Matter
in sentence
7086 examples of Matter in a sentence
It's not a
matter
of if, it's when.
No
matter
how wealthy a few plutocrats get, we can never drive a great national economy.
I disagree, and I think that it is equally a tool that humans use to enforce and encode our social and moral preferences and prejudices about status and power, which is why plutocrats like me have always needed to find persuasive stories to tell everyone else about why our relative positions are morally righteous and good for everyone: like, we are indispensable, the job creators, and you are not; like, tax cuts for us create growth, but investments in you will balloon our debt and bankrupt our great country; that we matter; that you don't.
It doesn't
matter
who we are.
The first step to empowerment is to give yourself the authority, the key to independent will, and for women everywhere, no
matter
who we are or where we come from, that is the most difficult step.
We need to learn which of our cells
matter
to each illness, and which molecules in those cells
matter
to each illness.
The laws of quantum field theory, the state-of-the-art physics, can show how out of sheer nothingness, no space, no time, no matter, nothing, a little nugget of false vacuum can fluctuate into existence, and then, by the miracle of inflation, blow up into this huge and variegated cosmos we see around us.
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?"
So it's clear that these factors, these upstream issues, do
matter.
They
matter
to our health, and therefore our healthcare professionals should do something about it.
It comes from our personal investment in knowing that our lives matter, the context of where we live and where we work, eat, and sleep, matter, and that what we do for ourselves, we also should do for those whose living and working conditions again, can be hard, if not harsh.
And it lay precisely in that insatiable curiosity, that irrepressible desire to know, no
matter
what the subject, no
matter
what the cost, even at a time when the keepers of the Doomsday Clock are willing to bet even money that the human race won't be around to imagine anything in the year 2100, a scant 93 years from now.
It is this inextinguishable, undaunted appetite for learning and experience, no
matter
how risible, no
matter
how esoteric, no
matter
how seditious it might seem.
I said, "Any chance you know Willie Brown?" (Laughter) As a
matter
of fact he did know Willie Brown, and Willie Brown and Herbie and I had dinner four years ago, and we started drawing out that center on the tablecloth.
It's what Coleridge called the willing suspension of disbelief or poetic faith, for those moments where a story, no
matter
how strange, has some semblance of the truth, and then you're able to believe it.
All of those things matter, but that's not why.
I say, it doesn't
matter
if you're a washer or a wiper, a sitter or a squatter, the human user interface should be clean and easy to use, because after all, taking a dump should be pleasurable.
And when we open the possibilities to understanding this sanitation chain, then the back-end technology, the collection to the reuse, should not really matter, and then we can apply locally adoptable and context-sensitive solutions.
That's not a huge amount of people reading, but 28 people
matter.
So, I continued to work on this project of how photography seduces us and is more interesting to look at than the actual real subject
matter.
And at the same time, it removes us from the real subject matter, and this acts as a sort of titillating thing.
And I think it doesn't really
matter
that my work is considered humorous, in a way; I think it's a way in for me to deal with the importance of imagery and how we read all our information through imagery.
And also, extreme inequality can be bad for our democratic institutions if it creates very unequal access to political voice, and the influence of private money in U.S. politics, I think, is a
matter
of concern right now.
Gender didn't matter, and race most certainly never mattered.
But our democracy is neither just a
matter
of voting once every couple of years.
Because we believe that democracy is not just a
matter
of stacking up preferences, one on top of each other, but that our healthy and robust public debate should be, once again, one of its fundamental values.
For that matter, between the post office and any national banking system that has a large network that serves the poor.
Now, there's all kinds of things to say about that mentality, the first of which is that the people who say that, who say that privacy isn't really important, they don't actually believe it, and the way you know that they don't actually believe it is that while they say with their words that privacy doesn't matter, with their actions, they take all kinds of steps to safeguard their privacy.
And so it's not just big data that causes challenges of interpretation, because let's face it, we human beings have a very rich history of taking any amount of data, no
matter
how small, and screwing it up.
Because after all, if I can spot a problem in an argument, it doesn't much
matter
whether it's expressed in words or in numbers.
Back
Next
Related words
Which
Would
There
Their
About
Subject
Really
Could
Other
Movie
People
Should
Where
World
Think
Might
Before
Never
Always
Still