All
in sentence
17008 examples of All in a sentence
And
all
the people in this room have done so through their business lives, or their philanthropic work, or their other interests.
Well, what I concluded from reviewing
all
these cases is that it is important that this happens only when death is instant and in a dramatic way and in the right position for copulation.
He sees an intruder in his territory, and it's coming
all
the time and he's there, so there is no end to it.
And as I travel around the world, I love taking photographs like these, so I can remember
all
the beautiful and interesting things that I've seen.
But if you pay attention to how it feels,
all
the surfaces of this tooth are hard and healthy, so this patient does not need a filling.
And we told them that at the end of the experiment, we will take
all
these Bionicles, we will disassemble them, we will put them back in the boxes, and we will use it for the next participant.
In the acknowledged condition, people worked
all
the way down to 15 cents.
Why? (Laughter) They put
all
this extra effort into it.
People don't realize how tough it is to write that kind of program that can read a "Jeopardy" clue in a natural language like English and understand
all
the double meanings, the puns, the red herrings, unpack the meaning of the clue.
I've read economists saying that, as a result of these new technologies, we'll enter a new golden age of leisure when we'll
all
have time for the things we really love because
all
these onerous tasks will be taken over by Watson and his digital brethren.
That means between now and late 2014, we will generate as much information, in terms of gigabytes, as
all
of humanity has in
all
the previous millenia put together.
And it happens in real life
all
the time.
And we can
all
make that choice.
Not sure of
all
the details, but excited.
And one of the points I make to people
all
the time is that sometimes when people do things that are courageous, it doesn't really mean that they're that courageous.
And we produced a number of people in law,
all
the way to the humanities.
And so to feel that sense of responsibility makes
all
the difference in the world.
And one great example that you'll appreciate: During a snowstorm in Baltimore several years ago, the guy on our campus with this Howard Hughes Medical Institute grant literally came back to work in his lab after several days, and
all
these students had refused to leave the lab.
Most important, if a student has a sense of self, it is amazing how the dreams and the values can make
all
the difference in the world.
Now, if we've got
all
these networked devices that are helping us to do care anywhere, it stands to reason that we also need a team to be able to interact with
all
of that stuff, and that leads to the second pillar I want to talk about, care networking.
Out of
all
the care I've had in hospitals and clinics around the world, the first time I've ever had a true team-based care experience was at Legacy Good Sam these last six months for me to go get this.
Here's Jenny, one of the nurses, Allison, who helped manage the transplant list, and a dozen other people who aren't pictured, a pharmacist, a psychologist, a nutritionist, even a financial counselor, Lisa, who helped us deal with
all
the insurance hassles.
I'm sure we could
all
be that productive without Facebook or Twitter to take up our time.
But he should, because the problem with
all
that poop lying around is that poop carries passengers.
All
those things, the eggs, the cysts, the bacteria, the viruses,
all
those can travel in one gram of human feces.
Diarrhea is the second biggest killer of children worldwide, and you've probably been asked to care about things like HIV/AIDS or T.B. or measles, but diarrhea kills more children than
all
those three things put together.
She got her toilet, and now she goes around
all
the other villages in India persuading other women to do the same thing.
There were some sites where one percent of
all
the skulls have these holes, and so you can see that neurologic and psychiatric disease is quite common, and it was also quite common about 7,000 years ago.
Twenty percent of
all
the glucose in your body is used by the brain, and as you go from being normal to having mild cognitive impairment, which is a precursor for Alzheimer's,
all
the way to Alzheimer's disease, then there are areas of the brain that stop using glucose.
All
the rest went to the top one percent.
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