Comment
in sentence
1308 examples of Comment in a sentence
And when the leaks started, the very first thing I tweeted about this was a
comment
about how, when you've been using search engines, you've been potentially leaking all that to U.S. intelligence.
And the
comment
section for that video became sort of like a self-help section, where people could talk about their tonsil stone experiences and, like, tips and tricks for getting rid of them.
What's amazing about this, this report, that didn't get that much attention, is the fact that not only were there 2,776 abuses, the chairman of the Senate Intelligence Committee, Dianne Feinstein, had not seen this report until the Washington Post contacted her asking for
comment
on the report.
Is that a fair
comment?
There's a bunch of code, and I get some friends to help, and we crack the code, and then inside that is another code, and then there are some equations, and then we solve those equations, and then finally out pops a message from Google which is their official answer to my article, and it said, "No comment."
With this image here, a
comment
on the Olympics in Athens, I assumed that the reader of the "New Yorker" would have some rudimentary idea of Greek art.
"You guys are so funny just standing around," was the typical comment, and they weren't funny, not while doing surgery.
They all seemed to get a really big laugh out of that comment, but it wasn't until a few years later that I fully understood what they thought was so funny.
Every week, every student must contribute to the class discussion, and also must
comment
on the contribution of others.
But this one
comment
kind of describes what we are discussing here today.
Well, this
comment
from an executive that I worked with recently illustrates that experience.
Because obviously it's making a
comment
about our culture right now: that we can't tell what's real.
She posts it to YouTube and she asks people to please leave a comment: "Am I pretty or am I ugly?"
We focus on the complexities of youth and family discord, but our friends kept on nudging us to
comment
on drones and target killings to make the film "more relevant," essentially reducing these people who have entrusted us with their stories into sociopolitical symbols.
We proposed a building that was audacious, that was different than any of the forms that the community was used to, and we were scared and our client was scared and the community was scared, so we created a series of photorealistic renderings that we put onto Facebook and we put onto Instagram, and we let people start to do what they do: share it, comment, like it, hate it.
Granted, it was before social media, but people could still
comment
online, e-mail stories, and, of course, e-mail cruel jokes.
To become an upstander means instead of bystander apathy, we can post a positive
comment
for someone or report a bullying situation.
I put this picture online, and sure enough, within the first few minutes, someone left a
comment
that said, "You can take that Scottish Saltire and shove it up your ass." (Laughter) See, people are passionate about flags, you know?
Would I brush off that comment, take a million pictures, and not be distracted for an instant from the pure joy of that moment, and by doing that, walk out with the shame that comes up for not standing up for myself, especially in front of my niece.
But I made this particular
comment
at a convention once of national parks officers, and this guy from North Carolina sidled up to me, he says, "You know, you oughtn't be so hard on your Connecticut, cause we here in North Carolina, we got 35,000 dams."
BG: I would like your
comment
on something that was in newspapers this morning.
Given the context, his words should have been rendered as, "We will live to see you buried," meaning that Communism would outlast Capitalism, a less threatening
comment.
But I do love other people who
comment
and get involved in my project.
Often, they underestimated the impact whistle-blowing had on their family, but what they continue to
comment
on is how hard it is to withhold the truth.
The first
comment
comes in.
I didn't bother to explain, but that night in my climbing journal, I duly noted my free solo of Half Dome, but I included a frowny face and a comment, "Do better?"
There's you, there's a stranger, there's some third thing that you both might see and
comment
on, like a piece of public art or somebody preaching in the street or somebody wearing funny clothes.
Make a
comment
about that third thing, and see if starts a conversation.
So Esther, when you were watching Helen's talk, was there any part of it that resonated with you through the lens of your own work that you'd like to
comment
on?
It's not even easy to
comment
on.
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