Additional examples are adjusted to the entries in an automated way - we cannot guarantee that they are correct.
Young Americans will be the engine of change, so we have to focus on their education.
As much as anything, the cold war was an engine of change.
It drew little attention, but it has the potential to be an engine of change in China.
What begins now is a new engine of change that will affect the lives of the people who work here and their patients.
Anger was the engine of change for him.
"We can't trust the traditional politicians to be the engines of change for how people connect to their government and each other," he said.
Fast Company's emphasis on cultural, rather than technological, engines of change has made for a softer landing.
It's the major engine of change of an institutional nature in the European economy."
Population change is a powerful engine of change, but it is slow.
None of these narratives has inspired confidence in the electoral system as an engine of change.
History often prefers engines of change.
Writer Alvin Toffler once described technology as the great, growling engine of change.
The great majority of Imperial citizens were alive, and constituted the collective engine of change and economic productivity.
Now many see Mr. Gorbachev and the Soviet Union as the great engine of change.
An engine of change now begins for the people who work at the large Paterson, N.J., hospital and their patients.
"What I am worried about is if this company were to be broken up, this engine of change and this engine of growth."
They were the engine of change in society, and as they grew older they would shift the attention of society toward their needs."
A prolific travel writer and journalist interprets the regions from Bulgaria to Baku as sites for troublesome engines of change.
By this time, the committees had become cohesive engines of change, developing score cards for consistently evaluating dairies and rules for judging contests.
Mr. Mondale, who is campaigning for his son, a candidate for the Minnesota Senate, sees international forces as the engine of change.
To the Editor: Anthony Lewis (column, July 6) is right that China's rule of law initiative "has the potential to be an engine of change."
Not unexpectedly, strong dissent comes from the Communist opposition, which argues that private industry is appropriating prerogatives of governments that have failed as engines of change.
Thus, in Salisbury, the 'proud stomach' of a reforming bishop infuriated the corporation and turned anti-clericalism, normally a chief engine of change into a conservative force.
But anecdotal evidence makes clear that color is winning more acceptance in the office, and many people say the engine of change will prove to be Hewlett-Packard's 1200C printer.
Kerr, Ian J. Engines of Change: The Railroads That Made India (2006)