Cities
in sentence
3254 examples of Cities in a sentence
China alone is going to move four to six hundred million people into
cities
in the next decade and a half.
The fact is, the last mile is the problem, and half the world now lives in dense
cities.
Three million people die every year in
cities
due to bad air, and almost all particulate pollution on this planet is produced by transportation devices, particularly sitting in
cities.
In 5,000 years, we've gone backwards in getting around cities. They've gotten bigger; they're spread out.
65 percent of the landmass of our
cities
are parked cars.
The 20 largest
cities
in the world.
So you wonder, what if
cities
could give to their pedestrians what we take for granted as we now go between cities? What if you could make them fun, attractive, clean, environmentally friendly?
What if it would make it a little bit more palatable to have access via this, as that last link to mass transit, to get out to your cars so we can all live in the suburbs and use our cars the way we want, and then have our
cities
energized again?
And they took it to Washington; they showed them; and they're going to be involved now, watching how these things get absorbed in a number of cities, like Atlanta, where we're doing trials to see if it really can, in fact, help re-energize their downtown.
We've got to start building
cities
and human environments where a 150-pound person can go a couple of miles in a dense, rich, green-space environment, without being in a 4,000-pound machine to do it.
Cars were not meant for parallel parking; they're wonderful machines to go between cities, but just think about it: we've solved all the long-range, high-speed problems.
But if you could put a pin in most cities, and imagine how far you could, if you had the time, walk in one half-hour, it's the city.
And what I've done is, I've looked at both environments like the coffeehouse, I've looked at media environments like the World Wide Web, that have been extraordinarily innovative; I've gone back to the history of the first cities; I've even gone to biological environments, like coral reefs and rain forests, that involve unusual levels of biological innovation.
It is not a question of whether, but to what extent our buildings, our landscapes, our
cities
and our rural communities are less beautiful, less functional, less equitable and less dignifying because women and people of color are less likely to be creating them.
It's happening all over the Developed World, probably for loss of habitat, but also because our
cities
are a little bit more livable than they have been.
If you like seeing 500-foot monsters that can destroy huge
cities
in seconds getting slaughtered by toddlers about one foot tall, this is a must-see.
Butter Battle is an entertaining story about two fictional
cities
and their arms race.
The idea of having three host
cities
was unnecessary, confusing and messed up the fluidity of the show.
If I did not have a home in Rhodes, had I not been to Greece 28 times in as many years, were I not familiar with dozens of islands and
cities
in Greece and if I had never enjoyed the friendship of these ebullient, life-intoxicated people, I might have believed that this lamentation had something to do with modern Greece.
Anti-nuke protesters who all looked like punk rockers of the late 1970s, and somehow became non-violent, (except for their leader, "Splatter") occupy the
cities.
It has many of the usual flaws of Canadian films...self-conscious acting...an excess of cinematic gimmicks and, above all, the self-effacing Canadian habit of using Canadian
cities
as stand-ins for American ones.
But in fact, it's just a bunch of coincidences between several characters that connect each other during one day in one of the biggest
cities
of the world.
Because of the persistence of Japanese soldiers on the small Japanese islands, the US decided to drop the bomb on populous
cities
in order to end the war, first Hiroshima and then Nagasaki.
But all is not rosy in the subterranean
cities
of the Martians(here shown as some caves and a few rooms).
Based on Michael Crichton's so-so novel, it's a nutty mixture of lost cities, giant hippos, monster monkeys, naff visual effects and corny dialogue.
The film satisfies all, and I hope that soon it might be released in all US theatres, because many do not have the chance to see the film unless they live in big
cities.
This movie sold out every movie house that it showed but it only showed in major
cities
and had a very limited release, so for those who would like to see this movie I would recommend the DVD release.
As in a modern short story, it's done in the abstract, with no real names, cities, or countries used.
Differing from his previous films, the story of 'Uzak' is set on Istanbul which is one of the most crowded
cities
of the world.
The rise of punk music was scarcely documented on film and most people tend to focus on the happenings of other
cities
such as London or New York.
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