Heritage
in sentence
277 examples of Heritage in a sentence
This clearly devastated me, and I couldn't help but wonder about the fate of my old friends, the winged bulls, and the fate of the many, many
heritage
sites all over the world.
Both my wife and I were so touched by this that we decided to expand the mission of our foundation to include digital
heritage
preservation of world sites.
The more I got involved in the
heritage
field, the more it became clear to me that we are losing the sites and the stories faster than we can physically preserve them.
In order to sustain our work into the future, we use technology centers where we partner with local universities and colleges to take the technology to them, whereby they then can help us with digital preservation of their
heritage
sites, and at the same time, it gives them the technology to benefit from in the future.
Two years ago, we were approached by a partner of ours to digitally preserve an important
heritage
site, a UNESCO
heritage
site in Uganda, the Royal Kasubi Tombs.
But I decided to learn about the Bible and my
heritage
by actually diving in and trying to live it and immerse myself in it.
But at the same time we are reconnecting and reasserting our Arab
heritage.
Instead, she tries to engage in a very important dialogue about her culture, nation and
heritage.
They're learning our culture, our language, our
heritage
and realizing we're just as different and just the same as each other.
Drumming has essentially represented the strong African heritage, and its importance can be seen in the many aspects of the African tradition.
And these incredibly beautiful boreal forests were the inspiration for some of the most famous art in Canadian history, the Group of Seven were very inspired by this landscape, and so the boreal is not just a really key part of our natural heritage, but also an important part of our cultural
heritage.
Here you see this out-sized Cyrus cylinder on the stage with great figures from Iranian history gathering to take their place in the
heritage
of Iran.
This is part of Africa's indigenous political
heritage.
So I decided to go back to my alma mater, and, at the University of California, San Diego, and I proposed to open up a research center for engineering sciences for cultural
heritage.
And in 2007, we created CISA3 as a research center for cultural heritage, specifically art, architecture and archaeology.
Well, our vision is to rediscover the spirit of the Renaissance, create a new discipline where engineering for cultural
heritage
is actually a symbol of blending art and science together.
I feel like our civilization works when this is a vast cultural
heritage
that we all share and that we know without having to outsource it to our devices, to our search engines and our smartphones.
DNA is our genetic
heritage.
Through bowmaking, I came in contact with part of my
heritage.
The idea, the dream, was really for a sort of Bauhaus sort of school where new ideas were interrogated and investigated, the creation of a new visual language based on the African creative
heritage.
This is from Thomas Edison, from the beginning of the 20th century: "Sleep is a criminal waste of time and a
heritage
from our cave days."
So it's really very successful teaching children that they have a
heritage
that's about mathematics, that it's not just about singing and dancing.
But the thing that I want to talk to you about today, the big idea that I want to discuss with you, is not that 3D printing is going to catapult us into the future, but rather that it's actually going to connect us with our heritage, and it's going to usher in a new era of localized, distributed manufacturing that is actually based on digital fabrication.
I think it was actually that moment that sent me on the journey to interview 300 people of Muslim
heritage
from nearly 30 countries, from Afghanistan to Mali, to find out how they fought fundamentalism peacefully like my father did, and how they coped with the attendant risks.
In fact, many people of Muslim
heritage
around the world are staunch opponents both of fundamentalism and of terrorism, and often for very good reason.
That's a terrible toll, but the vast majority were people of Muslim heritage, killed by Muslim fundamentalists.
I'm painfully aware that there has been an increase in discrimination against Muslims in recent years in countries like the U.K. and the U.S., and that too is a matter of grave concern, but I firmly believe that telling these counter-stereotypical stories of people of Muslim
heritage
who have confronted the fundamentalists and been their primary victims is also a great way of countering that discrimination.
It is also about destroying their property, their cultural heritage, and ultimately the very notion that they ever existed.
So for sure, the Fez River Rehabilitation will keep on changing and adapting to the sociopolitical landscape of the city, but we strongly believe that by reimagining the role and the agency of the architect, we have set up the core idea of the project into motion; that is, to transform the river from sewage to public space for all, thereby making sure that the city of Fez will remain a living city for its inhabitants rather than a mummified
heritage.
Well, it seems to me that this Hungarian presence in my life is difficult to account for, but ultimately I ascribe it to an admiration for people with a complex moral awareness, with a
heritage
of guilt and defeat matched by defiance and bravado.
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