Change
in sentence
15871 examples of Change in a sentence
We can understand the
change
in the brain waves that occur during sleep.
So, many of you probably know that as we go to sleep, our brainwaves
change
and we enter different stages: awake, light sleep, deep sleep and REM, or rapid eye movement.
OK, thank you. (Applause) So as you can see, we have this device that can monitor so many physiological signals for you, and what is really interesting about this device is that it does all this without any wearables, without asking the person to
change
his behavior or to wear anything or charge anything special.
This can
change
health care as we know it today, improve how we understand chronic diseases and also save many lives.
We can look at all of the different equations that go into making the ice grow or melt or
change
shape.
There are wobbles in the Earth's orbit over hundreds of thousands of years that
change
the climate.
There are changes in the solar cycles, every 11 years and longer, that
change
the climate.
Big volcanoes go off and
change
the climate.
Changes in biomass burning, in smoke, in aerosol particles, all of those things
change
the climate.
Contrails
change
the climate by creating clouds where there were none before, and of course greenhouse gases
change
the system.
Can we
change
things that affect air pollution and climate at the same time?
As you get towards the 1970s, things are going to start to
change.
I can't
change
that now and neither can you, but let's not mix up individual, isolated behavior with the systemic factors that have caused a 7.7-trillion-dollar retirement income gap.
I think it's only through our strength in numbers that we can begin to
change
the national "la-la" conversation that we are having on this retirement crisis.
So I am calling on
change
agents and social entrepreneurs, artists and elders and impact investors.
But what we found is we had to
change.
We had to
change
our culture about information.
We had to
change
from who needs to know to the fact that who doesn't know, and we need to tell, and tell them as quickly as we can.
We need to
change
the perverse incentive structures that produce these recurrent epidemics of accounting control fraud that are driving our crises.
and that is an online documentary series that gives you an impression of that year, 1968, a year marked by global social
change
that, in many ways, created the world as we know it now.
But the real reason we might think that humans have pheromones is the
change
that occurs as we grow up.
Along with the pubic hair and the hair in the armpits, new glands start to secrete in those places, and that's what's making the
change
in smell.
We know that we're headed for climate change, which is going to
change
rainfall patterns, making some areas drier, as you can see in orange, and others wetter, in blue, causing droughts in our breadbaskets, in places like the Midwest and Central Europe, and floods in others.
You get into international agreements, and if any of you are tracking the climate
change
agreement, you know this can be a very slow, frustrating, tedious process.
Unlike the deliberate focus required for playing an external instrument, we effortlessly
change
notes as we speak.
By pushing air faster or slower, we
change
the frequency and amplitude of these vibrations, which respectively translate to the pitch and volume of our voices.
I thought that I was indebted even to Bobby Finkel, because all those earlier experiences were what had propelled me to this moment, and I was finally unconditionally grateful for a life I'd once have done anything to
change.
And I do feel a little ridiculous that I'm up here on this stage and I'm choosing to use my time to tell you about a 100-year-old story about the invention of a squishy kid's toy, but I'd argue that the invention of the teddy bear, inside that story is a more important story, a story about how dramatically our ideas about nature can change, and also about how, on the planet right now, the stories that we tell are dramatically changing nature.
So for example, this is one of probably thousands of letters and drawings that kids sent to the Bush administration, begging it to protect the polar bear under the Endangered Species Act, and these were sent back in the mid-2000s, when awareness of climate
change
was suddenly surging.
This one came from a kid named Fritz, and he's actually got a solution to climate
change.
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