Lives
in sentence
7217 examples of Lives in a sentence
But what is really hard about designing at scale is this: It's hard in part because it requires a combination of two things, audacity and humility — audacity to believe that the thing that you're making is something that the entire world wants and needs, and humility to understand that as a designer, it's not about you or your portfolio, it's about the people that you're designing for, and how your work just might help them live better
lives.
Passion
lives
here.
They have no control over their bodies or their
lives.
So my father tried to get the police on the phone, but perhaps terrified by the rising tide of armed extremism that had already claimed the
lives
of so many Algerian officers, they didn't even answer.
The first is in the strength of her family and all the other families to continue telling their stories and to go on with their
lives
despite the terrorism.
Why do we think that we are really such masters of our
lives
that we can rationally make the best ideal choices, that we don't accept losses and risks?
If we weren't conscious, nothing in our
lives
would have meaning or value.
Allow yourself to be fascinated, because there are so many
lives
to save.
Perhaps you have watched the movie "The
Lives
of Others."
So I have a message for my fellow plutocrats and zillionaires and for anyone who
lives
in a gated bubble world: Wake up.
Had I not been taking my temperature I really would have just thought my period was late that month, but we actually had data to show that we had miscarried this baby, and even though this data revealed a really unfortunate event in our lives, it was information that we could then take to our doctor.
I don't see my job as to punish them or forgive them, but I do think they can have decent and meaningful
lives
even in prison.
So that was the question: Could inmates live decent and meaningful lives, and if so, what difference would that make?
Prisons need to provide humane environments where people can participate, contribute, and learn meaningful
lives.
In the classroom, I challenge my students to explore the silences in their own
lives
through poetry.
Civic imagination and innovation and creativity are emerging from local ecosystems now and radiating outward, and this great innovation, this great wave of localism that's now arriving, and you see it in how people eat and work and share and buy and move and live their everyday lives, this isn't some precious parochialism, this isn't some retreat into insularity, no.
And what I'd like to do is to invite all of you to help create this curriculum with the stories and the experiences and the challenges that each of you
lives
and faces, to create something powerfully collective.
Well, that chance encounter inspired my imagination, and I created the Lunch Lady graphic novel series, a series of comics about a lunch lady who uses her fish stick nunchucks to fight off evil cyborg substitutes, a school bus monster, and mutant mathletes, and the end of every book, they get the bad guy with their hairnet, and they proclaim, "Justice is served!" (Laughter) (Applause) And it's been amazing, because the series was so welcomed into the reading
lives
of children, and they sent me the most amazing letters and cards and artwork.
She's a gorilla that
lives
at the Franklin Park Zoo in Boston.
Others, like one bonobo who
lives
in Milwaukee at the zoo there was on them until he started to save his Paxil prescription and then distribute it among the other bonobos.
When Summerwear came to this country from Jamaica in the early '60s, he insisted on wearing light summer suits, no matter the weather, and in the course of researching their lives, I asked my mom, "Whatever became of Summerwear?"
They shape their
lives
according to the narrative of your life, as I did with my father and my mother, perhaps, and maybe Bageye did with his father.
In the original photograph, I'm being held up by my father, Bageye, but when my parents separated, my mother excised him from all aspects of our
lives.
Small details on our body, like a scar or wrinkles, tell the story of our
lives.
It's a year-round community, and every August, for a single week, 70,000 people power down their technology and pilgrimage out into the desert to build an anti-consumerist society outside the bounds of their everyday
lives.
And where health begins is not in the four walls of a doctor's office, but where we live and where we work, where we eat, sleep, learn and play, where we spend the majority of our
lives.
There's this gap between knowing that patients' lives, the context of where they live and work, matters, and the ability to do something about it in the systems in which we work.
We're trying to make sure that clinicians, and therefore their systems that they work in have the ability, the confidence to address the problems in the living and working conditions in our
lives.
Doctors and nurses can get better at asking about the context of patients' lives, not simply because it's better bedside manner, but frankly, because it's a better standard of care.
Let's see if we can discover some patterns in our data about our patients
' lives
and see if we can identify an upstream cause, and then, as importantly, can we align the resources to be able to address them?
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