Common
in sentence
6128 examples of Common in a sentence
It's a sentiment that's pretty
common
among female engineers that I work with and that I know.
She said the one thing that brought the successful women together, the one thing that they had in common, was the fact that they had good mentors.
And then, using deep learning, the algorithm looks for all these textures and wrinkles and shape changes on our face, and basically learns that all smiles have
common
characteristics, all smirks have subtly different characteristics.
And on paper, she had so much more in
common
with him: language, culture, history, family, her community was her lifeline here, but her moral compass trumped all of that.
We need to take into account these differences and how they affect us, as much as we account for what we have in
common.
For the most basic, most common, most frustrating part of being a patient.
For example, he discouraged giving the diagnosis to children who had seizures but now we know that epilepsy is very
common
in autism.
He believed that autism and autistic traits are
common
and always have been, seeing aspects of this continuum in familiar archetypes from pop culture like the socially awkward scientist and the absent-minded professor.
What is it about my brother's brain and his schizophrenia that he cannot connect his dreams to a
common
and shared reality, so they instead become delusion?
For a long period of time, we believed in a natural ranking order in the world around us, also known as the great chain of being, or "Scala naturae" in Latin, a top-down structure that normally starts with God at the very top, followed by angels, noblemen,
common
people, animals, and so on.
Abortion is
common.
It was really hard to obtain, because it's not
common
practice to ask for a picture of your own cancer.
JG: So, here's something all four of these videos have in common: They all have more than half a million views on YouTube.
We listed performance metrics for the most
common
stocks, but I wanted to help investors see how the stocks are doing.
What was I supposed to do? Ignore her? My wife and I managed to raise the funds to cover her treatment, but situations like Theresa were
common
every day, where people had the wrong diseases.
But what Tom Rando, a stem-cell researcher, reported in 2007, was that old muscle from a mouse can be rejuvenated if it's exposed to young blood through
common
circulation.
That error is so common, we even have a name for it: affirming the consequent, or the fallacy of the converse.
But as I've made these discoveries, I noticed a framework of really three simple things that all these different passionate world-changers have in common, whether you're a Steve Jobs or if you're just, you know, the person that has the bakery down the street.
To sum things up, in terms of these three pillars, they all have one thing in
common
more than anything else.
To say Olu is from Nigeria and Udo is from Argentina distracts from their
common
experience.
A Mexican gardener in Los Angeles and a Nepali housekeeper in Delhi have more in
common
in terms of rituals and restrictions than nationality implies.
I didn't have a wealthy network of individuals to turn to for investment, so I went to venture capitalists the most
common
form of investor in a technology company.
Some suspect these differing multiverse hypotheses may eventually coalesce into a
common
description, or be replaced by something else.
So this is a very
common
disease.
And two, that maybe that, the degeneration or dysfunction of this stem cell is what's causing osteochondral arthritis, a very
common
ailment.
They have a journey in common: a pilgrimage to Canterbury to visit the shrine of St. Thomas Beckett, a martyred archbishop who was murdered in his own Cathedral.
These benefits may have shifted ancient people’s thinking toward graves designed to honor the dead, and burial became more
common.
I loved their innovation, I loved how fast they worked, I loved their unorthodox approach to ideas to solve an everyday,
common
problem, whose solution should be simple.
"Common
time" is a musical term with a specific time signature of four beats per measure.
Yet when I see the word
"common
time," what automatically comes to mind for me is "at the same time."
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