Lives
in sentence
7217 examples of Lives in a sentence
And perhaps this is the most important thing that rewilding offers us, the most important thing that's missing from our lives: hope.
Voice 5: Still today I pray and think about those who lost their lives, and those who gave their
lives
to help others, but I'm also reminded of the fabric of this country, the love, the compassIon, the strength, and I watched a nation come together in the middle of a terrible tragedy.
Computers have changed the
lives
of us all in this room and around the world, but I think they've changed the
lives
of we blind people more than any other group.
Sadly, he died in a light plane crash in 2005, but his memory
lives
on in my heart.
It
lives
half its life inside the cold-blooded mosquito and half its life inside the warm-blooded human.
We kind of create places that they love to live just by living our own
lives.
Cold and flu have a huge burden on our societies and on our own lives, but we don't really even take the most rudimentary precautions against it because we consider it normal to get cold and flu during cold and flu season.
I would argue today, when we are distributing tools that we've designed and that don't necessarily make sense in people's lives, we run the risk of making the same mistake again.
And a woman who
lives
on our street, Lolita.
In short, in our real lives, we seek to place trust in a differentiated way.
So if we've got those evidence in our ordinary
lives
of the way that trust is differentiated, why do we sort of drop all that intelligence when we think about trust more abstractly?
For a long time in my life, I felt like I'd been living two different
lives.
I suffer from depression, and for a long time, I think, I was living two totally different lives, where one person was always afraid of the other.
I think it's safe to say that all humans will be intimate with death at least once in their
lives.
In Tana Toraja, the most important social moments in people's lives, the focal points of social and cultural interaction are not weddings or births or even family dinners, but funerals.
But I know that my husband's family looks forward to the moment when they can ritually display what his remarkable presence has meant to their lives, when they can ritually recount his life's narrative, weaving his story into the history of their community.
They've expanded and enriched our
lives.
Against the background of rising inequality, marketizing every aspect of life leads to a condition where those who are affluent and those who are of modest means increasingly live separate
lives.
In the last three years alone, more than 12,000 refugees lost their
lives.
Today, many people who live in the emerging markets, where 90 percent of the world's population lives, believe that the Western obsession with political rights is beside the point, and what is actually important is delivering on food, shelter, education and healthcare.
By suburban sprawl, I refer to the reorganization of the landscape and the creation of the landscape around the requirement of automobile use, and that the automobile that was once an instrument of freedom has become a gas-belching, time-wasting and life-threatening prosthetic device that many of us need just to, most Americans, in fact, need, just to live their daily
lives.
We have the first generation of children in America who are predicted to live shorter
lives
than their parents.
But particularly here in America, we are polluting so much because we're throwing away our time and our money and our
lives
on the highway, then these two problems would seem to share the same solution, which is to make our cities more walkable.
Just over three years ago, I was for the first time in Caracas, Venezuela, and while flying over the city, I was just amazed by the extent to which the slums reach into every corner of the city, a place where nearly 70 percent of the population
lives
in slums, draped literally all over the mountains.
But then in the apartment across the hall from this cow shed
lives
a newly married couple in what locals describe as one of the nicest apartments in the area.
It makes him so sick, he has to quit it, yet still he
lives
on.
The small farmer in Africa today
lives
a life without much choice, and therefore without much freedom.
it's about what we do right here, right now, and for the rest of our working
lives.
So what we decided to do was, we will look and ask ourselves the tough questions with partners who know more than us, what can we do to go beyond our business to help improve the
lives
of children?
We also have a foundation that's committed to work through partners and help improve the
lives
and protect the rights of 100 million children by 2015.
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