Growing
in sentence
6077 examples of Growing in a sentence
When I was a child
growing
up in Maine, one of my favorite things to do was to look for sand dollars on the seashores of Maine, because my parents told me it would bring me luck.
India has the youngest
growing
population in the world.
For many people, this means, I wish I'd spent more time with my family, with my kids when they were
growing
up.
From the Women's March to the Me Too movement, we have the
growing
political will of the people necessary to create lasting, legal change.
We really do have it going right that the continent is
growing
at rates that people had thought would not happen.
The economies were not
growing.
Many of us will remember our childhood
growing
up, maybe you got stung by a bee, you saw bees on flowers.
I mean, we matched the new color of the inside of their rooms to do some type of a stained wood with blue for their sheets, and these bees are terrific, and they also will use herbs that are
growing
in the garden.
From a few oases, the territories with peace and prosperity are
growing
and could someday encompass the globe.
Every new fact that is uncovered adds to the
growing
body of our collective knowledge.
And you would think
growing
up in a place like New York, it would be easy for a first-generation person to find their place.
But with those seeds, from day one, we are
growing
in my classroom, and this is what it looks like in my classroom.
And when we realized that we were
growing
for food justice in the South Bronx, so did the international community.
And these are my future farmers of America,
growing
up in Brook Park on 141st Street, the most migrant community in America.
My green [unclear] 25,000 pounds of vegetables, I'm
growing
organic citizens, engaged kids.
We are
growing
our way into a new economy.
It's called vegetable tourism, and believe it or not, people come from all over the world to poke around in our raised beds, even when there's not much
growing.
But it isn't just about growing, because we all are part of this jigsaw.
It's about taking those artistic people in your community and doing some fabulous designs in those raised beds to explain to people what's
growing
there, because there's so many people that don't really recognize a vegetable unless it's in a bit of plastic with a bit of an instruction packet on the top.
We are designing and building an aquaponics unit in some land that was spare at the back of the high school, like you do, and now we're going to be
growing
fish and vegetables in an orchard with bees, and the kids are helping us build that, and the kids are on the board, and because the community was really keen on working with the high school, the high school is now teaching agriculture, and because it's teaching agriculture, we started to think, how could we then get those kids that never had a qualification before in their lives but are really excited about growing, how can we give them some more experience?
And then there's the third plate, because if you walk through an edible landscape, and if you're learning new skills, and if you start to get interested in what's
growing
seasonally, you might just want to spend more of your own money in support of local producers, not just veg, but meat and cheese and beer and whatever else it might be.
People after the earthquake in New Zealand visited us in order to incorporate some of this public spiritedness around local
growing
into the heart of Christchurch.
Gardening has taught me that planting and
growing
a garden is the same process as creating our lives.
Being a retailer, it is a play on the belief that this middle-class that's
growing
will continue to grow, that the boom and the confidence in consumer spending will continue.
Today, 16 African countries and
growing
have sovereign country ratings.
According to the latest survey being done by the European Commission, 89 percent of the citizens of Europe believe that there is a
growing
gap between the opinion of the policy-makers and the opinion of the public.
But he was also in Oxford in the '50s, and yet
growing
up as a child in Nigeria, my father used to say to me, "You must never eat or drink in a Yoruba person's house because they will poison you."
And I was
growing
up in school and the federal government didn't want us taught about the history of the war, because they thought it probably would make us generate a new generation of rebels.
My story of Nigeria
growing
up was very different from the story I encountered in prison, and I had no language for it.
But I was a super ambitious student
growing
up.
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