Colleague
in sentence
385 examples of Colleague in a sentence
My colleague, the late great Loren McIntyre, discoverer of the source lake of the Amazon, Laguna McIntyre in the Peruvian Andes, was lost on the Peru-Brazil border about 30 years ago.
You know, I was in a Wall Street area one time several years ago when I was with a
colleague
of mine, and she's really wonderful and she does diversity work with me and she's a woman of color, she's Korean.
And I mentioned that to my fellowship mentor, and he, for his part, had heard the same from a colleague, about the large number of pregnant women and young adults being hospitalized in intensive care, with hard-to-manage clinical profiles.
And then one day, my
colleague
walked into my office, and he said, "Dr.
Together with
colleague
Suzanne Imes, Clance first studied imposterism in female college students and faculty.
Now, for the first time, you're going to see one of my
colleague'
s children develop microbially.
I was tormented by the thoughts of my family and my colleague, the guard, Edik.
Now, the same month that my laboratory published our discovery on the rice immunity gene, my friend and
colleague
Dave Mackill stopped by my office.
We're going to show babies a box of blue and yellow balls, and my then-graduate student, now
colleague
at Stanford, Hyowon Gweon, is going to pull three blue balls in a row out of this box, and when she pulls those balls out, she's going to squeeze them, and the balls are going to squeak.
To make the case to the National Health Service that more resources were needed for autistic children and their families, Lorna and her
colleague
Judith Gould decided to do something that should have been done 30 years earlier.
So what that means is that when you're talking to your spouse, your children, a
colleague
or your doctor on the telephone, someone could be listening.
So you have to recognize the voice of your
colleague.
I have a colleague, and she and I both teach the sociology of gender course on alternate semesters.
All that semester, whenever my
colleague
opened her mouth, what my students saw was a woman.
And more interesting to my
colleague
Robert is the research we have been doing on neurogenesis and depression.
We heard this story, and it triggered me and my colleague, photographer Tomm Christiansen, and we of course had the obvious question: who were these people?
A few years ago, with my colleague, Emmanuelle Charpentier, I invented a new technology for editing genomes.
This allows the cells to keep a record of infection, and as my colleague, Blake Wiedenheft, likes to say, the CRISPR locus is effectively a genetic vaccination card in cells.
We're going to fly into my
colleague
Peter's brain.
I was having dinner with my colleague, Danny Kahneman, the Nobel Prize winner, and I somewhat embarrassedly told him about having broken my window, and, you know, forgotten my passport, and Danny shared with me that he'd been practicing something called prospective hindsight.
With my colleague, Christoph Wachter, we accepted the invitation of the Swiss Embassy.
This is a black coral called Leiopathes, an image taken by my colleague, Brendan Roark, about 500 meters below Hawaii.
And even more mind-blowing, is my close
colleague
Vincent Pieribone at Yale, who has actually designed and engineered a fluorescent protein that responds to voltage.
While one
colleague
is busy translating incoming speeches in real time, the other gives support by locating documents, looking up words, and tracking down pertinent information.
I was at a dinner with a
colleague
who works at Microsoft Research and I said, "We wanted to do this study, Google said no, it's kind of a bummer."
For example, listening to gravity, just in this way, can tell us a lot about the collision of two black holes, something my
colleague
Scott has spent an awful lot of time thinking about.
Here's my
colleague
and one of the key members of the LIGO collaboration, Matt Evans, my
colleague
at MIT, addressing exactly that: (Audio) Matt Evans: The kinds of stars which produce the black holes that we observed here are the dinosaurs of the Universe.
Created by logician Raymond Smullyan and popularized by his
colleague
George Boolos, this riddle has been called the hardest logic puzzle ever.
Last April, I traveled to Jordan with my colleague, the development economist Paul Collier, and we brainstormed an idea while we were there with the international community and the government, an idea to bring jobs to Syrians while supporting Jordan's national development strategy.
Then a year or two later, Natalia was at a conference in Bristol, and she saw that a
colleague
of hers named Mike Buckley was demoing this new process that he called "collagen fingerprinting."
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