How to Use eurozone in a Sentence
eurozone
noun-
The eurozone is growing and many of these economies now are doing better.
—David McHugh, The Denver Post, 14 May 2017
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Much of the eurozone, in fact, went into the deflation zone last month.
—Bernhard Warner, Fortune, 28 Sep. 2020
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Montenegro may be joining the eurozone in the next few years.
—Kathleen Peddicord, Forbes, 30 Nov. 2023
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The turmoil couldn’t have come at a worse time for the eurozone’s third-largest economy.
—Nicole Winfield, The Christian Science Monitor, 21 July 2022
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Unemployment in the eurozone reached an eight-year low in April.
—Washington Post, 13 June 2017
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The center of the selling was government bonds in the eurozone.
—Min Zeng, WSJ, 27 June 2017
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That means that the eurozone fell into a recession over the winter months, and growth this year is likely to be weak.
—Nicole Goodkind, CNN, 13 June 2023
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The eurozone crisis and later the pandemic spurred a rush into the franc, which is seen as a haven asset.
—Patricia Kowsmann, WSJ, 31 Oct. 2022
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There are no major earnings this week, though on the data front, eurozone inflation data is due.
—Hugh Leask,holly Ellyatt, CNBC, 19 Jan. 2026
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The euro continues its long fade as Omicron (and Delta) alarm bells ring across the eurozone.
—Bernhard Warner, Fortune, 2 Dec. 2021
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For the 19-country eurozone, the commission forecasts the same levels of growth this year and next.
—BostonGlobe.com, 4 May 2018
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Consumer prices in the eurozone rose at the fastest pace in 13 years during September.
—WSJ, 2 Oct. 2021
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There are signs that inflation has peaked in the United States, Britain and many eurozone economies.
—Melissa Eddy, New York Times, 2 Feb. 2023
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The fear is that the fall forecast for 5% growth this year in the 19-nation eurozone could still be hurt by the end-of-year virus crisis.
—Democrat-Gazette Staff From Wire Reports, Arkansas Online, 25 Nov. 2021
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There are signs that inflation has peaked in the United States, Britain, and many eurozone economies.
—Eshe Nelson and Melissa Eddy, BostonGlobe.com, 2 Feb. 2023
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The eurozone economy didn’t grow at all in the last three months of last year and the outlook for the figures from the quarter just ended isn’t much better.
—David McHugh, Fortune Europe, 11 Apr. 2024
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In recent years, yields on Italian and Greek debt have stood among the highest in the eurozone due to concerns over debt levels.
—Caitlin Ostroff, WSJ, 26 Sep. 2022
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Next week will be 10 years to the day since the eurozone debt crisis ended, but no champagne corks will pop as the anniversary may very well mark the start of a new one.
—Christiaan Hetzner, Fortune, 21 July 2022
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The Danish central bank, which pegs the krone to the euro, has raised interest rates five times in seven months, to track the hikes in the eurozone.
—Christian Wienberg, Bloomberg.com, 10 Feb. 2023
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In 2008, at current prices, the American and eurozone economies were roughly the same size.
—Fareed Zakaria, Foreign Affairs, 12 Dec. 2023
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The forecast net cash requirement for 2024 is a record since the formation of the eurozone, the strategists say.
—WSJ, 17 Nov. 2023
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Even at the lower pace, that would still be enough for the ECB to soak up all the new debt issued by eurozone governments through the end of this year.
—David McHugh, ajc, 9 Sep. 2021
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As such, the eurozone GDP is expected to contract this year for the first time since 2013.
—Bernhard Warner, Fortune, 7 July 2020
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Germany’s 10-year bund, a benchmark for the euro zone, has surged by around 32 basis points, while other eurozone bonds have seen even bigger swings.
—Chloe Taylor, CNBC, 26 May 2026
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That contributed to a lackluster showing for the 20-nation eurozone.
—Sheryl Estrada, Fortune, 22 Aug. 2025
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But either way, the manufacturing share of GDP rose in Germany and fell elsewhere in the eurozone.
—Michael Pettis, Foreign Affairs, 17 Nov. 2025
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Spain, the eurozone’s fourth-largest economy, has been less adversarial toward China than other EU countries in recent years.
—ABC News, 13 Apr. 2026
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That convergence of political opinions came to a halt after the eurozone crisis brought down Berlusconi’s last government, in 2011.
—Erik Jones, Foreign Affairs, 21 Sep. 2022
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The currency market would also experience upheaval as the euro would soar, representing a major headwind on the eurozone’s exports and economic growth, Brown added.
—Jason Ma, Fortune, 23 Jan. 2026
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Yields on French government bonds – or the interest rate demanded by investors – have risen above those of Spanish, Portuguese and Greek bonds, which were once at the heart of the eurozone debt crisis.
—Saskya Vandoorne, CNN Money, 8 Sep. 2025
Some of these examples are programmatically compiled from various online sources to illustrate current usage of the word 'eurozone.' 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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