Belonging
in sentence
355 examples of Belonging in a sentence
It is, in theory, the global commons,
belonging
to us all.
When you ask people about belonging, they'll tell you their most excruciating experiences of being excluded.
There was only one variable that separated the people who have a strong sense of love and
belonging
and the people who really struggle for it.
And that was, the people who have a strong sense of love and
belonging
believe they're worthy of love and
belonging.
And I know that vulnerability is the core of shame and fear and our struggle for worthiness, but it appears that it's also the birthplace of joy, of creativity, of belonging, of love.
You're imperfect, and you're wired for struggle, but you are worthy of love and belonging."
Such people might be those
belonging
to the British lynch mob, which last year attacked a pediatrician in mistake for a pedophile.
U.S. officials, just a couple of weeks ago, froze a Swiss bank account
belonging
to Mr. Jain, and that bank account had 14.9 million U.S. dollars on it.
So I got the fountain pen, but I didn't get the sense of
belonging
and confidence I was searching for.
Most of them don't want to go back to the countryside, but they don't have the sense of
belonging.
And skaters, I think they tend to be outsiders who seek a sense of belonging, but
belonging
on their own terms.
And the doughnut's boundaries unleash the potential for humanity to thrive with boundless creativity, participation,
belonging
and meaning.
The rehabilitation of public spaces revived the feeling of
belonging
to a city that people lost.
Give me belonging, give me identity, give me continuity, but give me transcendence and mystery and awe all in one.
So these action neighborhoods, as I call them, really become the inspiration to imagine other interpretations of citizenship that have less to do, in fact, with
belonging
to the nation-state, and more with upholding the notion of citizenship as a creative act that reorganizes institutional protocols in the spaces of the city.
It is one of 700 known slime molds
belonging
to the kingdom of the amoeba.
Dr. Brené Brown, a well-known shame researcher, defines shame as "the intensely painful feeling or experience of believing that we are flawed, and therefore unworthy of love and belonging."
Based on this definition, here's how I'm defining money shame: "the intensely painful feeling or experience of believing that we are flawed, and therefore unworthy of love and belonging, based on our bank account balances, our debts, our homes, our cars and our job titles."
For me, they were colleagues
belonging
to that community of humanitarian aid workers that tried to bring a bit of comfort to the victims of the wars in Chechnya in the '90s.
So if you can briefly reflect on what I was discussing about beauty and about
belonging
and about our ancestors and our roots, and I need you all to stand for me, please.
He was raised in a middle class family, and his father in the middle there is a chemical engineer who spent 11 years in prison for
belonging
to the political opposition in Syria.
I'm talking about the simple human bonds between us, a kind of authentic sense of connection, of belonging, the bonds that make us happy, that support us to change, to be brave like Ella and try something new.
The gas was made up only of atoms
belonging
to the simplest elements.
A mountain of idle cash
belonging
to rich savers and to corporations, too terrified to invest it into the productive activities that can generate the incomes from which you can extinguish the mountain of debts and which can produce all those things that humanity desperately needs, like green energy.
The 200 or so species of octopuses are mollusks
belonging
to the order cephalopoda, Greek for head-feet.
But I think that my interest in ideas of identity was born here, in the strange intersection of
belonging
to two places at once but not really
belonging
to either one very well and
belonging
to this vast space in between and around simultaneously.
They have enjoyed the true meaning of
belonging
to a place, and that was reflected in their built environment, in the mosques and churches built back-to-back, in the interwoven souks and public venues, and the proportions and sizes based on principles of humanity and harmony.
People lived and worked with each other in a place that gave them a sense of
belonging
and made them feel at home.
The traditional urbanism and architecture of our cities assured identity and
belonging
not by separation, but by intertwining.
As the shape of the built environment changed, so the lifestyles and sense of
belonging
of the communities also started changing.
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