Experience
in sentence
6469 examples of Experience in a sentence
Number 13: On occasion, the victim, female or male, may
experience
a physical response, but this is not a sexual response in the sense of desire or mutuality."
So I washed up on a Dublin ferry port about 12 years ago, a professional foreigner, if you like, and I'm sure you've all had this
experience
before, yeah?
Maybe you've had that
experience
as well.
If a soldier sees his friend blown up, his brain goes into such high alarm that he can't actually put the
experience
into words, so he just feels the horror over and over again.
For every one single neuron, you can actually have from 10,000 to 100,000 different connections or dendrites or whatever you want to call it, and every time you learn something, or you have an experience, that bush grows, you know, that bush of information.
I lacked the
experience.
It's because perception is grounded in our
experience.
I was amazed at the ideas that they had, and I wanted others to
experience
this wonderland as well.
We blast the air conditioning the entire way, and we never
experience
overheating.
The brain develops in response to
experience
and to stimulation.
Indeed, the very famous philosopher Thomas Nagel once said, "To truly
experience
an alien life form on this planet, you should lock yourself inside a room with a flying, echolocating bat in complete darkness."
Basically, I send people signals at random points throughout the day, and then I ask them a bunch of questions about their moment-to-moment
experience
at the instant just before the signal.
Maybe, to really be happy, we need to stay completely immersed and focused on our
experience
in the moment.
Remember, this is from sort of moment-to-moment
experience
in people's real lives.
So many artists speak about needing to be open, to embrace experience, and that's hard to do when you have a lighted rectangle in your pocket that takes all of your focus.
So being open for that
experience
that might change you is the first thing we need to embrace.
Richard Serra had to let go of painting in order to embark on this playful exploration that led him to the work that he's known for today: huge curves of steel that require our time and motion to
experience.
So
experience
and challenge and limitations are all things we need to embrace for creativity to flourish.
We all wrestle with
experience
and challenge, limits and loss.
I know most of you have had the
experience
of coming back home and finding your kids playing these kinds of games.
The biggest lesson I learned was many years later when I went to Beverly Hills and I ran into a talent agent who looked at me up and down and said I don't look like I have any
experience
to be working in this business.
I've traveled all the way from Cleveland and Essex in East New York, took the local 6 line up to the hookers of Hunt's Point who were in my way on my way to master the art of space, and the one-to-infinite amount of man, woman and child you can fit in there only so I can push them to the back of the wall with my
experience.
People have bought tickets to my
experience
and used them as refrigerator magnets to let them know that the revolution is near, so stock up.
Mallory's argument that leaving the house, embarking on these grand adventures is joyful and fun, however, doesn't tally that neatly with my own
experience.
And it seems to me, therefore, that the doing, you know, to try to experience, to engage, to endeavor, rather than to watch and to wonder, that's where the real meat of life is to be found, the juice that we can suck out of our hours and days.
In my experience, there is something addictive about tasting life at the very edge of what's humanly possible.
Mallory postulated that there is something in man that responds to the challenge of the mountain, and I wonder if that's the case whether there's something in the challenge itself, in the endeavor, and particularly in the big, unfinished, chunky challenges that face humanity that call out to us, and in my
experience
that's certainly the case.
It's still ugly to this day, but in my experience, it is really, really hard to find an economist under 40 who still has that kind of way of seeing the world.
And that gets me back to the dollar, and it gets me back to reminding myself that we know this
experience.
The mind, our most valuable and precious resource, through which we
experience
every single moment of our life.
Back
Next
Related words
Their
People
About
Which
Would
There
Movie
Other
World
Countries
Could
Years
Through
Should
First
Where
Really
Being
After
Great