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"swingeing" Definitions
  1. large and likely to cause people problems, especially financial problems
  2. extremely critical of somebody/something

79 Sentences With "swingeing"

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

Swingeing cuts to salaries and budgets have worsened the problem.
The move comes as Londoners face swingeing cuts to policing.
Moreover, swingeing reductions in council budgets provide a backdrop to the fire.
Take his swingeing crackdown on lawyers who defend dissidents and the like.
Reve combines a pitch-black comedy of manners with swingeing satire and metaphysical despair.
As Mr Smith has discovered, the price of looking for swing can be swingeing.
But there is still the swingeing cost to longer-term growth from higher trade barriers.
The swingeing budget cuts and departmental turf wars of recent years have been tough enough.
But in doing so they would deal a swingeing blow to the EU's fledgling banking union.
Granting big loans to council-owned companies while public services suffer swingeing cuts is politically treacherous.
"The FTC has quite swingeing powers," Emily Taylor, CEO of Oxford Information Labs, told VICE News.
Saudi Arabia's stockmarkets fell sharply after it announced swingeing spending cuts to close a gaping budget deficit.
Just over a year ago Russian aluminum producer Rusal was hit with swingeing sanctions by the U.S. government.
To hit the target of firing up 80% of domestic capacity, the tariffs would need to be swingeing.
Just over a year ago Russian aluminium producer Rusal was hit with swingeing sanctions by the U.S. government.
Morgan Stanley made swingeing cuts to its fixed income business in 2015, reducing headcount by around a quarter.
Now, amid swingeing welfare cuts, the impious Galileans—and other religious groups—are on the front lines once again.
Mr Urzúa may also have been frustrated by the president's swingeing cuts to salaries and benefits of civil servants.
The difference is that U.S. companies are enjoying tailwinds from a robust economy and swingeing tax cuts agreed last year.
Indeed, China was a marginal net exporter of aluminium in this form in March itself despite that swingeing export tax.
It was also a swingeing blow to a transport system that had struggled to cope at the best of times.
PrivatBank's nationalisation was the culmination of a swingeing clean-up of Ukraine's financial system, backed by the International Monetary Fund.
PrivatBank's nationalization was the culmination of a swingeing clean-up of Ukraine's financial system, backed by the International Monetary Fund.
On October 29th America's Department of Commerce put a swingeing export restriction on Jinhua by barring American firms from selling it components.
And then there is the fear that it may inadvertently abet crime or corruption, earning its parent a swingeing fine in America.
Aluminium foil has already been hit with swingeing countervailing duties and the net has just been widened to include aluminium alloy sheet.
Imports of Chinese foil fell 57 percent last year to 183,900 tonnes after swingeing duties were imposed on some Chinese companies in February.
They issued dire warnings about the dangers of serving entire classes of client, such as money-transfer firms, and imposed swingeing penalties for infractions.
And whereas most other public services have already been subject to swingeing austerity cuts, school spending was protected in real terms in 2010-15.
The first law approved by the new congress (in which AMLO has a majority) involves a swingeing cut in the salaries of senior officials.
Candidates for first-past-the-post seats in parliament pay half as much (¥3m)—but that is still swingeing by international standards (see chart).
Yet, to the dismay of the European Commission, Mr Salvini favours swingeing tax cuts in pursuit of the flat tax he has promised his supporters.
The League is highly eurosceptic and had promised swingeing tax cuts for 2020 that economists warned could put unsustainable pressure on Italy's towering debt mountain.
The League is highly eurosceptic and had promised swingeing tax cuts for 2020 that economists warned could put unsustainable pressure on Italy's towering debt mountain.
But President Putin has pragmatically refrained from making swingeing cuts in a year when the Russian economy is expected to contract by up to 4 percent.
This represents a swingeing haircut for a company that, in 2012, had believed it was on a three-year growth path to a £15BN valuation, i.e.
Were governments to impose a swingeing tax on carbon, many fossil-fuel firms would get into financial trouble, as would firms that depend on dirty inputs.
Duncan Smith had been implementing swingeing welfare cuts for years - plus it looked as though Osborne's measures were so unpopular they were about to be quickly dropped.
The list of U.S. anti-dumping measures taken against Chinese steel imports is steadily lengthening, and cold-rolled products are the latest to incur swingeing U.S. sanctions.
In 2011, Portugal was rescued by a 78 billion euro ($85 billion) bailout from the European Union and IMF, a process that involved swingeing spending cuts and reforms.
Salvini has been behaving since the European election as if he were already prime minister, promising swingeing tax cuts and calling for changes to European Union budget rules.
The process that led to a swingeing fine for HSBC in 2012 does indeed look arbitrary, but the government was also less severe than it might have been.
Italy, which has reported more deaths from the virus than any other country, introduced swingeing restrictions on movement and banned all non-essential activities until at least next Friday.
Yet there is a glimmer of hope that China's antitrust law, which has been used to impose swingeing penalties on foreign companies, may start to work against big domestic targets.
Since Sunday's election, League leader Matteo Salvini has been acting as if he were already prime minister, promising swingeing tax cuts and calling for changes to European Union budget rules.
A severe financial crisis, together with swingeing spending cuts demanded by the creditors, plunged Greece into one of the deepest downturns experienced by a rich country since the second world war.
Hence, in recent years, we've seen attempts by certain EU Member States to create national frameworks which effectively rubberstamp swingeing surveillance powers — that then, in turn, invite legal challenge under EU law.
The rash of swingeing fines that had been disfiguring profits had largely dissipated (although Goldman Sachs recently agreed to pay $5 billion to settle charges that it knowingly peddled dodgy mortgage-backed securities).
The blame for the damage from de-risking lies mainly with policymakers and regulators, whose dire warnings about entire classes of client and their imposition of swingeing fines have been an over-reaction.
The country would service its creditors at the expense of its citizens, who suffered swingeing cuts to wages, pensions and public sector jobs at the same times as hikes in VAT and property taxes.
Mr Ruggiero believes that America could levy swingeing fines on Chinese banks that facilitate trade with North Korea, just as it punished European banks that helped customers get around sanctions on Cuba, Iran and Sudan.
In practice, the re-imposition of swingeing American sanctions—especially secondary sanctions that would hit European banks and businesses trading with Iran—could kill the deal or turn it into the diplomatic equivalent of a zombie.
Responding to the letter from the EU Commission, Italy vowed to respect the European Union's fiscal rules in its next budget despite deteriorating public finances and a pledge by the anti-austerity government for swingeing tax cuts.
If confirmed, such a result could alter the balance of power within the bickering government, giving greater authority to League leader Matteo Salvini, who is pushing for swingeing tax cuts in possible defiance of EU budget rules.
Boss Christian Sewing on Sunday effectively called time on the lender's multi-decade attempt to create a global investment bank with a swingeing plan to shrink its trading unit and put 288 billion euros of assets into runoff.
A key concern attached to Huawei is that back in 53 China's Communist Party passed a national intelligence law which gives the state swingeing powers to compel assistance from companies and individuals to gather foreign and domestic intelligence.
Instead, in an unexpected move, former PD leader Matteo Renzi has said his party should work with 5-Star to thwart the burgeoning ambitions of Salvini, who has promised to defy EU budget rules and introduce swingeing tax cuts.
Russian majority state-owned oil giant Rosneft posted a swingeing 23 percent drop in first-quarter net profit, raising questions over how much money the government will be able to glean from its crude producers as commodity prices continue to lag.
Foreign banks, some of which faced swingeing fines for having facilitated trade with Iran, complain about inconsistencies in official sanctions lists published by different countries and fret they may again face prosecution for violating sanctions still in place, or new ones.
Many analysts are sceptical about the latest privatisation goals and the ruling coalition, made up of the far right League and anti-establishment 5-Star Movement, is already focused on the 2020 budget where it has promised swingeing tax cuts.
So the really big irony of Rudd's comments is that the government has already afforded itself swingeing investigatory powers — even including the ability to require companies to decrypt data, limit the use of end-to-end encryption and backdoor services on warranted request.
Those limited banking sanctions were the most personal and the most galling to the then leader, Kim Jong Il. That suggests that your proposal of swingeing financial sanctions on the North and on any bank dealing with it will have the most effect.
And this core legal clash is the Gordian knot that US tech giants — including Facebook — are now bound up with as a consequence of domestic surveillance law granting their government swingeing rights to suck up personal data from "electronic communication service providers".
Bond yields have jumped back from record lows this week, with investors forced to unwind some of their more extreme positions as central bankers, from the U.S. Federal Reserve to Reserve Bank of Australia, indicated that in pricing swingeing cuts to policy rates, markets might just be getting it wrong.
Bond yields have jumped back from record lows this week, with investors forced to unwind some of their more extreme positions as central bankers, from the U.S. Federal Reserve to Reserve Bank of Australia, indicated that in pricing swingeing cuts to policy rates, markets might just be getting it wrong.
And while Facebook, Twitter and Google are clearly not the only companies in the industry that could be accused of muddying their terms with opaque language, swingeing vagueness and impenetrable layers of complexity, the huge and growing societal power of social media platforms — and these three giants specifically — is bringing them into contact with regulators' spotlights, more and more.
Second, the victorious Allied powers meeting at the Versailles peace conference needed to agree on how Germany and Austria were to be treated, in an atmosphere where, in Britain's general election in December 1918, the most popular cry on the stump had been "Hang the kaiser," and the victorious powers were about to demand swingeing war reparations from the defeated.
And so, in the absence of any deal, and without a revoking of Article 50, Britain crashes out of the EU on a no-deal basis -- a scenario that has alarmed national and international businesses and inside Britain's machinery of government and public services, due to the prospect of swingeing tariffs on goods at the border, miles of queued lorries and stockpiling of food and medicines by panicking householders.
The Beatles (1968) From the mid-1960s, Hamilton was represented by Robert Fraser and even produced a series of prints, Swingeing London, based on Fraser's arrest, along with Mick Jagger, for possession of drugs. This association with the 1960s pop music scene continued as Hamilton became friends with Paul McCartney resulting in him producing the cover design and poster collage for the Beatles' White Album.William Grimes (13 September 2011), Richard Hamilton, British Painter and a Creator of Pop Art, Dies at 89 New York Times. In 1969, Hamilton appeared in a documentary by filmmaker James Scott, in which he discussed the Swingeing London series and his preoccupation with mass media through a selection of his own work.
He kept Whitton on as assistant and brought in a number of new players. The club survived relegation by two points, ending the campaign in 18th place. Crowds had risen to an average of 4,479, but swingeing cuts were made to the playing staff at the end of the season.
A bad move, as following adverse criticism, results for that section were disregarded. Murray did not attend the Ball, at which the winners should have been announced but were not, due to the protests still pending. The two leading Volkswagen drivers had protested swingeing penalties for non-structural cracks, and when their protests were upheld the provisional winner protested, vehemently criticising the Australian Sporting Car Club. There was no 1956 Redex Trial.
Facing economic crisis in 1931, the Chancellor of the Exchequer, Philip Snowden, proposed swingeing cuts to public spending, particularly to unemployment benefit. Addison voted against these cuts in cabinet and went into Opposition when MacDonald formed a National Government with the Conservatives and Liberals. Addison lost his seat at the 1931 general election. In 1934 he regained his Swindon seat in a by- election, but lost it a second time at the 1935 general election.
All-weather tourer, Sydney NSW 1954 Sir Bernard Docker, chairman of the parent company, took the extra responsibility of Daimler's managing director in January 1953 when James Leek was unable to continue through illness. Car buyers were still waiting for the new (Churchill) government's easing of the 'temporary' swingeing purchase tax promised in the lead up to the snap-election held during the 1951 Earl's Court motor show. Lady Docker told her husband to rethink his marketing policies. 3-litre Regency production was stopped.
Clark started working for local papers, including the Erdington News and the Birmingham Post, before moving to The Daily Mail. In 1958, he joined The Guardian, where he wrote authoritative backgrounders to major events of the time, such as the Great Train Robbery. From 1964-72, Clark worked for The Observer, where he served as Home Affairs Editor and head of the Investigative Unit. Here, his exposure of London's casinos led the Home Secretary, Roy Jenkins, to introduce swingeing new controls that cleaned up the British gambling scene and sent many American 'businessmen' scurrying home.
Two years later he was again a candidate at a by-election, this time at Camberwell North. The Coalition Government in power since 1916 was beginning to unravel, and the election was a straight fight between Meller for the Conservatives and Charles Ammon of the Labour Party, neither of whom claimed to support the coalition. Ammon was comfortably elected as public opinion turned against the coalition following the swingeing cuts of the Geddes Report. At the ensuing 1923 general election Meller was elected as Conservative member of parliament for his home constituency of Mitcham.
Laws calling for swingeing culls of "under-height" horses were partially repealed by Elizabeth I in 1566. Areas of poor quality land could not support the weight of horses desired by Henry VIII, and were exempted because of "their rottenness ... [They] are not able to breed beare and bring forth such great breeds of [stallions] as by the statute of 32 Henry VIII is expressed, without peril of miring and perishing of them". This allowed many of Britain's mountain and moorland pony breeds to escape slaughter."Wool is my bread... (Safety in the wilderness)" .
A person guilty of an offence under this section is liable to imprisonment for a term not exceeding fourteen years.The Official Secrets Act 1920, section 8(1); the Criminal Justice Act 1948, section 1(1); the Criminal Justice Act (Northern Ireland) 1953, section 1(1); the Criminal Procedure (Scotland) Act 1975, section 221(1) Examples Hillaire Barnett described sentences for espionage as "swingeing".Hillaire Barnett, Constitutional and Administrative Law, 2nd Ed, 1998, Cavendish Publishing Ltd. George Blake was sentenced to imprisonment for a term of 42 years after pleading guilty to five counts of unlawfully disclosing information contrary to section 1(1)(c).
Mick Wadsworth made swingeing cuts to the playing staff in the close season as nine first-team regulars were allowed to leave, including fan favourites Joe Dunne and Tony Adcock, who fell just four goals short of Martyn King's club record of 131 career league goals. Despite the numerous changes, all was not well behind the scenes at Colchester United. Managing director Steven Gage resigned on the eve of the new season, and within two weeks of the season starting, Wadsworth had also resigned to join Crystal Palace. Wadsworth had brought in a number of highly paid players, most of whom were linked to controversial football agent Barry Silkman.
Some protestors and gardaí engaged in clashes following the protest, with an unidentified number of people being wounded and three gardaí sustaining minor injuries; two arrests were made. The two men who were arrested were in their twenties and charged with criminal damage and a breach of the peace respectively. The Department of Finance was occupied by protestors for a time, and 36 complaints of police brutality were made of which just over half were admitted; these led to a further march by students seven days later with the intention to "end garda brutality". Presseurop wondered the day after thousands of students marched on the streets of Dublin: "Has Ireland awoken?" and said the protest had "Giv[en] the lie to general opinion that the economically stricken nation has taken swingeing austerity measures with passive resignation".

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