Sentences with phrase «uneasiness among»

According to Yun, job growth continues to hum along at a robust pace, but there appears to be some uneasiness among households that the economy is losing some steam.
Specifically, it demonstrates a continued feeling of uneasiness among higher courts in giving trial judges «free rein» over the management of evidentiary exceptions.
However, others like Sweeney insist the top - tier firms are hurting financially and that is causing uneasiness among the lawyers, prompting the phones to ring a lot more at legal recruiters.
Last month, there were several robbery cases mostly in the national capital, creating uneasiness among Ghanaians.
There has long been unrest among the pros over the present setup (SI, Aug. 9,1965) and uneasiness among PGA officials over this unrest.
Edward Anhalt, the distinguished screen, writer, who accepted: the award for Becket at that luncheon, commented that he was then working on the script for BoeingBoeing, a sex farce considerably less «religious» than Becket, a fact that created minor uneasiness among the pious present.
There is, to put it delicately, uneasiness among Catholics as well.
Russia's ongoing interference in Ukraine has caused a wave of uneasiness among NATO states in Russia's immediate neighborhood and NATO has responded by increasing its presence in many of them.

Not exact matches

Obama gave The Atlantic several reasons for not enforcing the red line — uneasiness about a strike against Syria not being sanctioned by Congress, a lack of support from the international community and the American people, the possibility that the intelligence on the chemical - weapons attack wasn't 100 % solid — but did not mention the Iran deal among them.
There is a current of uneasiness, especially among Mormon academics, about what will happen if and when Ezra Taft Benson becomes church president and carries his right - wing political views into office with him.
Among bishops, priests, and editors who know the facts, there is frequently an evident uneasiness about the phenomenon.
In April 2010, Ortega wrote in Palabra Nueva (New Word), the magazine of the Havana Archdiocese, that Cubans had reached a national consensus, and that postponing reforms was sure to produce «impatience and uneasiness» among people already suffering hardships.
In this time of corporate upheaval and general uneasiness, simple details that can make a candidate stand out among their peers are often left by the wayside.
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