit you infuse your actions with can spread, become vast and echo for centuries to come.
The absurdities will echo for ages.
Differences between patient groups in the revascularisations performed in the first treatment period may partly echo delays in clinical decision-making on referral for revascularisation.
Their personal experience of arbitrariness may be echoed in their neighborhoods: they may see someone who is known to have killed people walking free and someone else incarcerated for possessing a small amount of drugs.
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