His
in sentence
94244 examples of His in a sentence
Bit by bit, though, as I got to know him better, I realized that
his
story wasn't being told.
He used to describe
his
life as living downstairs at a party.
He said he could hear the party in the kitchen, but he felt like he was always trapped in the basement, in
his
own little world, wanting to be part of the party but not able to walk upstairs.
So I documented
his
life.
Serge has got
his
arm around me.
I thought of Nick, and I thought of
his
resilience.
He came for school, earning
his
bachelor's degree in accounting and eventually became an accountant.
He explained to me that
his
parents told him that refugees are people from Africa who come to the US to escape death, starvation and disease.
I asked my father about it, and he shared
his
own confusion over the significance of that when he first came to the US.
Sterling, our guard, would spend
his
time walking in and out of the building and throughout the park, constantly making sure everyone was safe, because at times, our fear of having someone overdose and die came close.
And as an example, I want to give you Amos, a male that I knew who was a young male and he was alpha male, he was very popular, but he got sick and he lost
his
position because, you know, chimpanzee males they can spot from a mile away if you are weak and they went for him, and he lost
his
position, and then he got sicker and sicker until at some point we had to isolate him.
Other chimps would bring food to him, they would bring wood wool to him, which is this thing that they use to sleep in and build nests out of, and females would put the wood wool behind
his
back.
He was leaning heavily against the wall, and the way we do with pillows to patients in a hospital, they were putting that stuff behind
his
back.
What you see here is two male chimpanzees who are the same size, but one is walking upright, has
his
hair up, has a big rock in
his
hand, and he's the alpha male.
(Chimpanzee grunts) He has all
his
hair up and he displays.
So what you saw him do is he was lifting himself up and standing on two legs, and putting
his
arms out.
And what you see here is a graph where you see that the lower ranking the male baboon is, the higher is
his
cortisol level in the feces, but the alpha male, as you see, has just as high a level as the lowest-ranking males, and so you may think that being alpha male is nice and dandy and is wonderful, but it's actually a very stressful position, and we can demonstrate that physiologically.
And that's my first student to open up, the first in
his
family to have a bank account.
This immigrant student is the first one in
his
family to use an ATM.
That's a picture I took of my Bronx Borough President, addressing my kids in
his
house, not the jailhouse, making them feel a part of it.
And in
his
day, a million dollar gardens and incredible installations.
Tom Friedman, in
his
recent New York Times article, captured, in the way that no one else could, the spirit behind our effort.
Or Ryan, who can't go to school, because
his
immune deficient daughter can't be risked to have germs come into the house, so he couldn't leave the house.
So Andrew and
his
students went in, looked at some of those assignments, understood the root cause of the misconception, and then they produced a targeted error message that would be provided to every student whose answer fell into that bucket, which means that students who made that same mistake would now get personalized feedback telling them how to fix their misconception much more effectively.
For her, despite all of this, those photos were the perfect gift back to him, something he could look at again, something he remembered from before that wasn't still scarred from that day in March when absolutely everything else in
his
life had changed or been destroyed.
He saw
his
job as creating conflict around her theories.
But when he looked around
his
organization, nobody else seemed to be at all worried.
In the end, Joe and I found a way for him to raise
his
concerns.
And
his
colleagues don't think of him as a crank.
Now, sadly, neurological disorders such as Parkinson's disease gradually destroy this extraordinary ability, as it is doing to my friend Jan Stripling, who was a virtuoso ballet dancer in
his
time.
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