Cultural
in sentence
2092 examples of Cultural in a sentence
We definitely need a new breed of engineers that will go out and do this kind of work and rediscover for us these values, these
cultural
values that we badly need, especially today.
Something similar seems to happen with exaggerated conceptions of how technology is going to overpower in the very immediate run all
cultural
barriers, all political barriers, all geographic barriers, because at this point I know you aren't allowed to ask me questions, but when I get to this point in my lecture with my students, hands go up, and people ask me, "Yeah, but what about Facebook?"
I don't want to live in a world where
cultural
literacy has been replaced by these little bubbles of specialty, so that none of us know about the common associations that used to bind our civilization together.
I feel like our civilization works when this is a vast
cultural
heritage that we all share and that we know without having to outsource it to our devices, to our search engines and our smartphones.
LB: These works are on China's
cultural
memories.
And if you look at the red and blue electoral map of the United States, and if I were to tell you, "Oh, the blue is what designates all of the major nonprofit
cultural
institutions," I'd be telling you the truth.
It's one of those
cultural
myths, like, "The British are reserved."
Because baseball is the dominant
cultural
metaphor that Americans use to think about and talk about sexual activity, and we know that because there's all this language in English that seems to be talking about baseball but that's really talking about sexual activity.
For thousands of years, you have civil society, yet they are consistent and coherent and part of a political order, and I think it's a big
cultural
difference.
And I don't think I need to tell you that the discovery of life elsewhere in our solar system, whether it be on Enceladus or elsewhere, would have enormous
cultural
and scientific implications.
Or in Peru, Pedro Miguel Schiaffino, a great chef and a good friend, who goes to the farthest corner of the Amazon looking for ingredients, traditions and craftsmanship, because he believes that by bringing them back to his restaurant he can convince the 10 million inhabitants of Lima that using these products will bring prosperity to these communities, while also showing respect and giving value to their
cultural
identity.
In a matter of seconds, a soundscape reveals much more information from many perspectives, from quantifiable data to
cultural
inspiration.
It connects us with other people as almost nothing else can, across language barriers, across social and
cultural
and economic divides.
Let's get rid of this
cultural
cringe.
But along with the scientific challenge and the economic challenge, there's also a
cultural
challenge, and this is probably the part about malaria that people don't like to talk about.
And so this poses a huge
cultural
challenge in taming malaria, because if people think it's normal to have malaria, then how do you get them to run to the doctor to get diagnosed, to pick up their prescription, to get it filled, to take the drugs, to put on the repellents, to tuck in the bed nets?
This is a huge
cultural
challenge in taming this disease.
They understood the
cultural
challenge.
But now, I think, the dilemma is the
cultural
challenge.
In Tana Toraja, the most important social moments in people's lives, the focal points of social and
cultural
interaction are not weddings or births or even family dinners, but funerals.
So this
cultural
complex surrounding death, the ritual enactment of the end of life, has made death the most visible and remarkable aspect of Toraja's landscape.
And as an anthropologist, I see these differences in experience being rooted in the
cultural
and social world through which we define the phenomena around us.
So by having death as a part of the
cultural
and social fabric of life, people's everyday decisions about their health and healthcare are affected.
He made a lot of really interesting
cultural
references.
This is a picture of Times Square in the '50s, and despite all of the technological innovation,
cultural
changes, political changes, this is Times Square in 2008.
We can grow cities that are high-tech, but also respond to the timeless
cultural
needs of the human spirit.
Health is still not something that we should be proud of in Oklahoma City, but we seem to have turned the
cultural
shift of making health a greater priority.
The other set of reasons for variation in the treatment of the elderly is the society's
cultural
values.
Cultural
values that emphasize respect for older people contrast with the low status of the elderly in the U.S. Older Americans are at a big disadvantage in job applications.
Now, there's a third wave of migration happening in Detroit: a new ascendant of
cultural
entrepreneurs.
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