Culture
in sentence
3267 examples of Culture in a sentence
In an effort to create a
culture
within my classroom where students feel safe sharing the intimacies of their own silences, I have four core principles posted on the board that sits in the front of my class, which every student signs at the beginning of the year: read critically, write consciously, speak clearly, tell your truth.
In the
culture
and mythology of democracy, power resides with the people.
Because the lunch lady has not been treated very kindly in popular
culture
over time.
At 88, she has saved 12,000 girls, and she has changed the
culture
in the country.
You know, for a vain female like myself, it's very hard to age in this
culture.
There's all these hidden algorithms that decide what you see more of and what we all see more of based on what you click on, and that in turn shapes our whole
culture.
Our whole
culture
gets burned.
But along the way, I've learned that it's not just the technical side, but there's also this thing called the
culture
of crap.
Second, students treat the whole patient, mind and body, in the context of their families, their communities and their
culture.
She is well trained, can be counted on, and shares the face and
culture
of her patients, and she deserves our support surely, because whether by subway, mule, or canoe, she is teaching us to walk the walk.
And it's about our fixation with celebrity and celebrity culture, and the importance of the image: celebrity is born of photography.
Because obviously it's making a comment about our
culture
right now: that we can't tell what's real.
So, Jamie Oliver and school dinners; Bush and Blair having difficulty getting alongside Muslim culture; the whole of the hunting issue, and the royal family refusing to stop hunting; and the tsunami issues; and obviously Harry; Blair's views on Gordon Brown, which I find very interesting; Condi and Bush.
These trends are teamed with the stereotyping and flagrant objectification of women in today's popular
culture.
But in an image-obsessed culture, we are training our kids to spend more time and mental effort on their appearance at the expense of all of the other aspects of their identities.
The second is media and celebrity culture, then how to handle teasing and bullying, the way we compete and compare with one another based on looks, talking about appearance — some people call this "body talk" or "fat talk" — and finally, the foundations of respecting and looking after yourself.
Ultimately, we need to work together as communities, as governments and as businesses to really change this
culture
of ours so that our kids grow up valuing their whole selves, valuing individuality, diversity, inclusion.
Right now, our
culture'
s obsession with image is holding us all back.
The other kids would embrace my
culture
as well, sometimes even praying right alongside me.
It would be easy for me to blame those of another
culture
for making me feel the pain I felt, but when I think deeper, I also recognize that the most impactful, positive, life-changing events that have happened to me are thanks to those people who are different than me.
It's about haves and have-nots, and that's become part of our
culture.
But it also taps into a lot of our deepest fears, and about 30 years ago, the
culture
critic Neil Postman wrote a book called "Amusing Ourselves to Death," which lays this out really brilliantly.
He said, Orwell feared we would become a captive
culture.
Huxley feared we would become a trivial
culture.
We all need to create a global
culture
of human rights and be investors in a global human rights economy, and by working in this mindset, we can significantly improve justice globally.
We can create a
culture
of transparency and accountability to the laws, and make governments more accountable to us, as we are to them.
Now, for those of you who have lived in the global South, you'll know that missed calls are a really critical part of global mobile
culture.
I also fear that the
culture
of rapid failure could be minimizing the devastating consequences of the failure of a business.
Well, I was there to research on Sufi rituals in Chechnya, actually — incredible
culture
of Sufism in Chechnya, which is absolutely unknown outside of the region.
It's really important, because that's the way people are going to look differently at their own culture, at their own land.
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