Decide
in sentence
2287 examples of Decide in a sentence
Prosecutors
decide
whether or not to take legal action against the people police arrest and they
decide
what charges to file, directly impacting how much time a defendant potentially faces behind bars.
After all, they decide, and they did.
But instead of the unwillingness of the candidates to allow the system to proceed and the people to decide, Ghana honored democracy and its people.
It didn't leave it up to the Supreme Court to decide; the people did.
So what happens for adults is we
decide
that something's relevant or important, we should pay attention to it.
And the officer in that film, in two days' time, will appear before an inquest jury in London, and they have the power to
decide
that Ian Tomlinson was unlawfully killed.
So we're trying to
decide
what to do with this, and the phone rings.
Imagine you're learning to play tennis and you want to
decide
where the ball is going to bounce as it comes over the net towards you.
But until recently, there hasn't been any data to help us
decide
either way.
Now light and temperature vary with each window's microclimate, so a window farm requires a farmer, and she must
decide
what kind of crops she is going to put in her window farm, and whether she is going to feed her food organically.
And it took a lot of courage for these defenders to
decide
that they would begin to stand up and support each other in implementing these laws.
Or what if our education professors consulted with our local public schools to
decide
how we're going to intervene with our at-risk students and then wrote about it in a local newspaper?
And this terrifies me because it implies that I could keep re-editing and rewriting forever and its up to me to
decide
when a poem is finished and when I can walk away from it.
So then you decide, "Well, I'm sick of myself.
When you have 20 people in front of you, looking at you and you are the one who has to
decide
... So we started doing some repairs.
And Friday night we're trying to
decide
between risky sex or happiness."
Whether it's as basic as trying to
decide
what restaurant to go to or as important as trying to
decide
who to spend the rest of your life with, human lives are filled with computational problems that are just too hard to solve by applying sheer effort.
Take the example of trying to
decide
what restaurant to go to.
The explore/exploit trade-off shows up any time you have to choose between trying something new and going with something that you already know is pretty good, whether it's listening to music or trying to
decide
who you're going to spend time with.
It's also the problem that technology companies face when they're trying to do something like
decide
what ad to show on a web page.
When you're trying to
decide
what restaurant to go to, the first question you should ask yourself is how much longer you're going to be in town.
If you've ever had to tidy up your wardrobe, you've run into a particularly agonizing decision: you have to
decide
what things you're going to keep and what things you're going to give away.
Each time you access a piece of information, it's loaded into the fast memory and the computer has to
decide
which item it has to remove from that memory, because it has limited capacity.
This says if you're going to
decide
to remove something from memory, you should take out the thing which was last accessed the furthest in the past.
The region, the U.K. and the U.S. decide, has to be kept safe from communism, and the superpower that will be created to do this would be Iran, the Shah.
And then they have to
decide
how they're going to invest in their 52 choices, and they never heard about what is a money market fund.
You will
decide
whether you want to donate your organs or not.
First reason is that no matter how many times people tell you, "If you want a great career, you have to pursue your passion, you have to pursue your dreams, you have to pursue the greatest fascination in your life," you hear it again and again, and then you
decide
not to do it.
It doesn't matter how many times you download Steven J.'s Stanford commencement address, you still look at it and
decide
not to do it.
I'm not quite sure why you
decide
not to do it.
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