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24 Sentences With "if things get bad"

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

If things get bad enough, investors could even see these companies as too risky.
In the U.S., there's the assumption if things get bad, Powell is on your side.
If things get bad would, I have to go back and get another crummy job?
We do, after all, have Israeli passports that we can brandish if things get bad.
If things get bad enough, Japan and Europe could plunge into recession, the O.E.C.D. warned.
There's even a chance that Beijing could backtrack on the downsizing if things get bad enough.
She has a small rainy-day fund and credit cards to float them if things get bad.
But if things get bad enough in the next two hundred years, we may never have that chance.
She adds that if things get bad — and your ingrown turns cystic — you should go see a professional.
It can record any operating losses as "deferred assets" and, if things get bad enough, it can print more money.
If things get bad enough, there could even be a chance for one more rally in this bull market, he said.
So one of Macron's biggest political liabilities is that he doesn't have a reliable contingent of support if things get bad.
But if things get bad, the United States, traditionally a world leader in epidemic response, has greatly diminished capacity in this regard.
They'd see that if things get bad enough, there will no one left to exploit, no system to rig, no game to win.
We don't know how bad COVID-19 will get in the US. But if things get bad, rate cuts now will help more than rate cuts later.
That means folks who don't head outside much, or don't eat a balanced diet, might be at risk for vitamin D deficiency or even rickets, a bone disease, if things get bad enough.
If things get bad enough, founders will face pressure to step aside, if for no other reason than because their still-significant stake in the company could be wiped out if they don't.
Scouring medical journals and the Internet for information about her brain tumor, Maynard came across Oregon's Death with Dignity law and mentioned it, saying, "Look, if things get bad, this is an option," Diaz recalls.
Together, Medishield and Medisave form the core of Singapore's more market-oriented health insurance system — the idea is you pay routine expenses out of your Medisave account, and if things get bad enough that you hit your deductible, you begin using your Medishield account.
He doesn't appear to understand that joking about "tapes" is the sort of thing likely to increase legal scrutiny, or that the cover-up is usually worse than the crime, or that, if things get bad enough, your own party will decide you're too much of a liability.
But it could provide a sanctuary for dissidents, a possible safety valve for some of the deprived population, and potentially a location where a future opposition government could establish some degree of sovereign rule in what could temporarily then become a divided country if things get bad enough.
Alejandra Jane Dubois I guiltily calm my fears every day by reciting my privilege (I'm white and educated, in a conventional marriage, with a healthy savings account, etc), and so likely to survive this presidency relatively unscathed; and then I reassure myself again, that as a dual national, I can always flee to Europe if things get bad enough.
The X-Men appear, using remaining Shi'ar technology in an attempt to stop Red Skull. As result of this opposition, the cosmic cube is destroyed, and the Red Skull defeated. Many years later, an older Tony Stark is shown visiting Peter Parker, his daughter, May, and May's young daughter Anna. Stark speculates that if things get bad enough again, superhuman abilities may yet emerge.
The 'second generation' of models of currency crises starts with the paper of Obstfeld (1986). In these models, doubts about whether the government is willing to maintain its exchange rate peg lead to multiple equilibria, suggesting that self-fulfilling prophecies may be possible. Specifically, investors expect a contingent commitment by the government and if things get bad enough, the peg is not maintained. For example, in the 1992 ERM crisis, the UK was experiencing an economic downturn just as Germany was booming due to the reunification.

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