Courage
in sentence
1192 examples of Courage in a sentence
The stories we tell about a movement like the First Intifada or the United States Civil Rights era matter deeply and have a critical influence in the choices Palestinians, Americans and people around the world will make next time they encounter an injustice and develop the
courage
to confront it.
But if you look at what we've done, if you have the
courage
to really look at it, you'll see that not only do our kids think their worth comes from grades and scores, but that when we live right up inside their precious developing minds all the time, like our very own version of the movie "Being John Malkovich," we send our children the message: "Hey kid, I don't think you can actually achieve any of this without me."
Five years later, Icelanders had the
courage
to be the first country in the world to democratically elect a woman as their president.
I think largely this has to do with unconscious bias, because in media, much like everywhere else, we have both conscious and unconscious bias, and we need to have the
courage
to talk about it if we want to change it.
And it's two things that I think are very important in that, in surrounding yourself with people and practices that nourish you, but it's equally important, maybe even more important, to have the
courage
to get rid of people and practices that take away your energy, including the wonderful bloggers and commentators.
I am incredibly glad that I had the
courage
to run, to risk failure but receive success on so many levels.
When we tap into our passion, we give ourselves the courage, in our own eyes, to speak up, but we also get the permission from others to speak up.
Tell her you were brave, and always, always in the company of courage, mostly the days when you just had yourself.
We must have the
courage
and urgency to practice stopping it as it is unfolding.
Or can we, through a combination of imagination and common sense and
courage
find a way to manage this rivalry without a war nobody wants, and everybody knows would be catastrophic?
Or can we summon the imagination and
courage
to find a way to survive together, to share the leadership in the 21st century, or, as Xi Jinping [said], to create a new form of great power relations?
Two: acknowledge the other person's
courage.
Kindness demands courage."
So, after eight years of writing, and nearly 16 years after that dire night, I mustered the
courage
to propose a wild idea: that we'd meet up in person and face our past once and for all.
I think we can match their
courage
with some support.
Ultimately, maybe that hill really is too steep, but she'll come to that conclusion through courage, not fear.
With compassion,
courage
and understanding, we can walk side by side and support one another, and think about how society can change if we all do that instead of judging on only what you can see.
It gave me
courage.
And so, dream with me what a 21st-century scientist slash engineer could look like: individuals who are driven to master the sciences so that they can serve society, and are also aware of the tremendous power their knowledge and decisions have; folks who are developing their moral
courage
at all times, and who realize that conflict and controversy are not necessarily bad things if our ultimate loyalty is to the public and the planet.
Let's have the
courage
to look each other in the eye, because by looking, we can open a whole world to someone else.
In order to do good, we need memory, we need
courage
and we need creativity.
And in that sense, I think civility is actually closely related to another virtue, the virtue of
courage.
So mere civility is having the
courage
to make yourself disagreeable, and to stay that way, but to do so while staying in the room and staying present to your opponents.
And above all, you must have the
courage
to unflinchingly pursue the truth.
You may use your faith to make people afraid and terrify them into submission, or you can use it to give
courage
to people so they rise to the greatest heights of enlightenment.
And most of all, we've learned from the
courage
of Liberia's community health workers that we as people are not defined by the conditions we face, no matter how hopeless they seem.
Now, at 59 years old, I only hope to have a tiny bit of the
courage
and mental clarity I had at 24, and that way, never again remain quiet.
That's called
courage.
And just like fear,
courage
is contagious.
When I got out to those protests about the fourth or fifth day, it was not out of courage; it was out of guilt.
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