Answer
in sentence
4985 examples of Answer in a sentence
And the
answer
is patriarchal culture, which says to boys and young men that to be needing of relationship, to be emotional with someone is girly.
The next few years may tell us whether we'll be able to continue to increase our understanding of nature, or whether maybe for the first time in the history of science, we could be facing questions that we cannot answer, not because we don't have the brains or technology, but because the laws of physics themselves forbid it.
If we follow this line of thinking, then we will never be able to
answer
the question, "Why is there something rather than nothing?"
But if, in two or three years' time, when the LHC switches off again for a second long shutdown, we've found nothing but the Higgs boson, then we may be entering a new era in physics: an era where there are weird features of the universe that we cannot explain; an era where we have hints that we live in a multiverse that lies frustratingly forever beyond our reach; an era where we will never be able to
answer
the question, "Why is there something rather than nothing?"
AG: Well, that is a question that has no answer, because refugees have the right to be protected.
No matter your answer, you're just ranking it, not defining it.
For answers to these questions, it starts with individuals, and I think peer-to-peer security is the
answer.
It's possible that the
answer
lies in another hypothesis altogether.
So the groups of four friends, they only had a 50-50 chance of getting the
answer
right.
The three friends and the stranger, even though the stranger didn't have any extra information, even though it was just a case of how that changed the conversation to accommodate that awkwardness, the three friends and the stranger, they had a 75 percent chance of finding the right
answer.
And the
answer
to the ultimate question of life, the universe, and everything is most certainly 42.
I'm not sure anyone knows the
answer
to that question, yet fantastical, fictional worlds are created everyday in our minds, on computers, even on napkins at the restaurant down the street.
The first tempting
answer
is, "I'm not moving."
So, a second tempting
answer
is, "19 miles/second around the Sun."
Such a sassy reply may get subordinate Starfleet officers in trouble, but it is the only good
answer
to the question, "How fast are you moving?"
And sure enough, so they collect all the data, they do all the data crunching, and an
answer
emerges, and the
answer
is, "Amazon should do a sitcom about four Republican US Senators."
"The
answer
to our problem is to start building great big tanks and attaching them to the downspouts of our roof gutters, rainwater harvesting."
Well, the
answer
is you don't want to drink it until it's been treated a little bit.
The
answer
lies in how many different arrangements of 52 cards, or any objects, are possible.
The
answer
is, it depends.
Voice: "Well, to enter the cave, you must
answer
my riddles three."
In this lesson, we'll add the single experimental fact that whenever anyone measures just how fast light moves, they get the same answer: 299,792,458 meters every second, which means that when we draw light on our space-time diagram, it's world line always has to appear at the same angle.
The simple
answer
is that tattooing involves getting pigment deeper into the skin than the outermost layer that gets shed.
The
answer
involves a bit of quantum mechanics, but don't worry, we'll start with a rainbow.
It's an obvious question until you try to
answer
it, but let's take it seriously.
In his "Meditations on First Philosophy," René Descartes tried to
answer
that very question, demolishing all his preconceived notions and opinions to begin again from the foundations.
Could we
answer
that question based on our experience with everyday physics?
But these are questions that people spend their entire lifetime trying to answer, not in a single TED Talk.
The
answer
is, the first poem was generated by an algorithm called Racter, that was created back in the 1970s, and the second poem was written by a guy called Frank O'Hara, who happens to be one of my favorite human poets.
The Turing test was first proposed by this guy, Alan Turing, in 1950, in order to
answer
the question, can computers think?
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