All
in sentence
17008 examples of All in a sentence
It's going to take
all
the ingenuity that we have got to get there, so bring it on.
Here's Mr. Clean looking amorously at
all
the other Procter & Gamble products, and Procter & Gamble, you know, the statistic always cited is that Wal-Mart is their largest customer, and it's true, as one store, Wal-Mart buys 15 percent, thus 15 percent of Procter & Gamble's business is with Wal-Mart, but their largest market segment is something that they call "high frequency stores," which is
all
these tiny kiosks and the lady in the canoe and
all
these other businesses that exist in System D, the informal economy, and Procter & Gamble makes 20 percent of its money from that market segment, and it's the only market segment that's growing.
It was a global crowdfunding campaign to enable IDA to rebuild a whole new children's hospital, and, if successful, we the people would take the medical equipment
all
the way from London to the Syria border.
Not that I can take
all
the credit, but ... (Laughter) But what if you don't have my advantages?
Licklider foresaw computers doing
all
the routinizable work that was required to prepare the way for insights and decision making.
When you put
all
the mental illnesses together, they account for roughly 15 percent of the total global burden of disease.
Now some of you here look a bit astonished by that number, but consider for a moment the incredible diversity of mental illnesses, from autism and intellectual disability in childhood, through to depression and anxiety, substance misuse and psychosis in adulthood,
all
the way through to dementia in old age, and I'm pretty sure that each and every one us present here today can think of at least one person, at least one person, who's affected by mental illness in our most intimate social networks.
Now, if I had to draw together
all
these different experiments in task shifting, and there have of course been many other examples, and try and identify what are the key lessons we can learn that makes for a successful task shifting operation, I have coined this particular acronym, SUNDAR.
The first is that we need to simplify the message that we're using, stripping away
all
the jargon that medicine has invented around itself.
British Columbia, Canada, is publishing a catalogue of
all
the ways that its residents and citizens can engage with the state in the cocreation of governance.
And we should
all
care about this whether you live in cities or not.
So with cities, you also have congestion and pollution and disease and
all
these negative things.
We got rid of
all
the useless things like engines and transmissions.
We think this can
all
be standardized, and then people can personalize the stuff that goes into that wall, and like the car, we can integrate
all
kinds of sensing to be aware of human activity, so if there's a baby or a puppy in the way, you won't have a problem.
We have sensors on
all
the furniture,
all
the infill, that understands where people are and what they're doing.
And it is my contention that the manner in which we train our leaders will make
all
the difference.
It happens to us in
all
the aspects of our life,
all
the time.
All
the teenagers testified during the trial that they could see very well.
Take
all
the measurements and record them, right?
What are we going to do with
all
this plastic that we're going to need to use in our marine environment?
We need to have stem cells from
all
the genetic sub-types that represent who we are.
In other words, everything you need to do in order to remember the rule and apply it seems to be fully developed by mid-adolescence, whereas in contrast, if you look at the last two gray bars, there's still a significant improvement in the director condition between mid-adolescence and adulthood, and what this means is that the ability to take into account someone else's perspective in order to guide ongoing behavior, which is something, by the way, that we do in everyday life
all
the time, is still developing in mid-to-late adolescence.
(Hospital noises) When I was visiting my terminally ill father in a hospital, I was asking myself, how does anybody get well in a place that sounds like this? Hospital sound is getting worse
all
the time.
All
that changed was the acoustics of the classroom in those two examples.
In fact, 65 decibels is the very level at which this big survey of
all
the evidence on noise and health found that, that is the threshold for the danger of myocardial infarction.
But the thing that really struck me, when I plotted
all
this data, and it was a lot of numbers, was that you can see how it levels off.
I found quite a few packets of biscuits amongst
all
the fruit and vegetables and everything else that was in there.
We're used to seeing the stuff on our plates, but what about
all
the stuff that goes missing in between?
For the sake of the planet we live on, for the sake of our children, for the sake of
all
the other organisms that share our planet with us, we are a terrestrial animal, and we depend on our land for food.
They kind of have this vault where they're stored in high-def, and George Lucas did
all
the sound effects.
Back
Next
Related words
Which
There
About
Would
Movie
Their
People
Other
Could
Things
World
Where
After
Really
Great
Think
Through
Being
Should
While