Laureate
in sentence
369 examples of Laureate in a sentence
And if you're going to become a Nobel laureate, it helps to get a book now and then.
Nobel Prize
laureate
Malala survived Taliban extremists in October 2012.
Steven Weinberg, the Nobel laureate, once said, "The more the universe seems comprehensible, the more it seems pointless."
Today, this young woman is me, a Nobel
laureate.
And maybe, just maybe, saying, "Because of that Nobel
laureate
I'm here today."
I. I. Rabi, a Nobel laureate, said that when he was growing up in New York, all of his friends' parents would ask them "What did you learn in school?" at the end of a day.
While working on this in our office, we've realized that we're building upon the work of our colleagues, including architect Tatiana Bilbao, working in Mexico City; Pritzker
laureate
Alejandro Aravena, working in Chile; and recent Pritzker winner Balkrishna Doshi, working in India.
Here's National Medal of Science recipient Craig Venter and Nobel
laureate
Ham Smith.
She came to the Ig Nobel ceremony with the first prototype of the bra and she demonstrated: (Laughter) (Applause) ["Paul Krugman, Nobel
laureate
(2008) in economics"] ["Wolfgang Ketterle, Nobel
laureate
(2001) in physics"] I myself own an emergency bra.
But in 1960, Nobel Physics
laureate
Eugene Wigner coined the phrase, "the unreasonable effectiveness of mathematics," pushing strongly for the idea that mathematics is real and discovered by people.
The late Kenyan Nobel Peace laureate, Wangari Maathai, put it simply and well when she said: "The higher you go, the fewer women there are."
But the most courageous thing we do every day is we practice faith that goes beyond the facts, and we put feet to our prayers every single day, and when we get overwhelmed, we think of the words of people like Sonia Sanchez, a poet laureate, who says, "Morgan, where is your fire?
In the words of Nobel
laureate
Octavio Paz: “It is not enough to say that Sor Juana’s work is a product of history; we must add that history is also a product of her work.”
Elinor Ostrom, the latest Nobel
laureate
of economics, clearly shows empirically across the world that we can govern the commons if we invest in trust, local, action-based partnerships and cross-scale institutional innovations, where local actors, together, can deal with the global commons at a large scale.
A faithful adaptation of the Nobel
laureate
Tagore's novel dealing with the pursuit of sexual pleasure of a Bengali widow, the director gives a new dimension to the much acclaimed and controversial work.
Faced with the biggest test in its history, the euro is far from steering into disaster, as the Nobel
laureate
economist Milton Friedman predicted ten years ago.
A Nobel
laureate
who teaches at Princeton University, Krugman is also a columnist for the New York Times, whose commentaries and blog, “The Conscience of a Liberal,” are read with an almost religious fervor by liberal (in the American sense) economists and journalists around the world.
The Nobel
laureate
economist Robert Solow has shown that growth comes from three sources: the working population, capital investment, and technological progress.
But, as the attack on the heroic Pakistani schoolgirl and Nobel Peace Prize
laureate
Malala Yousafzai demonstrated, girls and women are still blocked from education in many places, sometimes through violence.
The new “Green Revolution” seeds that the Nobel
laureate
agronomist Norman Borlaug developed with public money were freely available to all users anywhere.
As the Nobel
laureate
economist Paul Krugman pointed out a quarter-century ago, a country in this situation will be unwilling to undertake additional painful adjustment, because it gets nothing in return.
Or, as the Nobel
laureate
economist Robert Solow observed in 1987, “You can see the computer age everywhere but in the productivity statistics.”
International doyens, including former United Nations Secretary-General Kofi Annan and his fellow Nobel Peace Prize
laureate
Desmond Tutu, have also called for dialogue.
It is understandable that left-leaning scholars found some of the socialist government’s redistribution and education policies appealing, as Nobel
laureate
Joseph Stiglitz did when visiting Caracas, the country’s capital, in 2007.
And the benefits of the 2009 Shanghai Expo were rapidly undermined by the jailing of Nobel Peace Prize
laureate
Liu Xiaobo and the television screens around the world broadcasting scenes of an empty chair at the Oslo ceremonies.
The idea, introduced by the Nobel
laureate
economist Milton Friedman in 1969, entails the distribution of freshly printed money directly to the public, with a commitment from the central bank never to withdraw it.
The Nobel
laureate
Albert Camus said that the little he had learned about life had been “on the football field,” and that, like adversity, a kicked ball “never arrives from the direction you expected it.”
Even with dozens of compelling investments to choose from, Nobel
laureate
economists poring over the data found that measures to combat malnutrition were among the most powerful options.
Last month, an eminent panel of four top economists – three leading Bangladeshi scholars and a Nobel
laureate
in economics – met in Dhaka to examine the results.
The Nobel
laureate
economist Edmund S. Phelps has described Trump’s direct interference in the corporate sector as reminiscent of corporatist Nazi Germany and Fascist Italy.
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