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54 Sentences With "go into reverse"

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

It is true that globalisation could stall or go into reverse.
Remove the ice, by contrast, and those processes go into reverse.
But since 2012 progress has stalled, and may go into reverse.
BRUSSELS (Reuters) - European history may be about to go into reverse.
But if it buys less than expected, the rally could go into reverse.
Of course, all these trends may go into reverse if they go too far.
But since 2012 progress has stalled, and many fear it may go into reverse.
Cheerleaders for a hot economy hope these forces will go into reverse as unemployment falls.
In fact, population growth today largely reflects longer lives and will eventually go into reverse.
If trade negotiations between the U.K. and EU go into reverse course, that would be terrible.
But that upward trajectory could go into reverse if Manama does not tackle its spending overruns.
The free movement of people inside the E.U. might be the first to go into reverse.
But eventually the process runs out of steam and starts to go into reverse, causing a panic.
But it can also go into reverse as companies pull investments out of foreign projects or repatriate earnings.
So as the balance-sheet shrinks, this effect might be expected to go into reverse and interest rates to rise.
As trade flows and foreign direct investment go into reverse, stresses within China's economy will become increasingly difficult to manage.
Trump may have to be similarly dextrous if stocks defy his predictions and go into reverse before his re-election race.
The nation's diversity would not go into reverse regardless of how high he built his wall along the nation's southern border.
Today's tech markets seem stable but could flip suddenly if the powerful network effects that created them were to go into reverse.
The self-reinforcing logic of the old system will go into reverse over the next few years, whoever sits in Downing Street.
Unfortunately, when the Federal Reserve tightens, the dollar strengthens and the offshore markets become less accommodating, this process can go into reverse.
Borrowing worked well for the $80 billion company as asset values rose; it could become a problem as they go into reverse.
Whether Trump speaks to a joint session of Congress or not, the state of our union is stagnant and about to go into reverse.
Thaker expects the state to bunker down and financial sector reform "to go into reverse" in the event of an abrogation of the deal.
While it is unlikely London's population growth will go into reverse whatever the Brexit outcome, what could feasibly change is the composition of the population.
He maintains the withdrawal will be "conditions-based", which suggests it could go into reverse if the Taliban do not get more enthusiastic about peacemaking.
Two-thirds of the professionals think it will go into reverse, with 30% saying it will stay the same and just 4% thinking it will improve.
The shock decision to leave the EU has pushed the pound to 30-year lows and raised concerns that the British economy could go into reverse.
Low gas prices have gradually eroded the excess supply by causing production growth to stall and go into reverse while encouraging record consumption by power producers.
One possibility is that the spiral may go into reverse as central banks, led by the Fed, start to unwind the bond holdings they have built up.
In the recovery, however, breakevens are rising as all these cost trends go into reverse, which is in turn offering some underpinning to oil prices at a higher level.
But this boost is expected to go into reverse during the current quarter, with the Bank of England estimating growth of just 0.2% and some forecasters predicting a contraction.
Far worse than the direct costs to trade, says Guntram Wolff from Bruegel, a Brussels-based think-tank, would be the signal that European integration can go into reverse.
Push electrons the other way around the circuit, though, by connecting the battery to a power supply, and the chemical reactions will go into reverse, charging the thing up again.
US stocks have dominated their overseas counterparts for years, and it's prompted a debate over whether that trend will continue far into the future, or if it's about to go into reverse.
"As growth in the U.S. economy starts to slow, we think that the long-running rally in the U.S. stock market will go into reverse," Mr. Jones wrote in his predictions for 2018.
Steel-to-elevators group Thyssenkrupp on Tuesday warned of a darkening economic backdrop, signaling tough times for its capital goods business as it works through a major restructuring and major car markets go into reverse.
There is no reason to expect that increasingly relaxed attitude to go into reverse; legalising cannabis looks broadly successful and around a quarter of Americans will soon live in states where it has taken place.
Leaving aside the general wrecking ball effects of a Trump-Amlo personality clash, as López Obrador is also fond of provocative putdowns, there are at least four specific ways the relationship may go into reverse.
"But flows can quickly go into reverse and then it becomes a vicious circle, especially if there is leverage," he told the FT. That reversal has already taken place, according to BIS data released on Friday.
Some traders expect the Urals rally in the Baltic to lose momentum or even go into reverse when trade shifts to August barrels, as the first preliminary loading dates for next month are expected to emerge shortly.
A report by international aid advocacy group the ONE Campaign said the progress against preventable deaths and diseases since 1990 could stall, and even go into reverse, unless donor governments make new commitments to innovation and action.
Just as the accumulation of a large net long position helped propel prices higher sharply higher between January and May, the subsequent liquidation of part of that position has seen the rally stall and then go into reverse.
Named after the Christ-child, it sees warm water, collected over several years in the western tropical Pacific, slosh back eastwards when winds that normally blow westwards weaken, or sometimes go into reverse, roughly every two to seven years.
Larry Summers, the Harvard professor, former Treasury secretary, and National Economic Council director, has a piece in Monday's Washington Post that that makes a very big claim: The steady progress of human civilization could now stop and go into reverse.
Related: Jeremy Corbyn refuses to resign after Brexit — but his party might force him out The shock decision to leave the EU has pushed the pound to 30-year lows and raised concerns that the British economy could go into reverse.
JONATHAN BARONProfessor of psychologyUniversity of PennsylvaniaPhiladelphia* Reverend Robert Malthus must surely be turning in his grave at such Pollyannaish assertions as 'it is not clear that there are too many people' and 'population growth…will eventually go into reverse' ("Wanted", August 27th).
It is fortunate that the urea conversion reaction is slow. If it were not it would go into reverse in the stripper. As it is, succeeding stages of the process must be designed to minimize residence times, at least until the temperature reduces to the point where the reversion reaction is very slow. Two reactions produce impurities.
Essentially, both the Flynn effect and racial differences in measured IQ are artefacts of literacy differences. As the literacy of Western populations declines, as appears to be the case currently, then Marks' literacy theory of IQ scores predicts that average IQ test scores is expected to decline, and the Flynn effect will go into reverse, which is exactly what recent studies have found.
The official investigation by the Civil Aeronautics Board concluded that a failure in the propeller's pitch control system of engine No. 3 caused the propeller to go into reverse during climb-out. The engine was left running at high power, while engine No. 4 was mistakenly feathered. Under such conditions, the aircraft was no longer able to maintain altitude and descended into the ground.
In the 1980s, a Japanese electronics company, Futaba, copied wheeled steering for RC cars. It was originally developed by Orbit for a transmitter specially designed for Associated cars It has been widely accepted along with a trigger control for throttle. Often configured for right hand users, the transmitter looks like a pistol with a wheel attached on its right side. Pulling the trigger would accelerate the car forward, while pushing it would either stop the car or cause it to go into reverse.
The rate of inflation went from 59 percent in 1980 to 111 percent by 1983. Nothing improved when the government then tried to go into reverse with contractionary macroeconomic policies and renewed depreciation. Output plunged, but inflation once more went up instead of down, to 163 percent by 1985. By this time, pessimism about the government's capacity to solve anything, inflationary expectations turning into understandable convictions, and the price-increasing effect of devaluation all combined to give Peru a seemingly unstoppable inflation despite the elimination of anything that might be considered excess demand.
Unfamiliarity with recent technical and financial innovations may help explain how investors sometimes grossly overestimate asset values. Also, if the first investors in a new class of assets (for example, stock in "dot com" companies) profit from rising asset values as other investors learn about the innovation (in our example, as others learn about the potential of the Internet), then still more others may follow their example, driving the price even higher as they rush to buy in hopes of similar profits. If such "herd behaviour" causes prices to spiral up far above the true value of the assets, a crash may become inevitable. If for any reason the price briefly falls, so that investors realize that further gains are not assured, then the spiral may go into reverse, with price decreases causing a rush of sales, reinforcing the decrease in prices.
Sieferle argues that Germans seem to want their nation to disappear. He asserts that the post-World War II Allied occupation by the Western Allies (Britain, France and the United States) saddled Germany with a false image of Germany as a pre-modern culture fundamentally different from the West. He denies this, writing that although this image may fit Russia, and although other Western nations may find it difficult to face the truth, which is that “If Germany belonged to the most progressive, civilized, cultivated countries,” he writes, “then ‘Auschwitz’ means that, at any moment, the human ‘progress’ of modernity can go into reverse.” He argues that Germans are saddled with the conviction that German sins are unique and absolute, beyond comparison and beyond redemption, and that this conviction has become a hereditary burden, a self-demonisation that meant Germany felt obliged to accept an unsustainable number of migrants in 2015.

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