How to Use geopolitics in a Sentence
geopolitics
noun-
As the geopolitics play out, U.S. troops are likely to stay in place.
— Anna Mulrine Grobe, The Christian Science Monitor, 10 Feb. 2022 -
Chess has been on the front lines of geopolitics before.
— Andrew Beaton and Joshua Robinson, WSJ, 3 Mar. 2022 -
The end of the Cold War might have temporarily cooled the geopolitics of chess.
— Adam Taylor, Washington Post, 28 Sep. 2022 -
Australia finds itself on the front line of the new geopolitics.
— Michael E. Miller, Washington Post, 22 May 2022 -
There is a strong taste of geopolitics to the announcement.
— Nathaniel Taplin, WSJ, 24 Sep. 2020 -
What will happen now will reflect the way that geopolitics has changed over the past two decades.
— Andrew Stuttaford, National Review, 22 Aug. 2021 -
But geopolitics meant his stay in Korea would be a bit longer.
— Steve Price, Forbes, 3 May 2022 -
For much of the 20th century, geopolitics was shaped by the struggle for oil.
— Gerald F. Seib, WSJ, 7 Apr. 2022 -
For her, the spear of geopolitics is tipped with transphobia.
— Danielle MacKey, The New Yorker, 21 Dec. 2022 -
As bad as this latest round of gangster geopolitics is, what unfolds in the coming hours and days will set the world's course in the years ahead.
— Stephen Collinson, CNN, 22 Feb. 2022 -
Project Owl users chat about geopolitics and current events.
— Scott Nover, Quartz, 17 July 2021 -
Australia is raking in huge amounts of cash from coal—due both to bad geopolitics and bad weather.
— Megha Mandavia, WSJ, 20 Sep. 2022 -
None of this does away with geopolitics entirely, of course.
— Jeffrey Kluger, Time, 7 Oct. 2022 -
The story of why the two countries couldn’t agree on the height and resolve the world’s highest border dispute is part geopolitics and part geodesy.
— Eric Bellman, WSJ, 8 Dec. 2020 -
The frontline in the war is sometimes called a new Berlin Wall, a dividing line in today’s geopolitics.
— New York Times, 15 Nov. 2021 -
The election comes at a pivotal moment not just for geopolitics but the future of our planet.
— David A. Andelman, CNN, 9 Nov. 2022 -
Thanks to the forces of economics and geopolitics, most of the folks taking care of us, our parents and our grandparents are the world’s migrants.
— Washington Post, 20 Sep. 2021 -
The book notes the rising importance of Asia in the global geopolitics of energy.
— Rich Karlgaard, Forbes, 27 Apr. 2021 -
In short, the Olympics are built on excess, tangled in geopolitics, rife with corruption and cheating.
— New York Times, 15 July 2021 -
The events that have cast a shadow across Europe in early 2022 are very different than those that drove Western geopolitics in the Cold War era.
— Noah Robertson, The Christian Science Monitor, 2 Mar. 2022 -
Either move would be fraught, mixing sports and geopolitics at a time when U.S.-China tensions are already high.
— Deirdre Shesgreen, USA TODAY, 8 Mar. 2021 -
The 2022 Winter Olympics will be remembered for geopolitics, not sports.
— Walter Russell Mead, WSJ, 7 Feb. 2022 -
The subject is controversial and the geopolitics are fraught.
— Washington Post, 3 Sep. 2021 -
There is a ludicrous femme fatale (Phoebe Phelps), the intimate portraits of the past, much gassing on about geopolitics.
— Parul Sehgal, New York Times, 20 Oct. 2020 -
But since the 2016 election, geopolitics have changed quite a bit – and, for many of these countries, not necessarily for the better.
— Robert Hinck, The Conversation, 20 Oct. 2020 -
India has good relations with both Russia and the West, and seeks a more muscular role in geopolitics.
— Mujib Mashal, New York Times, 6 Nov. 2022 -
Catholics celebrated in the streets, and Protestants feared sanction as geopolitics whirred to life.
— Renee Diresta, Wired, 26 Mar. 2021 -
One factor that could boost Foundry's efforts is geopolitics.
— Jeff John Roberts, Fortune, 27 Aug. 2020 -
What's clear is that foreign affairs and geopolitics have returned as issues that could shape the opinions of U.S. voters.
— Josh Boak, ajc, 18 May 2022 -
Richard Bronze, the head of geopolitics at Energy Aspects, a research firm, estimates that the actual cut will be only about one million barrels a day.
— Stanley Reed, New York Times, 5 Oct. 2022
Some of these examples are programmatically compiled from various online sources to illustrate current usage of the word 'geopolitics.' Any opinions expressed in the examples do not represent those of Merriam-Webster or its editors. Send us feedback about these examples.
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