Objects
in sentence
927 examples of Objects in a sentence
Objects
moving towards us, their light waves are compressed and they appear bluer.
Objects
moving away from us, their light waves are stretched, and they appear redder.
And oddly enough, as you look more deeply into the universe, more distant
objects
are moving away further and faster, so they appear more red.
And we can also see strange tufts coming off of it, and
objects
which don't appear to line up with anything that we can see with our own eyes.
It's a billionth the size of any of the
objects
in my survey.
And she spoke of advocating for him and said that patients come from all different religions and use all different kinds of
objects
for comfort; whether it's a holy rosary or a symbolic feather, it all needs to be supported.
And then even Maira Kalman did this amazing cryptic installation of
objects
and words that kind of go all around and will fascinate students for as long as it's up there.
Though certain theories were built on the idea of invisible atoms, some prominent scientists still believed them to be a useful fiction, rather than actual physical
objects.
Next, he lost the ability to identify
objects
by touch.
It illustrates that finding hidden connections in everyday
objects
can resonate so deeply.
Then we run experiments, build prototypes, make objects, bringing aspects of these futures to life, making them concrete and tangible so you can really feel the impact of those future possibilities here and now.
Because these
objects
spin, we wondered, could we actually use the physics of these
objects
to be able to build centrifuges?
It turns people into objects, and then, we hope, back again into people.
We don't just experience our bodies as
objects
in the world from the outside, we also experience them from within.
I don't perceive my insides as
objects.
When the brain uses predictions to figure out what's there, we perceive
objects
as the causes of sensations.
The death of that star is the birth of a neutron star: one of the densest known
objects
in the universe, and a laboratory for the strange physics of supercondensed matter.
I work on a problem called object detection, where we look at an image and try to find all of the objects, put bounding boxes around them and say what those
objects
are.
It has all sorts of things like spoon and fork, bowl, common
objects
like that.
Attractive faces activate parts of our visual cortex in the back of the brain, an area called the fusiform gyrus, that is especially tuned to processing faces, and an adjacent area called the lateral occipital complex, that is especially attuned to processing
objects.
And this was very exciting for me, because it meant that I could make these physical objects, and I could make films from those
objects.
So, the same thing could be true for this kind of life, which I'm talking about, on cold objects: that it could in fact be very abundant all over the universe, and it's not been detected just because we haven't taken the trouble to look.
They have to be all the time pointing toward the Sun, and they will be able to spread out in space, because gravity on these
objects
is weak.
Sturdy buildings within that range should be able to withstand the shockwave, and staying in the centers and basements of these buildings also helps provide protection from heat and flying
objects.
The things that changed how you work probably aren't
objects
anymore.
So, I started collecting found
objects.
And into it, she tosses DVDs and books, magazine cuttings, theater programs, physical objects, really anything that's provided a source of creative inspiration.
The first works were actually
objects.
Computers made things move, but these were all real, folded
objects
that we made.
Based on sensory input, it builds models, which are continuously updating, simplified descriptions of
objects
and events in the world.
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