Knowing
in sentence
1869 examples of Knowing in a sentence
Where does this intelligence of
knowing
that a fold can actually hold more information, so as you actually watch the baby's brain grow.
With all of us
knowing
everything, we're kind of forced by technology to become Buddhas or something, to become enlightened.
So where compassion comes is where you surprisingly discover you lose yourself in some way: through art, through meditation, through understanding, through knowledge actually,
knowing
that you have no such boundary,
knowing
your interconnectedness with other beings.
Kelly calling Erin in her lowest moment,
knowing
that Erin would do whatever she could to make them feel loved and cared for, is proof to me that by using the arts as the entry point, we can heal and build our homeless youth population.
It's cruel to offer him a job
knowing
that he's going to fail."
But then, if we on the African continent don't necessarily know enough about it, then perhaps anybody with the right level of skill and commitment could fly in, spend some time listening and engaging and fly out
knowing
enough to invent for Africa.
And while these responses are well-meaning,
knowing
the benefits it brought me, it makes me incredibly frustrated when people are told that they couldn’t or shouldn't work, when it's something that they want to do and physically can do.
And not
knowing
where help was needed always ensured that help was in short supply in the areas that needed it most.
I've always been fascinated with
knowing
the self.
I may also be interested in
knowing
how focused I am, so I can put my level of attention into the circuit board on the other side.
Ordinarily, I would have no way of
knowing
how focused or relaxed I was in any tangible way.
We're hoping for both because our business model is, if you come into a therapy session with one problem, we want to make sure you leave
knowing
you have ten, so you keep coming back.
And of course, being Australian, I started looking at stuff in Australia,
knowing
from my own experience of various times when nonlethal weapons have been introduced in Australia.
They just work together, and never the same group twice, not
knowing
what's going to happen next.
Paul Polman, the Unilever CEO, put this really well when he said, "The issues we face today are so big and so challenging, it becomes quite clear we can't do it alone, and so there is a certain humility in
knowing
you have to invite people in."
More generally,
knowing
about the explore/exploit trade-off can make it a little easier for you to sort of relax and go easier on yourself when you're trying to make a decision.
Knowing
all of this has helped me to relax when I have to make decisions.
But
knowing
that I was going to get better, and looking forward to a time that I would feel good again, helped me to keep moving forward.
The experience of looking up and
knowing
that the sky you're looking at surrounds every known living thing in the universe is very profound.
And to be able to do that is a tremendous fisheries tool, because
knowing
how many fish are there is really critical.
It's
knowing
your punchline, your ending,
knowing
that everything you're saying, from the first sentence to the last, is leading to a singular goal, and ideally confirming some truth that deepens our understandings of who we are as human beings.
It's not just
knowing
that Louise from Seattle survived Japanese American internment camps.
It's
knowing
that, meanwhile, her husband was one of an estimated 33,000 Japanese Americans who fought for our country during the war, a country that was simultaneously interning their families.
PV: It's not just
knowing
that interracial marriages like Shermaine and Paul in DC exist, it's acknowledging that our society has been programmed for them to fail.
WG: It's not just
knowing
that white people like Lisa in Chicago have white privilege, it's reflecting consciously on the term whiteness and its history,
knowing
that whiteness can't be equated with American.
It's
knowing
that Lisa can't forget her own personal family's history of Jewish oppression.
PV: It's not just
knowing
that native languages are dying.
It's
knowing
how the nongendered Cherokee language enabled Ahyoka's acceptance as a trans woman in Tahlequah, Oklahoma.
In 2006, after 12 years being separated away from my family, and then seven years
knowing
that they were dead and them thinking that we were dead, we reunited ... in the most dramatic, American way possible.
Not
knowing
the obstacles is the problem.
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