Animals
in sentence
2401 examples of Animals in a sentence
It gives us an insight into some of the
animals
that we were sitting right next to for 31 days and never normally would have paid attention to, such as hermit crabs.
Humanity takes center stage at TED, but I would like to add a voice for the animals, whose bodies and minds and spirits shaped us.
Once upon a time, he told me, all
animals
on Earth were one.
Embarrassed, the
animals
fled, and that was the last time they revealed themselves this way.
The ancient understanding that underneath their separate identities, all
animals
are one, has been a powerful inspiration to me.
When I use my camera, I drop my skin like the
animals
at that cave so I can show who they really are.
As
animals
blessed with the power of rational thought, we can marvel at the intricacies of life.
So this evolutionary foil safeguards the plant against these rather cute animals, and protects it and of course ensures its survival.
The monkeys are not stupid
animals.
Just to save a few pennies on the price of meat, we've spent a lot of antibiotics on animals, not for treatment, not for sick animals, but primarily for growth promotion.
Now, all of these parts of the forest are made up of different plants, and different
animals
call them home.
I want to say a word for the soil and the bees and the plants and the animals, and tell you about a tool, a very simple tool that I have found.
And that tool is very simply, as Chris suggested, looking at us and the world from the plants' or the
animals'
point of view.
And that is this: the farm is called Polyface, which means ... the idea is he's got six different species of animals, as well as some plants, growing in this very elaborate symbiotic arrangement.
I mean, look, every single physician accepts some biological connection between
animals
and humans.
Veterinarians had been diagnosing, treating and even preventing emotionally induced symptoms in
animals
ranging from monkeys to flamingos, from to deer to rabbits, since the 1970s.
But veterinarians have very specific and very effective ways of treating and even preventing self-injury in their self-injuring
animals.
After all, we humans are animals, too, and it's time for us physicians to embrace our patients' and our own animal natures and join veterinarians in a species-spanning approach to health.
For the fifth task, there were no animals, just their leftovers.
We call it Honest Chops, and we're reclaiming halal by sourcing organic, humanely raised animals, and by making it accessible and affordable to working-class families.
When John Chapin and I, 15 years ago, proposed in a paper that we would build something that we called a brain-machine interface, meaning connecting a brain to devices so that
animals
and humans could just move these devices, no matter how far they are from their own bodies, just by imagining what they want to do, our colleagues told us that we actually needed professional help, of the psychiatry variety.
This is the latest: We just published this a year ago, the first brain-to-brain interface that allows two
animals
to exchange mental messages so that one animal that sees something coming from the environment can send a mental SMS, a torpedo, a neurophysiological torpedo, to the second animal, and the second animal performs the act that he needed to perform without ever knowing what the environment was sending as a message, because the message came from the first animal's brain.
Now we know that there's a lot of
animals
out there that can do it too.
But the last few decades have shown us that other
animals
can do it too: elephants, porcupines, sheep, goats, you name it.
And even more interesting than that is that recent discoveries are telling us that insects and other little
animals
with smaller brains can use medication too.
Now, I think that we should look at these animals, and we can learn from them how to treat our own diseases.
They're toxic to most animals, but not to monarchs.
Now, these are
animals
that are very small and we tend to think of them as very simple.
Now, we know that even today, most of our drugs derive from natural products, including plants, and in indigenous cultures, traditional healers often look at
animals
to find new drugs.
What I think is important, though, is to move beyond these large-brained mammals and give these guys more credit, these simple animals, these insects that we tend to think of as very, very simple with tiny little brains.
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