Happen
in sentence
5060 examples of Happen in a sentence
CO: I decided to stay in the country, give up the master's in Moscow and to work full-time to make this
happen.
Can we apply the techniques that worked here to this? T.S. Eliot once said, "One of the most momentous things that can
happen
to a culture is that they acquire a new form of prose."
A momentous thing that can
happen
to a culture is they can acquire a new style of arguing: trial by jury, voting, peer review, now this.
They understand that theater and performance can
happen
anywhere.
But as well as being regenerative by design, our economies must be distributive by design, and we've got unprecedented opportunities for making that happen, because 20th-century centralized technologies, institutions, concentrated wealth, knowledge and power in few hands.
I also worried that nothing would ever
happen
to them, or that they would have nothing to say to me.
So, if you really want to help these workers, start these small, very focused, very pragmatic classes in these schools, and what's going to
happen
is, all your workers are going to move on, but hopefully they'll move on into higher jobs within Apple, and you can help their social mobility and their self-improvement.
The ability to create is the most empowering thing that can
happen
to an individual.
And it's just wonderful to see these glimmers of the promise of what can
happen
if we train our kids right.
It has massively parallel processing capability, and it's going to change the way drugs are discovered, we hope, and I think eventually what's going to
happen
is that we're going to want to re-screen drugs, on arrays like this, that already exist, all of the drugs that currently exist, and in the future, you're going to be taking drugs and treatments that have been tested for side effects on all of the relevant cells, on brain cells and heart cells and liver cells.
If the space I'm sending it in is not effective, that communication can't
happen.
You're never, there's just, juxtapositions are possible that just aren't, you don't think they're going to
happen.
Now, it could happen, but I'm not going to plan my life around it.
And this is the great team that helped us make it
happen.
It's because leaders, what we do is we connect improbable connections and hope something will happen, and in that room I found so many connections between people across all of London, and so leadership, connecting people, is the great question today.
You know, how do you, as the leader, scan, connect, make things
happen?
Now we expect that to
happen
with silly stories about precognition, but the problem is, we have exactly the same problem in academia and in medicine, and in this environment, it costs lives.
But it doesn't just
happen
in the dry academic field of psychology.
But it doesn't just
happen
in the very dry world of preclinical basic science cancer research.
And then I got this image in my head of what would
happen
if you yanked the wire from the wall and if you started to follow it.
We've got to make it
happen.
People are supposed to be good at making stuff
happen.
When I realized the power of this new world, I quit my safe teaching job, and set up a virtual business school, the first in the world, in order to teach people how to make this happen, and I used some of my learnings about some of the rules which I'd learned on myself.
It's not going to happen, I don't think.
So one of the things I've been doing over the last few years is really compiling data on things that could either
happen
within national borders or across national borders, and I've looked at the cross-border component as a percentage of the total.
Something similar seems to
happen
with exaggerated conceptions of how technology is going to overpower in the very immediate run all cultural barriers, all political barriers, all geographic barriers, because at this point I know you aren't allowed to ask me questions, but when I get to this point in my lecture with my students, hands go up, and people ask me, "Yeah, but what about Facebook?"
It's a place where your data can be free, so when we think about, increasingly, how governments want to access user data, what they're trying to do in Iceland is make this safe haven where it can
happen.
So in early prototypes I built these surfaces to try to see how the curl would react to temperature and possibly allow air to ventilate through the system, and in other prototypes did surfaces where the multiplicity of having these strips together can try to make bigger movement
happen
when also heated, and currently have this installation at the Materials & Applications gallery in Silver Lake, close by, and it's there until August, if you want to see it.
I'm also looking at trying to develop some building components for the market, and so here you see a pretty typical double-glazed window panel, and in that panel, between those two pieces of glass, that double-glazing, I'm trying to work on making a thermo-bimetal pattern system so that when the sun hits that outside layer and heats that interior cavity, that thermo-bimetal will begin to curl, and what actually will
happen
then is it'll start to block out the sun in certain areas of the building, and totally, if necessary.
I started out by trying to figure out what romantic love was by looking at the last 45 years of the psychological research and as it turns out, there's a very specific group of things that
happen
when you fall in love.
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