How to Use panacea in a Sentence
panacea
noun- The law will improve the lives of local farmers, but it is no panacea.
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For all the research, all the grants, all the talk — there’s still no panacea.
— Megan Schrader, The Denver Post, 13 June 2017 -
The advice wasn’t so much a panacea as a flash of hope.
— Emma Goldberg, New York Times, 14 May 2023 -
Even in the rosiest scenario, Paxlovid won’t be a panacea.
— Katherine J. Wu, The Atlantic, 10 May 2022 -
Each of these policies may help, but none is a panacea.
— Barry Latzer, National Review, 22 Mar. 2022 -
That said, reusables aren’t a panacea for the planet or its people.
— Jessica Defin, Vogue, 22 July 2021 -
Roth acknowledges a code of ethics, on its own, isn't a panacea.
— John Fritze, USA TODAY, 2 May 2023 -
But no single game can serve as a panacea for what ails the nation.
— Sean Gregory, Time, 8 Feb. 2021 -
This is not a panacea, nor is it intended to stand alone.
— Charles Bethea, The New Yorker, 16 Dec. 2016 -
For the Navajo people, the churro were something of a panacea.
— Henry Gass, The Christian Science Monitor, 7 Apr. 2022 -
Having a woman in the top job isn’t a panacea for any issue.
— Rachel Ventresca, Fortune, 6 June 2024 -
Still, studying the Bible has been no moral panacea for Chattanooga schools.
— G. Jeffrey MacDonald, The Christian Science Monitor, 30 Oct. 2017 -
Even the best desk chair in the world is not a panacea, the physical therapist points out.
— Jamie Gold, Forbes, 16 Aug. 2022 -
None of this is a panacea, and the bill doesn’t overhaul the Defense Health Agency that is a big line item.
— The Editorial Board, WSJ, 25 Apr. 2018 -
Of course, the TikTok sobriety space isn’t some kind of panacea.
— Amelia Tait, refinery29.com, 9 Jan. 2022 -
Petro’s ascent to power is not a panacea for the country’s ills.
— Ivan Briscoe, Foreign Affairs, 19 June 2022 -
Adding Udoka isn't anything close to a panacea for the woes ailing the Rockets.
— Michael Shapiro, Chron, 25 Apr. 2023 -
The program hasn’t been a panacea for all working parents.
— Joshua Emerson Smith, San Diego Union-Tribune, 29 Nov. 2020 -
No method is a panacea, no choice of form is a guarantee of a worthwhile film.
— Richard Brody, The New Yorker, 21 Jan. 2022 -
But this program is not built on the premise that serious games are a panacea.
— Chris Kohler, WIRED, 13 Feb. 2007 -
When asked about the role of the sign, Jaynes-Diming also says that the artifact isn’t a panacea to racial ills.
— Isis Davis-Marks, Smithsonian Magazine, 27 Aug. 2021 -
But even that wouldn’t be a panacea for the $100 trillion industry.
— John Detrixhe, Quartz, 20 Oct. 2020 -
Experts warn the treatment is not a panacea and should be used with caution.
— The Washington Post, The Denver Post, 11 June 2019 -
Chopra acknowledges that psychedelics are not a panacea.
— David E. Carpenter, Forbes, 8 June 2021 -
To be sure, red flag laws are no panacea for mass violence.
— Noah Robertson, The Christian Science Monitor, 27 May 2022 -
The swooning Steelers could be a panacea of sorts Sunday.
— Jonas Shaffer, baltimoresun.com, 1 Dec. 2021 -
Even though your intrepid reporter went to all the trouble of adding up 15 teams’ win shares, the draft is no panacea.
— Dallas News, 23 June 2022 -
That doesn’t mean the shots will offer a protective panacea.
— Katherine J. Wu, The Atlantic, 25 Aug. 2022 -
The process is not a panacea for slow processing times that the state has been working to improve.
— Alexia Elejalde-Ruiz, chicagotribune.com, 24 Sep. 2019 -
The over-saturation of content and the challenges of streaming which was once thought to be a panacea for everything.
— Aramide Tinubu, Variety, 12 Aug. 2024
Some of these examples are programmatically compiled from various online sources to illustrate current usage of the word 'panacea.' 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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