Language
in sentence
3279 examples of Language in a sentence
Yep, I did that clichéd thing that young people do sometimes and I got a tattoo in a
language
I can't even read.
It didn't scale but it at least was bringing computers to developing countries and learning pretty quickly that these kids, even though English wasn't their language, the Latin alphabet barely was their language, but they could just swim like fish.
We have three main goals: give all of us a
language
for talking about a subject that's quite awkward and uncomfortable to discuss; empower a whole front line, namely friends, to help; and, in the process, improve all of our ability to love better.
I'm proud that he has a
language
to make me pause.
I want all of my kids to understand what the bar should be for how they're treated and to have a
language
and a voice to use when that bar is not met versus just accepting it.
You hear it in the
language
people use.
But in fact, there are many more words in the English
language
with R in the third than the first place.
I mean, compared to all these people who hate me when I try to speak their
language
and hate me more when I don't, these people are just wonderful."
And if you move to the right you also get language, because that's abstracting even further from resemblance, but still maintaining meaning.
Something about this language, its love, its longing, its voice, rekindled Patrick's desire to write.
Reading gave him a
language
for what he had lost.
And last, reading gave him a
language
to speak to his daughter.
Meaning by our very language, we understand that the things we're seeing in our world are by design.
Sometimes, the poem is so bright, your silly
language
will not stick to it.
And adjust I did to life on the inside: the prison food, the prison language, the prison life.
And with these four letters, you can create a language: a
language
that can describe anything, and very complicated things.
The
language
of technology is binary; you've probably heard that at some point in time.
Now, you Web 2.0 folks in the audience know what I'm talking about, but for those of you for whom that last sentence was in a crazy moon language, I mean simply this: the online part of the Earth Witness project would be created by the users, working together and working openly.
To accomplish this, Shakespeare employs his most introspective
language.
Well, I'm really excited to talk a bit about my own upbringing in music and family and all of that, but I'm even more excited for you people to hear about Donnell's amazing family and maybe even a little bit about how we met, and all that sort of thing, but for those of you that may not be familiar with my upbringing, I'm from Cape Breton Island, Nova Scotia, eastern Canada, which is a very, very musical island, and its origins come from Scotland with the music and all the traditions, the dancing, the language, which unfortunately is dying out in Cape Breton.
The traditional
language
is Gaelic, but a lot of the music came from the Gaelic language, and the dancing and the singing and everything, and my bloodline is Scottish through and through, but my mother and father are two very, very musical people.
I began operating my business with 1-2-3, began writing add-ins for 1-2-3, wrote a natural
language
interface to 1-2-3.
June Cohen: Olé! (Applause) [This talk contains graphic
language
Viewer discretion is advised] So, this is the first and the last slide each of my 6,400 students over the last 15 years has seen.
It will speak their language, it will meet their schedules, it will fulfill their needs.
Originally written in Spanish, his poems often use straightforward
language
and everyday experience to create lasting impact.
There are also some neat possibilities for education, like language, math and logic games where we want to give people the ability to try things quickly, and view the results immediately.
And we wanted to build a learning tool for
language
learners.
Now, at first, this is just nice poetic language, but it's also set in a typeface that's perfect for this moment.
Typography is the study of how fonts inhabit our world, they're the visual
language
of the words we use.
And we might mean slightly different things by them, but at least we start with some
language
in common.
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