Lives
in sentence
7217 examples of Lives in a sentence
And I assembled this in my garage, and it now
lives
in the physics department of the University of Nevada, Reno.
What we do is prolong people's lives, and delay death, and redirect death, but we can't, strictly speaking, save
lives
on any sort of permanent basis.
And what's really happened over the period of time that I've been working in intensive care is that the people whose
lives
we started saving back in the '70s, '80s, and '90s, are now coming to die in the 21st century of diseases that we no longer have the answers to in quite the way we did then.
What we know is that obviously we are all going to die, but how we die is actually really important, obviously not just to us, but also to how that features in the
lives
of all the people who live on afterwards.
How we die
lives
on in the minds of everybody who survives us, and the stress created in families by dying is enormous, and in fact you get seven times as much stress by dying in intensive care as by dying just about anywhere else, so dying in intensive care is not your top option if you've got a choice.
Everyone
lives
on this street here.
I can't even think about anything that could change our
lives
that way.
So this memorial actually considers all of these myriad connections that were part of these people's
lives.
And one of the most tremendously moving experiences is to go to the memorial and see how these people are placed next to each other, so that this memorial is representing their own
lives.
How does this affect our
lives?
We received thousands of data sets, and we built this interface which allows people to actually see their
lives
unfolding from these traces that are left behind on your devices.
We polish the rough edges of our
lives
so that they feel whole.
I work in Haiti, where about 80% of the population
lives
in energy poverty.
And, as a psychologist, what excited me most was the idea that we would use what we learned in the virtual world about ourselves, about our identity, to live better
lives
in the real world.
Over the past 15 years, I've studied technologies of mobile communication and I've interviewed hundreds and hundreds of people, young and old, about their plugged in
lives.
People want to customize their
lives.
When I spoke at TED in 1996, reporting on my studies of the early virtual communities, I said, "Those who make the most of their
lives
on the screen come to it in a spirit of self-reflection."
Now we all need to focus on the many, many ways technology can lead us back to our real lives, our own bodies, our own communities, our own politics, our own planet.
Half of humanity
lives
in cities today, but a 60-times-larger area is used to grow food.
Secrets can remind us of the countless human dramas, of frailty and heroism, playing out silently in the
lives
of people all around us even now.
This picture never got returned back to the people who lost it, but this secret has impacted many lives, starting with a student up in Canada named Matty.
And it might seem like a simple idea, and it is, but the impact it can have on people's
lives
can be huge.
They want the power to plan their own
lives
and to raise healthier, better educated and more prosperous families.
And we stopped trying to save these
lives.
What I'm talking about is giving women the power to save their lives, to save their children's
lives
and to give their families the best possible future.
We can do our part, in this room and globally, by talking about the hundreds of millions of families that don't have access to contraception today and what it would do to change their
lives
if they did have access.
CA: Some people on the right in America and in many conservative cultures around the world might say something like this: "It's all very well to talk about saving
lives
and empowering women and so on.
It just means that they're getting to make choices about their
lives.
And I think in that choice, we're also honoring the sacredness of the family and the sacredness of the mother's life and the childrens
' lives
by saving their
lives.
And within this accumulation of images and texts, I'm struggling to find patterns and imagine that the narratives that surround the
lives
we lead are just as coded as blood itself.
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