Gives
in sentence
3714 examples of Gives in a sentence
And I thought, no, it's a very intimate look, but it's not a look a daughter
gives
her father.
I basically shot everything with short lenses, which means that you're very close to the action, but framed it very similarly to the long lens shots which
gives
you a sense of distance, so I was basically was setting up something that would remind you of something you haven't really quite seen before.
So this
gives
you a little bit of an idea of the sound world of this instrument, which I think is quite interesting and it puts me in the role of the inventor, and the nice thing about — This instrument is called the Mouseketeer ... (Laughter) and the cool thing about it is I'm the world's greatest Mouseketeer player.
Okay? (Music) So that
gives
you a little taste of that piece.
It
gives
me something to do, something to work towards.
This one that appeared in Science last year, for example, demonstrates that even simple retrieval practice, where students are just supposed to repeat what they already learned
gives
considerably improved results on various achievement tests down the line than many other educational interventions.
The mastery-based population was a full standard deviation, or sigma, in achievement scores better than the standard lecture-based class, and the individual tutoring
gives
you 2 sigma improvement in performance.
And it
gives
me a lot of hope.
It
gives
you the rewarding feeling out of doing fun things, including taking risks.
It
gives
you the kick out of taking risks.
That's based on diet intake surveys, it's based on levels of obesity, it's based on a range of factors that
gives
you an approximate guess as to how much food is actually going into people's mouths.
You plan on coming back, getting undressed, going to bed, waking up, doing it again, and that anticipation, that rhythm, helps give us a structure to how we organize ourselves and our lives, and
gives
it a measure of predictability.
And this little exercise here
gives
you a first good insight of the notion of area.
On TaskRabbit, it
gives
people control of their economic activity.
And then one of the professors starts to speak, and he says, "Your work
gives
me a feeling of joy."
It
gives
them the pie, it
gives
that kind of a behavioral punch which we've called a superpower.
That just
gives
you an example of the kind of thing that these games probe.
That is, we exploit the fact that the healthy partner, playing somebody with major depression, or playing somebody with autism spectrum disorder, or playing somebody with attention deficit hyperactivity disorder, we use that as a kind of biosensor, and then we use computer programs to model that person, and it
gives
us a kind of assay of this.
It
gives
us a way of reaching out to audiences around the globe, but nothing replaces the authenticity of the object presented with passionate scholarship.
Well, because it
gives
them good, paying jobs, or, in many African countries, unofficial opportunities to profit from corruption.
That's why we're starting to see more disclosure laws come out, so for example, on the environment, there's the Aarhus Convention, which is a European directive that
gives
people a very strong right to know, so if your water company is dumping water into your river, sewage water into your river, you have a right to know about it.
It
gives
you reference points.
The Army
gives
him a rifle.
Going back, that same 18-year-old boy graduates from high school in Kansas City, Missouri, joins the Army, the Army
gives
him a rifle, they send him to Iraq.
That fellow looks left and right, and spreads a newspaper, rolls it into the newspaper,
gives
it to me like a banned item, something like that.
So the real crux of the problem here is, how do you make a system that's a simple device but
gives
you a large mechanical advantage?
And as they slide their hand down the lever, they can push with a smaller effective lever length, but push through a bigger angle every stroke, which makes a faster rotational speed, and
gives
you an effective high gear.
This is an example that you might care about someday, and I hope you never do, because imagine if you ever get that call that
gives
you that bad news that you might have cancer.
It
gives
new meaning to models against animal testing, doesn't it?
More recently, Thomas Schelling
gives
the analogy of a homeowner who hears a rustling in the basement.
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