Matters
in sentence
2778 examples of Matters in a sentence
Suppose what
matters
in the choice is tastiness and healthfulness.
But we're now in the era of implementation, where what really
matters
is execution, product quality, speed and data.
And it
matters
a lot.
Even though we tried to do all the right things, we still received our customary flood of video protests and angry emails and even a package that had to be scanned by security, but we have to remember people care intensely about this stuff, and it's because these products, this work, really, really
matters
to them.
So I did what instinctively felt like the right thing, which was to go onto the Internet and try to figure out if I could take
matters
into my own hands.
So I think when you think about it, this tends to transfigure your views, whereas what
matters
for ethical purposes and moral considerations, not so much the fact of consciousness, but the degree and the complexity of consciousness.
Rip off the stuff that
matters.
The end result is that you can perform your best when it
matters
most.
Our parents, our teachers, our coaches, our bosses all influence whether or not we can put our best foot forward when it
matters
most.
Our environment
matters.
What happens in our heads really matters, and knowing this, we can learn how to prepare ourselves and others for success, not just on the playing field but in the boardroom and in the classroom as well.
This isn't big B, but it's an insight about a molecule that
matters.
There are hundreds of places in our genomes that shape risk for brain illnesses, and any one of them could lead us to the next molecular insight about a molecule that
matters.
There is a huge number of people who want to take
matters
into their own hands.
That study illustrates what my friends in public health often say these days: that one's zip code
matters
more than your genetic code.
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.
To make
matters
worse, the school I was enrolled in didn't have an English immersion program.
This is the crux of the work on which I have been singularly focused for the last 16 months, the question of why privacy matters, a question that has arisen in the context of a global debate, enabled by the revelations of Edward Snowden that the United States and its partners, unbeknownst to the entire world, has converted the Internet, once heralded as an unprecedented tool of liberation and democratization, into an unprecedented zone of mass, indiscriminate surveillance.
That's not participation, and in fact, governments have not been very good at using technology to enable participation on what
matters
— the way we allocate our budget, the way we occupy our land, and the way we manage our natural resources.
I want to tell you a personal story about why this
matters
a lot to me.
Now, one might think, of course, leadership
matters
everywhere.
No, it's the speed of urbanization that
matters.
The fact is, social cohesion
matters.
Mobility
matters
in our cities.
The only rule of perspective that I think
matters
is if it looks believable, you've succeeded.
What really
matters
is how I deal with it.
This shows that with frugal innovation what
matters
is that you take what is most abundant, mobile connectivity, to deal with what is scarce, which is energy.
It doesn't matter how we build, it
matters
what we build.
When my own daughter was born a couple of years ago by emergency C-section, we took
matters
into our own hands and made sure she was coated with those vaginal microbes that she would have gotten naturally.
This really matters, because ultimately, privacy depends on each and every one of us, and we have to protect it now because our online data is more than just a collection of ones and zeros.
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