Adapts
in sentence
13 examples of Adapts in a sentence
The classical cases of emergence are all cases of emergent behavior, how a traffic jam behaves, how a hurricane functions, how a living organism reproduces and
adapts
and metabolizes, all questions about objective functioning.
In another experiment, I want to show you how the robot
adapts
its flight to control its suspended payload, whose length is actually larger than the width of the window.
And like most parasites, it can begin dangerous, but then it coevolves and adapts, and we end up with a symbiotic relationship with this new parasite.
So I took a bargain that I'd later see in a prison, a Stasi prison in Berlin, on a sign that read, "He who
adapts
can live tolerably."
It doesn't have an environment that
adapts
to it; it has to adapt to the environment.
A tough sell: British playwright Ronald Harwood
adapts
his autobiographical stage drama into loud, bellowing film about WWII Shakespearean theatrical troupe saddled with an aged, blustery, brilliant-but-unreliable star at the end of his tether.
The film
adapts
the story into a dark, sexualized drama meant to attract the attention of today's oversexed audience, but the success of previous Austen adaptations should have been an indication that this is not necessary.
When Jess Franco
adapts
a De Sade story for the screen, he tends to put forth a good deal more effort than with the bulk of his other projects.
The soldiers capturing a house in the field and then losing it, Murphy blowing a tank, shooting by mistake at himself in the mirror, standing on a tank in flames, throwing grenades at a pillbox, crossing a river under fire, whatever you think it is there, and in Cinemascope, which
adapts
very well to the widescreen format.
To borrow the philosopher Isaiah Berlin’s famous taxonomy, a supervisor is like a fox; it knows many small things, is flexible, and constantly
adapts
its survival strategy.
The great virtue of capitalism is that it
adapts
to ruinous conditions and even finds ways of turning them to advantage.
While China is far from insolvent – the country remains a net creditor, to the tune of nearly $1.8 trillion – more domestic liquidity must be released to support the economy, and especially the private sector, as it
adapts
to domestic and global structural changes.
Rather than an exponent of courage, it has the Prince of Cynicism – a scruffy knock-off who
adapts
his opinions to whatever is politically expedient.
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