Decide
in sentence
2287 examples of Decide in a sentence
Now you can be lost in the cloud for a day, a week, a month, a year, a whole career, but sometimes, if you're lucky enough and you have enough support, you can see in the materials at hand, or perhaps meditating on the shape of the cloud, a new answer, C, and you
decide
to go for it.
What I'm saying is, we should be less quick to
decide
that that change is terrible, we should be less quick to impose our likes and dislikes about words on other people, and we should be entirely reluctant to think that the English language is in trouble.
If you're thinking, "But that lets all of us
decide
what words mean," I would say, "Yes it does, and it always has." Dictionaries are a wonderful guide and resource, but there is no objective dictionary authority out there that is the final arbiter about what words mean.
When I graduated from college, I couldn't
decide
between two careers, philosophy and law.
If alternatives are equally good, you should just flip a coin between them, and it seems a mistake to think, here's how you should
decide
between careers, places to live, people to marry: Flip a coin.
You might
decide
to be a pink sock-wearing, cereal-loving, country-living banker, and I might
decide
to be a black sock-wearing, urban, donut-loving artist.
Blaise Pascal was a 17th-century mathematician who tried to bring scientific reasoning to the question of whether or not he should believe in God, and his wager went like this: Well, if God doesn't exist but I
decide
to believe in him nothing much is really lost.
But then this pushes the question back: If scientists don't use a single method, then how do they
decide
what's right and what's wrong?
Deep learning is a technology that can take a huge amount of data within one single domain and learn to predict or
decide
at superhuman accuracy.
Look again at Amel Zenoune's watch, forever frozen, and now please look at your own watch and
decide
this is the moment that you commit to supporting people like Amel.
She said to me, "I needed one month to
decide
which dress to wear."
As a statistician, I want people to show me the data so I can
decide
for myself.
Think about how experiments in participatory budgeting, where everyday citizens get a chance to allocate and
decide
upon the allocation of city funds.
How about we decide, these are, in a way, becoming fundamental rights, the right to communicate with whom I want.
If I really struggle morally and agonize and I
decide
to do the right thing, what difference does it make, because there are an infinite number of versions of me also doing the right thing and an infinite number doing the wrong thing.
We
decide
what gets attention based on what we give our attention to.
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.
We have to
decide
whether to do it well or badly, the economic, or structural, transformation.
But the second of the transformations, the climate transformations, we have to
decide
to do.
Of course, our elected representatives are not saying, "Yes, we're going to vote according to what citizens decide," but they're willing to try.
As citizens, we are ready to
decide
on our common destinies, because we know that the way we distribute power says a lot about how we actually value everyone, and because we know that enabling and participating in local politics is a sign that we truly care about our relations to one another, and we are ready to do this in cities around the world right now.
It is up to us to
decide
whether we want schools or parking lots, community-driven recycling projects or construction sites, loneliness or solidarity, cars or buses, and it is our responsibility to do that now, for ourselves, for our families, for the people who make our lives worth living, and for the incredible creativity, beauty, and wonder that make our cities, in spite of all of their problems, the greatest invention of our time.
We've made similarly sinister design decisions on any number of issues, from water infrastructure to where we
decide
to place grocery stores versus liquor stores, or even for whom and how we design and fund technology products.
But at the core, it's this fundamental design principle, this choice of whether we're going to
decide
to take care of everyone.
So you decide, perhaps let me pass a law.
You
decide
you want to print money.
If you look at their patent carefully, especially if you have any engineering background or talent, you may
decide
that you see one or two points where the design is not perfectly adequate.
And if we have it, you'll
decide
how many miles to drive, what mode of travel, where to live and work.
We have to
decide
what it means.
So who knows what humanity will benefit from should this plant
decide
to reveal all its secrets.
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