Culture
in sentence
3267 examples of Culture in a sentence
Matcha became so popular that a distinct Chinese tea
culture
emerged.
Although Roman
culture
was never fully lost, its influence declined and new art styles arose focused on religious symbolism and allegory rather than proportion and realism.
In that case, the Voynich manuscript might be like the rongorongo script invented on Easter Island, now unreadable after the
culture
that made it collapsed.
Those who believe the manuscript was an attempt to create a new form of written language speculate that it might be an encyclopedia containing the knowledge of the
culture
that produced it.
Or the lost knowledge of a forgotten
culture?
Economic growth is important, but that economic growth must not come from undermining our unique
culture
or our pristine environment.
Today, our
culture
is flourishing.
So our
culture
is flourishing, but so is our environment.
That is exactly the kind of hope and
culture
change we are trying to create.
It is about the future of the freedom to be as social beings with each other, and the way information, knowledge and
culture
will be produced.
It's when they go from being political and advocacy issues to being part of pop culture, voices coming from everywhere, celebrities using their platforms, musicians, athletes.
But they excelled at covering ground, and in a remarkable diaspora surpassing even the dinosaurs' record of territorial conquest, they dispersed across the planet, ravishing every ecosystem they encountered, along the way, inventing
culture
and metalworking and painting and dance and music and science and rocket ships that would eventually take 12 particularly excellent apes to the surface of the Moon.
Ideas are the most powerful force shaping human
culture.
And so I repurposed this code to train a system on one person in our
culture
who would never need to be surveilled in that manner, which is Britney Spears.
And it's the responsibility of the artist to ask questions about what that technology means and how it reflects our
culture.
And so what I want to talk about today is trying to take these ideas that we've seen in the musical
culture
and try to bring these towards reinventing the way we think about writing books, using them and teaching from them.
Because, in fact, I got up here and I talked about how great the music
culture
is.
And at the same time, you know, as my people are dying, my
culture
is also dying.
Because, you know, we have this
culture
inferiority, which means that anything that comes from us is not good enough.
And that's why I start the businesses that I start, that's usually consumer brands, that have embedded in them the very best of my African
culture.
Another possibility is that the social transformations that have shaped our
culture
may have also changed the structural columns of human thought.
Here I'd like to propose that in the same way we can reconstruct how the ancient Greek cities looked just based on a few bricks, that the writings of a
culture
are the archaeological records, the fossils, of human thought.
And in fact, doing some form of psychological analysis of some of the most ancient books of human culture, Julian Jaynes came up in the '70s with a very wild and radical hypothesis: that only 3,000 years ago, humans were what today we would call schizophrenics.
And for the performing artists we bring, it's a window into a
culture
they otherwise would not have had exposure to.
At this time, medieval books chronicling the adventures of knights and their moral code dominated European
culture.
But his treatise on the power of creativity and individualism has inspired art, literature, popular culture, and even political revolution.
Obviously the impact of your work has been written about and I'm sure you've heard about it all your life: what it meant to people, what it meant to our culture, you heard the applause when I just named the names of the shows, you raised half the people in the room through your work.
You managed to push
culture
forward through your art while also achieving world-beating commercial success.
But most of the time, the world's population is living without real access to arts and
culture.
First, I am no expert in art or
culture.
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