Learned
in sentence
3238 examples of Learned in a sentence
And if, despite all of this, you are someday diagnosed with Alzheimer's, there are three lessons I've
learned
from my grandmother and the dozens of people I've come to know living with this disease.
I also
learned
that our most admirable education reformers, people like Arne Duncan, the former US Secretary of Education, or Wendy Kopp, the founder of Teach For America, had never attended an inner city public school like I had.
In low-income neighborhoods, kids forget almost three months of what they
learned
during the school year over the summer.
Essentially, what they
learned
is that children in these families are hearing so many fewer words each day that by the time they are three years old, there's this enormous disparity in their
learned
language.
I
learned
that a Décima is a type of verse that only exists in Spanish, and that it has 10 lines.
I wrote the first one having only recently
learned
how, and it has some errors in terms of meter, so it's not presentable in its current state.
What have I
learned
in these 15 years since the song was born from going all over the world with four lines written on a coaster from a bar in Madrid?
I
learned
that identity is infinitely dense, like an infinite series of real numbers, and that even if you get very close and zoom in, it never ends.
We
learned
directly how to struggle through really tough medical decisions.
And I
learned
that when we approach it together, we get to decide what success looks like.
Instead, we
learned
to accept both joy and sadness at the same time; to uncover beauty and purpose both despite and because we are all born and we all die.
I've
learned
that cancer isn't always a battle.
And I thought about it and realized, and I said to my mom, "Just now, Mom." (Laughter) So from that night onwards, much akin to humanity in its adolescence, I
learned
the crude tools of survival.
The people of this ancient land embraced me in their limitless love, and I've
learned
from these people that neither power nor poverty can make your life more magical or less tortuous.
I've
learned
from the people of my country that the dignity of a life, a human being, a culture, a religion, a country actually resides in its ability for grace and compassion.
I've
learned
that whatever moves you, whatever urges you to create, to build, whatever keeps you from failing, whatever helps you survive, is perhaps the oldest and the simplest emotion known to mankind, and that is love.
And the robot hasn't quite
learned
the human value function properly, so it doesn't understand the sentimental value of the cat outweighs the nutritional value of the cat.
When a detective who had
learned
about visual intelligence in North Carolina was called to the crime scene, it was a boating fatality, and the eyewitness told this detective that the boat had flipped over and the occupant had drowned underneath.
So as I
learned
about the true nature of poverty, I couldn't stop wondering: Is this the idea we've all been waiting for?
So ... here's what I've
learned.
What I
learned
from my own experience is that we must face our fears if we want to get the most out of our technology, and we must conquer those fears if we want to get the best out of our humanity.
We walk in the footsteps of those women, our foremothers, legends like Ella Baker, Septima Clark, Fannie Lou Hamer, from whom we
learned
the power of organizing after she would had single-handedly registered 60,000 voters in Jim Crow Mississippi.
And what we
learned
is that walking just 30 minutes a day can single-handedly decrease 50 percent of your risk of diabetes, heart disease, stroke, even Alzheimer's and dementia.
It's a lesson he shared with me again and again, and I
learned
it to be true the hard way.
Musu has
learned
over 30 medical skills, from screening children for malnutrition, to assessing the cause of a child's cough with a smartphone, to supporting people with HIV and providing follow-up care to patients who've lost their limbs.
Community members across Liberia
learned
the symptoms of Ebola, teamed up with nurses and doctors to go door-to-door to find the sick and get them into care.
Today, Ebola has come under control in West Africa, and we've
learned
a few things.
We've
learned
that blind spots in rural health care can lead to hot spots of disease, and that places all of us at greater risk.
We've
learned
that the most efficient emergency system is actually an everyday system, and that system has to reach all communities, including rural communities like Emile's.
And most of all, we've
learned
from the courage of Liberia's community health workers that we as people are not defined by the conditions we face, no matter how hopeless they seem.
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