Objects
in sentence
927 examples of Objects in a sentence
We also have some amazing
objects
from Japan, centered around craftsmanship, called "Made in Japan."
You can obviously look at
objects
in the Guggenheim Museum, you can obviously get into them and so on and so forth.
It's one of the oldest
objects
in the world, found in the Golan Heights around 233,000 years ago, and currently residing at the Israel Museum in Jerusalem.
It is also one of the oldest
objects
on our platform.
One of the curators told me, "Amit, what would it be like if you could create a virtual curator's table where all these six million
objects
are displayed in a way for us to look at the connections between them?"
You can spend a lot of time, trust me, looking at different
objects
and understanding where they come from.
So I started showing her all
objects
that have the material gold in them.
If we actually look at all the
objects
that have been tagged under "happiness," you would expect happiness, I guess.
This anatomization also extends to politically and socially charged
objects.
Objects
appeared, morphed and disappeared in my reality.
And what I do as a creative artist is I develop vocabularies or languages of moving
objects.
Sometimes what happens in life affects my choice of
objects
that I try to work with.
It could be a certificate, a contract, real world objects, even personal identifiable information.
What I remember today from this is that
objects
tell stories, so storytelling has been a really strong influence in my work.
They're these just impossibly small, fascinating little
objects.
And the reason is when
objects
get really small, they're governed by a different set of physics that govern ordinary objects, like the ones we interact with.
And chemistry works in this case because these nanoscale
objects
are about the same size as molecules, so we can use them to steer these
objects
around, much like a tool.
So, the whole activity of working with my hands and creating
objects
is very much connected with not only the idea realm, but also with very much the feeling realm.
I'm going to show you many different kinds of pieces, and there's no real connection between one or the other, except that they sort of come out of my brain, and they're all different sort of thoughts that are triggered by looking at life, and seeing nature and seeing objects, and just having kind of playful random thoughts about things.
So a lot of the pieces that I've made, they involve found
objects.
When I see objects, I imagine them in motion.
Can we build systems that recognize objects, identify emotions, emote themselves, play games and even read lips?
It's full of prototypes and
objects.
Gravity is the attractive force between two
objects
with mass— any two
objects
with mass.
The original equation describing the gravitational force between two
objects
was written by Isaac Newton in 1687.
It goes like this: the gravitational force between two
objects
is equal to the mass of one times the mass of the other, multiplied by a very small number called the gravitational constant, and divided by the distance between them, squared.
If you doubled the mass of one of the objects, the force between them would double, too.
Due to a phenomenon called diffraction, there are fundamental limits to the smallest
objects
that we can possibly see.
Let's try another set of puzzle pieces from astronomical, non-black hole
objects.
So in our simulations, we pretend a black hole looks like astronomical non-black hole objects, as well as everyday images like the elephant in the center of our galaxy.
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