Exercise
in sentence
1248 examples of Exercise in a sentence
For example, we had an
exercise
where we all stood in a circle, and each person had to do the world's worst tap dance, and everybody else applauded and cheered you on, supporting you onstage.
Now, people who don't
exercise
their normative powers in hard choices are drifters.
Counselling and support groups, cognitive behavioral therapy, and moderate intensity
exercise
also help smokers stay cigarette-free.
He says, "Well, do you two exercise?"
So over the course of that year and a half Donald's eating changed and our
exercise
regimen changed, and his heart rate responded, his blood pressure responded to that change that he made in his body.
And I want to invite you in particular to try a simple
exercise
drawn from the early frameworks of this curriculum.
They want to know how much
exercise
your dog is getting.
My vivacious sister, who gets more
exercise
than I do, and who, like perhaps many people in this room, increasingly talks about a lethal illness in the past tense.
For them, "doing bad things" typically means doing something that poses meaningful challenges to the
exercise
of our own power.
The idea of voting as our only
exercise
in citizenship does not make sense anymore.
If the protests that swept Brazil in June 2013 have taught us anything, it's that every time we try to
exercise
our power outside of an electoral context, we are beaten up, humiliated or arrested.
Because they're not an
exercise
of top-down perfectionism, they are about the network.
For example, Marty is the husband of that actress I mentioned, and he watched them when they were practicing, and he was soon talking to Wally, my friend the ex-con, about that
exercise
regime.
For instance, we set the best of intentions to
exercise
after the holidays, but actually, the majority of Americans find that their New Year's resolutions are broken by Valentine's Day.
Some people may literally see
exercise
as more difficult, and some people might literally see
exercise
as easier.
That led us to think that maybe people with strong motivations and strong goals to
exercise
might actually see the finish line as closer than people who have weaker motivations.
Based on feedback that we gave them, some of our participants told us they're not motivated to
exercise
any more.
Other people, though, based on our feedback, told us they were highly motivated to
exercise.
Importantly, though, this only happened for people who were not motivated to
exercise.
On the other hand, people who were highly motivated to
exercise
saw the distance as short.
So our bodies can change how far away that finish line looks, but people who had committed to a manageable goal that they could accomplish in the near future and who believed that they were capable of meeting that goal actually saw the
exercise
as easier.
That led us to wonder, is there a strategy that we could use and teach people that would help change their perceptions of the distance, help them make
exercise
look easier?
We thought that this strategy would help make the
exercise
look easier.
We were really excited because it meant that this strategy helped make the
exercise
look easier, but the big question was, could this help make
exercise
actually better?
Could it improve the quality of
exercise
as well?
We designed this
exercise
in particular to be moderately challenging but not impossible, like most exercises that actually improve our fitness.
So the big question, then: Did keeping your eyes on the prize and narrowly focusing on the finish line change their experience of the
exercise?
People who kept their eyes on the prize told us afterward that it required 17 percent less exertion for them to do this
exercise
than people who looked around naturally.
It changed their subjective experience of the
exercise.
It also changed the objective nature of their
exercise.
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