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187 Sentences With "depresses"

How to use depresses in a sentence? Find typical usage patterns (collocations)/phrases/context for "depresses" and check conjugation/comparative form for "depresses". Mastering all the usages of "depresses" from sentence examples published by news publications.

An excess demand for the medium of exchange depresses trade.
Political unrest depresses travel for an average of 20053 months.
It's a certain mental dopamine stimulation that depresses upon deprivation.
Although voting was reportedly strong, lousy weather typically depresses voter turnout.
The idea of being part of a group still depresses me.
Inequality of this sort depresses human capital, leaving society worse off.
This will cut exports, which other things equal depresses the economy.
The pickings are not as green, and the cold depresses turnout.
But as the new supply depresses prices, it also pinches cash flow.
QE depresses bond yields, meaning lower interest bills for more indebted governments.
"The society depresses me, its sons fill me with admiration," he wrote.
She vowed to stop any deal that costs jobs and depresses wages.
This dynamic stubbornly depresses wages in the South, and throughout the country.
On the other hand, it depresses me that this is where we are.
I take the express bus, mostly because taking the subway underground depresses me.
To critics they are a financial voodoo that exacerbates inequality and depresses investment.
Depreciation encourages capital flight, increases the cost of energy imports and depresses consumption.
"I tried to stop tracking those receipts, because it depresses me," she said.
Illegal immigration depresses wages, but legal immigration expands opportunities and creates a growing economy.
The Trigger Assist Device (TAD) that depresses the trigger is controlled by a separate button.
Pressing a key depresses the membrane, which closes the underlying circuit and transmits your keystroke.
A stronger U.S. dollar typically depresses the price of commodities like gold and crude oil.
It kind of depresses me that people think they need to order everything online now.
Each big rig that passes over a lake's frozen surface depresses the ice a bit.
"It depresses me how little discussion there is, in America today, of education," he says.
Illegal immigrants, on the other hand, often get abused by unscrupulous employers, which depresses wages.
Drink lots and lots of water Unless I'm really thirsty, water kind of depresses me.
This is a risky endeavor that depresses margins, and where the hits can be mercurial.
"It depresses you," Mr. Barrett told Buzzfeed last year of his brief time in custody.
It depresses the overseas earnings of American companies when they get converted back into dollars.
The salary cap unfairly depresses salaries and creates parity, the most boring thing in sports.
The current, outdated system depresses wages for our poorest workers and puts great pressure on taxpayers.
The current, outdated system depresses wages for our poorest workers, and puts great pressure on taxpayers.
One of the things that really depresses me is how quickly we're able to delete music.
Trade liberalisation, in this example, depresses wages by more than prices, hurting labour in real terms.
It depresses me when that's not the general vibe, and inspires me to figure it out.
This depresses second-hand prices further, as Oliver Stone of Colibri Aircraft told the Financial Times.
And the extent to which we don't teach those skills greatly depresses youth participation in politics.
When you drop one of them onto your open palm, the system depresses your skin to match.
While cocaine stimulates the heart, heroin depresses the lungs, which can cause simultaneous cardiac and respiratory arrest.
But these reserves add to a global glut of capital which depresses interest rates and encourages borrowing.
In weak economies, battered consumers buy fewer imports and unemployment depresses wages, which can help boost exports.
"What depresses me the most is if people walk past the booth and don't stop," she said.
And like, I don't want to talk about her losing at all because it just depresses me.
A stronger dollar depresses global trade, research suggests, while tighter American monetary policy straitens global financial conditions.
This only fuels a cynicism that depresses support for the more progressive parts of the left's program.
The degradation there depresses him: its clean, deep cuts have filled with boulders calved from the sides.
The fact that most of the country will see Geostorm without the aid of 4DX depresses me greatly.
In the United States, a single killing depresses local property prices by 1.5% on average the following year.
An influx of young foreign workers would address nearly all the ways in which population ageing depresses growth.
It depresses R base turnout in the midterms, as Trump voters are further disconnected from the Congressional wing.
The corporate control of agriculture depresses the price of food and the wages that farmers and farmworkers receive.
Making the tests harder predictably depresses test scores, creating a sense of failure and hopelessness among young children.
"The current outdated system depresses wages for our poorest workers and puts great pressure on taxpayers," Trump said.
This oversupply depresses wages, since drivers can only earn money when they have a passenger in their car.
When a train passes over an oil greaser, it depresses a release that squirts oil on the rail.
But let's say we run the numbers and this idea still depresses private savings by an unacceptable amount.
Then a quickening of sound as she crosses the patio with purpose, depresses the keys on her phone.
The largest share of group insurance premiums, paid by employers, also depresses wages for lower-wage and other workers.
But he said Canada's system cannot result in oversupply of some products on the global market that depresses prices.
The negative interest rate policy has proved unpopular because it hurts bank earnings and depresses already low deposit rates.
A somewhat conflicting body of evidence has shown that enrollment in stigmatized programs, like cash welfare, actually depresses voting.
But the absence of the bright white screens that I've grown accustomed to staring at all my life depresses me.
That, in turn, further depresses productivity and raises health care costs, leading to more poverty, which leads to more disease.
Their cumulative impact, particularly combined with the current resurgence of protectionism worldwide, only depresses economic growth, employment and living standards.
Turnover is very high, as Medicaid reimbursement depresses wages — workers, providing public assistance themselves, often must rely upon public assistance.
Their movement depresses the income accruing there — otherwise nobody would be willing to do the activities subject to full tax.
The "need for heavy spending on new model development significantly depresses profitability", according to a recent research note from S&P.
A medication that depresses the creation of these cells—and causes them to die earlier—could be a life-saving treatment.
As a result, the button no longer depresses when it is pressed, which might make it more durable than previous iterations.
As incomes rise there that will reduce pressure for emigration across the border into the United States which depresses wages here.
This seems to be more than just a correlation: several studies, in Africa and elsewhere, have found that schooling actually depresses fertility.
However, the International Monetary Fund has warned about the risks of easing over an extended period because this depresses yields so much.
Mr. Netanyahu's strategy has proved reliable before and could still succeed if it depresses the Arab vote while energizing right-wing Israelis.
"What depresses me the most is if people walk past the booth and don't stop," a dealer told The Times this summer.
But Major at HSBC argues that the huge overhang of global debt depresses growth and therefore keeps real natural interest rates low.
This is a cycle that feeds itself rather than an onerous tax code that feeds upon itself and depresses innovation and growth.
Because of budget cuts, Dorine (Carol Kane), a proofreader at a magazine, is forced to work from home, which depresses her further.
One of the things that just depresses me all the time is where are the Democrats running ... You know, they're mad at everybody.
In it, a woman is grinning as she depresses the plunger on the hormone-filled syringe she's injecting into her husband's naked bottom.
Doing so punishes North American metals and minerals producers, and contributes to a chilling effect that depresses the incentives for increased resource production.
Opponents argue that because it is more complex, ranked-choice voting depresses turnout and leads to more errors because it can be confusing.
He debates trying to cheer himself up by consuming a raw seafood platter, but the idea of doing so alone depresses him further.
Rich economies grow more slowly, but that is probably because they have fewer easy ways to raise productivity, not because education depresses their growth.
You either turn the system to look for it, or figure out that only one of depresses while the other is a volume rocker.
If Trump depresses the turnout by, say, 10 percent, those Republican House members that won by that margin — or less — could be in trouble.
It is also the case that making it harder to register and cast a ballot probably depresses voter turnout, although the effects remain modest.
But then, it depresses me that players risk their lives and their bodies for a game that has failed to put their safety first.
Bad weather often depresses hiring and keeps temporary workers home, whether they're involved in shooting a movie on location or building a new home.
Tread on a tile and the surface depresses up to one centimeter (Kemball-Cook compares the sensation to walking in a children's play-area).
Therefore, if the Fed depresses interest rates, inflation too will fall, to meet the real interest rate that the economy is pricing by itself.
Such a boost in production highlights the need for pipelines for the largely landlocked industry, whose a lack of export routes depresses prices, CAPP said.
The Fed's announcement also boosted gold as lower rates depresses the dollar, making it cheaper for investors outside the U.S. to buy the precious metal.
Even though most Americans don't own stocks, tanking equity prices can hamper investment and create a negative feedback loop with consumer sentiment that depresses spending.
For example, perhaps when men feel they aren't contributing enough money, this lowers their sense of "manliness" or masculinity, which ultimately depresses their sex drive.
Students will also analyze how/whether political messaging is intended to ignite action or apathy, which either increases or depresses voter turnout among targeted voters.
The counterargument to that is that if adding a citizenship question depresses Latino response rates, it won't actually be all that helpful to the government.
Opponents argue that because it is more complex, ranked-choice voting depresses turnout and leads to more errors in part because it can be confusing.
Rather they are chronic, reflecting a profound demographic shift which depresses both demand and supply—and which is creeping its way across the rich world.
In its long battle against deflation, it pioneered "quantitative easing"—buying vast amounts of government bonds—which depresses longer-term rates and thus banks' lending margins.
It's easy for an economist to chalk up support for rent control as idiocy that depresses the home construction that might reduce housing prices for everyone.
Every extremely massive object, like a planet, star or black hole, depresses that material just a little bit, creating what we feel as gravity on Earth.
Why it matters: The cost-shifting and complexity of health insurance can hide its high cost, which crowds out families' other needs and depresses workers' wages.
Ms. Merkel said the split over Iran "depresses me very much," but she stressed that Europe and the United States were ultimately pursuing the same goal.
It reflects the stickiness of gender roles at work and at home: Marriage significantly depresses women's earnings, and the arrival of children has an even stronger effect.
Here is his reference to the report, in context (emphasis added): The current, outdated system depresses wages for our poorest workers, and puts great pressure on taxpayers.
The real problem for Donald Trump in bringing up this talk is that it depresses the very people who he wants to bring out to the polls.
Social media has played a major role in sharing this information at a rapid pace which continually stresses and depresses those who see the updates come through.
This affects students, who experience canceled courses, larger class sizes and unqualified teachers -- many of whom leave quickly, creating churn and instability that further depresses student learning.
Even when no pending test looms on the horizon, the misuse of time and spirit depresses those of us who suffer from the condition patients call cancerchondria.
To make matters worse, fears of an economic slowdown that depresses demand for crude has dragged the oil price down below the level before last month's attack.
The Fed wants inflation sustained at a decent pace in part because low inflation depresses rates which provide less policy room in the case of a downturn.
Research has found that giving mothers long leaves that don't apply to men depresses their earnings and makes them less likely to move up to higher positions.
He has spent the last decade leading Senate opposition to bipartisan immigration reform bills, arguing that illegal immigration depresses wages and takes jobs from out-of-work Americans.
In principle, an influx of low-skilled workers depresses wages for competing native workers, in the same theoretical way that opening up to trade with poor countries does.
"They all know who Donald Trump is and this race proves he remains a major liability for Republicans that juices our turnout and depresses their support," he said.
One thing that depresses me a bit is how quickly we can get rid of music that a person dedicated two years of his/her life to making.
The ugly red-brick structure was a psychological cage in which its inhabitants find themselves dominated by the celebrated public man whose bleak inner self depresses them all.
Research on concentrated disadvantage makes it abundantly clear that inequality depresses the mobility prospects of even the brightest kids, with poor black youth disproportionately exposed to neighborhood violence.
It found that political unrest depresses travel for an average of 27 months; environmental disasters take 24 months to recover from; and the effects of disease lasts 21 months.
As you press down on the key, the dome depresses, bringing together the electrical contact located underneath the key and the switch located below, thus completing the electrical circuit.
In comes President Trump, who seems much less concerned about the risks of climate change, and more worried about how excessive regulation impedes economic growth and depresses living standards.
The grocery workers' union was particularly interested in a question the petition asks the F.T.C. to study: whether Amazon depresses wages in areas where it is a major employer.
The shortage of milk is reported to be particularly acute in France where farmers have concerns over a glut of 350,000 tons of powdered milk, which depresses prices further.
KAMPALA, March 13 (Reuters) - The Ugandan shilling traded flat on Friday amid subdued activity on both demand and supply sides as the coronavirus pandemic depresses both import and export activity.
"Yes it depresses the profitability temporarily but when you know how steep the J-curve is once they start being productive, this will pay back, we believe, handsomely," he said.
One of the major challenges of testing for drugs in rape cases is that virtually anything that depresses the central nervous system or lowers inhibitions can be used in an assault.
Because alcohol depresses brain function, drinking at night means you're more likely to go quickly into a deeper sleep stage, which Smith says confuses people into thinking substances help with sleep.
Profitability at regional banks has suffered because the Bank of Japan's ultra-ease monetary policy has triggered a collapse in spreads between lending rates and financing rates, which depresses bank margins.
And their concern could indicate trouble for Mr. Trump if his more conventional approach on some policy issues alienates his base and depresses Republican turnout in the midterm elections in November.
Because it underscores what Business Roundtable CEOs know from their own experience: America's current high corporate tax rate depresses capital spending and wages at home and encourages relocation and investment abroad.
"The only thing that depresses me is so many people support him," Jose Reyes Rios, the computer-science major, who aspires to work at Google one day, said in late September.
The troubled yet worthwhile journey this book takes us on matches the mood of Yeats's poem "The Second Coming" — and it's a journey rife with depressing detail that also depresses Marantz.
That followed earlier warnings, including from Royal Dutch Shell Plc that it would slow its $25 billion share buyback programme as the coronavirus weighs on the global economy and depresses fuel demand.
So even if a border tax adjustment depresses the dollar price of oil worldwide, other things being equal, it would still make sense to hold long positions in WTI rather than Brent.
But while increased efficiency tends to either increase production or require less work, the practical downside is rarely modelled in games: the former increases the consumption of resources, the latter depresses wages.
And I refresh my eyes with drops when I watch a movie, work long hours at the computer, or do any activity that depresses the frequency of blinking, which moistens the eyes.
Ms. Merkel said the split over Iran "depresses me very much," but she stressed that Europe and America were ultimately pursuing the same goal since Europe, too, was concerned about Iranian behavior.
"Much-awaited U.S. market rebound lifts the Tokyo market, and investors are not swayed by recent yen strength that usually depresses Japanese stocks," said Hiroki Allen, chief representative of Superfund Japan in Tokyo.
Profitability at regional banks has taken a hit as the Bank of Japan's super-loose monetary policy has triggered a collapse in spreads between lending rates and financing rates, which depresses bank margins.
The effort is part of the government's program to rein in employers' reliance on temporary visas to fill some jobs, a practice the administration argues hurts U.S. workers and depresses wages (The Hill).
Blocking an avenue in downtown Santiago, the taxi drivers' demonstration was the latest in a series around the globe against the service, which critics say is unsafe, skirts labor laws and depresses wages.
Keynes posited that this might lead to a "general glut": a world in which everyone tries to hold more money, depressing spending, which in turn depresses production and income, leaving people still worse off.
So I look at things like Spain's disinflation in the face of massive unemployment: I'd say that the preponderance of evidence still supports the notion that high unemployment depresses inflation, low unemployment fosters inflation.
The contoured controllers fit firmly in the palm, guiding your forefinger over a springy trigger and curling the rest of your fingers around a large lower grip button that depresses when you make a fist.
The plaintiffs — the developers of a baby naming app and a basketball workout app — say that Apple "stifles innovation," depresses purchases of and within iOS apps, and limits overall development by enforcing such strict rules.
The VEB joins activist investor CIAM in wanting a vote on the matter, after CIAM wrote in a letter to management made public last week that the poison pill structure depresses shareholder value in Ahold.
Medicaid spending, which pays for much of long-term care, went up only 28503 percent at the federal level last year, and depresses compensation for caregivers in home-and-community-based settings and nursing homes.
In an official report to Congress, the U.S. Treasury Department broke one of Trump's most prominent campaign promises: to label China a currency manipulator, or a country that deliberately depresses the value of its currency.
I will gladly bake a berry crisp or grill salmon for friends on a Saturday night, but the very idea of boiling quinoa or putting together a halfway decent salad on a weeknight depresses me.
"A hypersonic threat is a system that starts out ballistic, so you'll see it like a ballistic missile, but then it depresses the trajectory and flies more like a cruise missile or airplane," Hyten said.
The lack of a mandatory employment verification process dramatically increases competition in the labor market, particularly for low-skilled jobs, and depresses wages by perpetuating a class of workers willing to work for substandard wages.
Depriving Mexico of remittances is bad for the U.S. because it depresses the economy of a principal trading partner and stimulates further illegal migration into the U.S. Moreover, its implementation is both very costly and difficult.
Conservatives contend that compelling enrollees to contribute more will make them more responsible for their health care, but critics point to research that finds forcing low-income families to make even small payments often depresses enrollment.
Direct steel imports from China into the United States have already fallen dramatically this year and last, but the U.S. maintains that its local steelmakers are indirectly hurt by unfairly traded Chinese steel which depresses global prices.
So the issues with it are essentially that it forces the Fed into a posture where they have to be more aggressive just to fight inflation and at the same time it depresses long term global economic output.
There's far too much effort by policy makers to design legislation that benefits middle-age folks and older folks who are more likely to turn out to vote, and that further depresses the interest of young people in politics.
It's an established economic fact, demonstrated time and again, that raising minimum wage depresses the availability of jobs to entrants, who are simply priced out of the market as firms tighten their belts to offset the increased labor cost.
Instead of a mechanical button that depresses when you push it, the iPhone 7's solid state (non-mechanical) Home button doesn't move and instead operates using software, providing haptic feedback to mimic the feel of a button push.
Selling new shares often depresses a company's stock price, but Tesla's stock ended the day up 4.3 percent, a sign that some investors still believe the company can achieve its ambitious goals, and are willing to finance those dreams.
" When colon cancer forced Mr. Schulz to end the daily strip in 2000, at age 77, The Times invoked a dismal Charlie Brown, mourning the end of the baseball season: "There's a dreariness in the air that depresses me.
" When colon cancer forced Mr. Schulz to end the daily strip in 2000 at age 77, The Times invoked a dismal Charlie Brown, mourning the end of the baseball season: "There's a dreariness in the air that depresses me.
"But when the plan is passed and those voters see that it fattens investors' and contractors' pockets (but not workers'), creates few jobs, depresses wages and damages our environment, they will sour on it and turn against its backers," he wrote.
When a flood of Ph.D.s desperate to keep a toehold in academia depresses adjunct wages, that makes it cheaper for universities to hire them to teach classes and free up time for tenured researchers to do what they enjoy: conduct research.
Others criticize the caucus setup itself: The events take a long time, they're scheduled at a specific time in the evening, and there's been no absentee voting in the past, all of which depresses turnout and could make it even more unrepresentative.
Others criticize the caucus setup itself: the events take a long time, they're scheduled at a specific time in the evening, and there's been no absentee voting in the past, all of which depresses turnout and could make it even more unrepresentative.
I think one thing that truly depresses me is that if you flip the scenario, and Trump is "Dawn Trump," and she's this emotionally unregulated, neon-haired, male strip-show judge with five children to three different men—that is beyond unimaginable.
ABFA, which represents 373 companies responsible for 4.4 billion gallons of renewable fuel production around the globe, is asking a federal judge to rule whether the EPA's expansion of the waiver program was legal, which they argue depresses demand for their biofuel.
Either political professionals don't realize that rain depresses Democratic turnout (which seems strange to me, since I heard political pros tell me this many times over the years before I saw research proving it) or else they somehow don't connect the dots correctly.
But precisely because it depresses the global price of soybeans, it's actually good news for everyone who buys soybeans — not just edamame lovers but also farmers who use it as animal feed, food processors who use soy oil, and, ultimately, almost everyone who eats food.
This depresses wholesale electricity prices and has at times led to negative prices, when huge quantities of free wind power saturate EU grids, to the detriment of traditional utilities such as Engie, RWE, and EDF, whose gas, coal and nuclear plants struggle to compete.
HONG KONG — It both comforts and depresses me, as a lawyer who has practiced for four decades, that every day over the past few months I have been besieged on Facebook by anxious Hong Kongers urging me to take legal action to help protesters.
A lack of competition depresses interest in voting, and where incompetent election administration and Democratic dominance converge is that the city's Democratic political machines are happy to collude with their Republican counterparts to run the Board of Elections with preference for patronage and power over all else.
But Democrats don't seem to be all that much for the American little guy when they continue to push for open immigration that depresses wages, environmental regulations that close factories, and social issues like abortion and gay rights that take them away from focusing on economic opportunities.
"This pattern or practice of discrimination denies job opportunities to individuals who are searching for and interested in jobs, reduces the number of older workers who apply for jobs with the offending employers and employment agencies, and depresses the number of older workers who are hired," the complaint reads.
HCL has a reputation for bringing people over through the L-1 visa, meant for intracompany transfers, or the H-1B visa — the skilled worker program that President-elect Donald Trump attacked on the campaign trail as a tool he claimed depresses wages and discriminates against American workers.
But the gains were tempered by Apple's cautious outlook for the current quarter, which it mainly attributed to the strong U.S. dollar, which hurts companies like Apple that sell a majority of their products overseas, by forcing them to raise prices, which depresses unit sales, or sacrifice margins.
The exchange between the two leaders will be watched closely for signals on what type of relationship they might have, since Trump recently listed Japan as a country that depresses its currency and harms the U.S. There are a few economic reports Friday, including import prices at 225:25 a.m.
But it also has a revealing quote from this infamous 1981 letter: It was a throw-out and it depresses me [Nicholas Brusilowksi] did not destroy the image […] and that it has years later found its way onto the art market and I would prefer if it were not exhibited.
And the state could be the biggest loser -- both in terms of congressional representation and its share of federal grant programs -- if the administration's decision to add a question about citizenship to the 2020 Census depresses the response rate among immigrants who are not citizens (even if they are here legally).
But Ms. Attenberg, it depresses me to no end that the gritty, credible, less kissed-by-God heroine of your book, Andrea Bern, a single, childless, 39-year-old straight woman, a character created almost 50 years after Mary Richards, is still realistically struggling with and defying convention because she isn't married.
For example, if there are companies you'd like to own but solid analysis tells you they're too expensive, a sudden dip in the market — as we had in February with an extremely brief 10 percent correction — can mean opportunities to buy those stocks relatively low, depending on how much the general dip depresses their prices.
Letter To the Editor: Re "How 'Hire American' Could Affect a World of Tech Workers" (news article, April 19): The problem with the H-1B visa program is that it depresses the price of tech jobs, which in turn lowers the desirability for tech jobs and the incentive for American students to seek math and science education.
After he spoke to his House Republican colleagues at a meeting of their conference last week, cautioning them of the dangers of the discharge petition, urging them not to turn the floor over to the Democrats, warning them of the electoral disaster to come if they pass an amnesty bill that depresses GOP voter turnout in the November elections, two more of his fellow Republicans signed the discharge petition, despite his plea.
And if Donald TrumpDonald John TrumpPossible GOP challenger says Trump doesn't doesn't deserve reelection, but would vote for him over Democrat O'Rourke: Trump driving global, U.S. economy into recession Manchin: Trump has 'golden opportunity' on gun reforms MORE ends up costing the GOP among suburban white women — which certainly seems likely — or if Trump more broadly depresses Republican turnout, up to 12 more Democratic women could be swept into office in districts currently rated as lean-Republican.
Uninterested in lowering or raising the bar, in finding a mechanical alternative to the paint brush or in making a signature commodity (remember that guy who got famous by painting badly on broken dishes?) – all conventional macho choices – Eisenman is fascinated by the challenge of making paintings and drawings about whatever crosses her mind, tickles her fancy, bugs her, challenges her, worries her, depresses her, brings her joy, or tests her capacity for downright silliness, always – it should be noted – with an edge.
TIMPF: They will just move on at finding something else to be upset about, but for me whether the news is good or bad, it still depresses me because the bad news makes me sad because of the people being involved in the sad thing and the good news makes me sad because I am jealous of how much fun people are having that I am not having that is involving the good news, so I think I would only ever truly be happy in a cave where there was some sort of place I could plug in my phone, so I could play Word Cookies and lots of bats for me to hang out with.

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