How to Use multinational in a Sentence

multinational

adjective
  • How did your multinational crew influence the look and the feel of the movie?
    Patrick Frater, Variety, 20 Jan. 2024
  • The ship and its multinational crew remain in the port of Hodeida in Yemen, where they were taken after the seizure.
    Luis Martinez, ABC News, 11 Dec. 2023
  • While the prison in Cabaret is closer to the capital, gaining control of it would require the multinational force to free the area from gang control.
    Jacqueline Charles, Miami Herald, 25 Jan. 2024
  • About a decade ago, the world’s biggest economies agreed to crack down on multinational corporations’ abusive use of tax havens.
    Gabriel Zucman, The Conversation, 23 Feb. 2023
  • The council will be tasked with naming a new prime minister, prepare for the arrival of an multinational force and set a path toward elections.
    Jacqueline Charles, Miami Herald, 25 Mar. 2024
  • The government in Dublin has a big budget surplus, thanks to a boom in tax revenue from multinational companies.
    Ed O’Loughlin, New York Times, 15 Sep. 2023
  • Others have promoted the idea of a multinational force led by the United States, but with Israeli oversight for security of the strip.
    Edward Wong, New York Times, 8 Jan. 2024
  • An elusive deal Safe passage out of Gaza depends on a multinational deal and the cooperation of Hamas.
    Doha Madani, NBC News, 15 Oct. 2023
  • The multinational operation made more than five billion robocalls in three months back in 2021.
    Stephen Pastis, Fortune, 4 Aug. 2023
  • No longer a scrappy startup, the company is now a multinational giant.
    Vivienne Walt, Fortune, 27 Apr. 2023
  • Her father was an executive at a multinational and her mother was a folk dancer.
    Mark Rozzo, Town & Country, 2 Apr. 2023
  • But who would ever accuse a multinational like Microsoft or Google of such scruples?
    Katherine Cross, WIRED, 17 Mar. 2023
  • African countries struggle with food shortages that are blamed on too much power in the hands of Western multinational corporations.
    Dave Lieber, Dallas News, 9 Mar. 2023
  • The task facing the two hosts is stark: to jumpstart credible multinational action on climate change where previous summits have failed.
    Zeid Ra’ad Al Hussein, Foreign Affairs, 11 Sep. 2023
  • The club currently has one of the Premier League’s youngest squads, a multinational cast recruited both for their potential as Brighton players and their future value to someone else.
    Tariq Panja, New York Times, 14 Apr. 2023
  • Or, in the case of a multinational corporation, analyze and optimize the entire planet’s tax codes?
    WIRED, 7 Feb. 2023
  • When Moscow launched its full-scale invasion of Ukraine in February 2022, a slew of multinational companies left Russia, or announced plans to do so.
    Niamh Kennedy, CNN, 25 Aug. 2023
  • The gulf between China’s promises to open up and level playing fields and the reality on the ground continues to turn off multinational companies.
    William Pesek, Forbes, 27 Mar. 2024
  • As much as any other dealer, Gagosian engineered the multinational model for selling art.
    Zoë Lescaze, New York Times, 28 Sep. 2023
  • Blinken announced an additional $100 million to finance the deployment of a multinational force to Haiti.
    Kim Hjelmgaard, USA TODAY, 12 Mar. 2024
  • The idea was to stop multinational corporations, among them Apple and Nike, from using accounting and legal maneuvers to shift earnings to low- or no-tax havens.
    Paul Wiseman, Fortune, 23 Oct. 2023
  • The European Parliament is one of the legislative bodies of the multinational European Union.
    Fox News, 13 Dec. 2022
  • The chief concern of the protestors is how the wind farm, proposed by the multinational company Energix, would further entrench Israeli occupation over the Golan.
    Popular Science, 26 July 2023
  • After a desperate search and rescue mission by a multinational group, OceanGate said that the five passengers on the Titanic submersible have died.
    Town & Country, 22 June 2023
  • Support for multinational companies based in China, the U.S., and Germany fell significantly in the past year.
    Jacob Turcotte, The Christian Science Monitor, 15 Mar. 2024
  • The multinational chain, however, traces its roots to much simpler times in Southern California.
    Tony Briscoestaff Writer, Los Angeles Times, 3 Mar. 2023
  • As lawlessness in Haiti spirals out of control, Kenya has stepped forward to lead a multinational security force aimed at loosening the grip of gangs in the Caribbean nation.
    Abdi Latif Dahir, New York Times, 4 Oct. 2023
  • The rip-roaring dollar cut deeply into the earnings of multinational companies selling their wares overseas last quarter.
    Nicole Goodkind, CNN, 10 Feb. 2023
  • Pastor Kim’s mission acts as the heart of the film, and also its pivot, as Gavin tracks two different defection attempts engineered through a multinational network.
    Steve Dollar, Los Angeles Times, 1 Jan. 2024
  • The world’s biggest multinational companies could offer Wall Street some insight about how the global economy is faring.
    Nicole Goodkind, CNN, 25 Oct. 2023

Some of these examples are programmatically compiled from various online sources to illustrate current usage of the word 'multinational.' 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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