Black
in sentence
5065 examples of Black in a sentence
Matt Kenyon: I'd just finished a project that dealt with the US Coalition side of the war and it was a
black
armband that was called the "Improvised Empathetic Device" which accumulated, in real time, the names, ranks, cause of death and location of US service members who had died overseas, and each time the Department of Defense or CENTCOM released their data, it would stab me in the arm.
And in that notepad I counted more Confederate flags than
black
people.
That is because [there], in Georgia, white people and
black
people are more historically familiar to one another.
One of the Whitopian outlooks that really hit me was a proverbial saying: "One
black
man is a delightful dinner guest; 50
black
men is a ghetto."
It's a telescope that's going to allow us to peer back, witness galaxies as they were when they were actually assembling, the first
black
holes in the universe, the first galaxies.
The other two are facing up: one with a
black
top, another with a red one.
We do, however, need to check the one with the
black
lid, to make sure it wasn’t incorrectly placed on an even-numbered box.
As you walk in the door, Baakir greets you with a "Welcome
black
home."
I have organized against the prison system, which impacts poor folks, especially black, indigenous and Latino folks, at an alarming rate.
One of the women was white, and one was
black.
And the
black
woman said, "I'm not so sure.
So the
black
woman says to the white woman, "When you wake up in the morning and you look in the mirror, what do you see?"
And the
black
woman said, "You see, that's the problem for me.
Because when I wake up in the morning and I look in the mirror," she said, "I see a
black
woman.
The density of
black
starts to blur umber.
Very mean-looking people,
black
clothes,
black
turban, and they pour into my office.
And the little
black
dots you see are actually newborn neurons-to-be.
So you see the massive increase of the
black
dots representing the new neurons-to-be.
Could the Earth be swallowed by a
black
hole?
A
black
hole is an object so dense that space and time around it are inescapably modified, warped into an infinite sink.
Nothing, not even light, can move fast enough to escape a
black
hole’s gravitational pull once it passes a certain boundary, known as the event horizon.
Thus, a
black
hole is like a cosmic vacuum cleaner with infinite capacity, gobbling up everything in its path, and letting nothing out.
To determine whether a
black
hole could swallow the Earth, we first have to figure out where they are.
When matter approaches a
black
hole, the immense gravitational field accelerates it to high speed.
If we observe several stars orbiting around an apparently empty point, a
black
hole could be leading the dance.
Most of the
black
holes that we’ve found can be thought of as two main types.
The smaller ones, called stellar mass
black
holes, have a mass up to 100 times larger than that of our sun.
We’ve observed several of these objects as close as 3000 light-years away, and there could be up to 100 million small
black
holes just in the Milky Way galaxy.
Despite their large mass, stellar
black
holes only have a radius of around 300 kilometers or less, making the chances of a direct hit with us miniscule.
If a typical stellar-mass
black
hole were to pass in the region of Neptune, the orbit of the Earth would be considerably modified, with dire results.
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