Often
in sentence
12358 examples of Often in a sentence
His name is Michael Phillips, he is the pastor of Kingdom Life Church, and he
often
talks about how problems show up in our lives so arrogantly, with so much confidence, as if there is just nothing we can do about them.
I've
often
wondered, what is the evolutionary pressure that made our ancestors in the Veldt adapt and evolve to really enjoy pictures of galaxies when they didn't have any.
And she would
often
stop and have this dejected look on her face like, "Are you for real?"
So from Papua New Guinea to Hollywood all the way to modern art in Beijing, we smile often, and use smiles to express joy and satisfaction.
Have you ever wondered why being around children, who smile so frequently, makes you smile very
often?
But I bet there's something you didn't think about today, something so close to home, you probably don't think about it very
often
at all.
And most importantly, what we do is we use a rigorous, and
often
uncomfortable, process of physical therapy and occupational therapy to retrain the nerves in the nervous system to respond normally to the activities and sensory experiences that are part of everyday life.
It will come untied less
often.
But also, I worry about the West, because
often
in this country, in this Western world that we have, culture risks being a form of entertainment.
This didn't really sit well with my intuition, and maybe it's just because I don't play with particles very
often.
Well, I play with them sometimes, but not very
often.
And it's
often
not until she hits puberty and she's growing and developing breasts, but she's not getting her period, that somebody figures out something's up here.
The reason they're
often
subject to various kinds of surgeries is because they threaten our social categories.
And what happens when people try to assemble themselves back into life, because of our taboos around suicide, we're not sure what to say, and so quite
often
we say nothing.
We
often
think linearly.
Many of these technologies, speaking as a physician and innovator, we can start to leverage, to impact the future of our own health and of health care, and to address many of the major challenges in health care today, ranging from the exponential costs to the aging population, the way we really don't use information very well today, the fragmentation of care and the
often
very difficult course of adoption of innovation.
So if you think of cancer as a weed, we
often
can whack the weed away and it seems to shrink, but it
often
comes back.
Because I know as a doctor, if someone comes to me with stage I disease, I'm thrilled; we can
often
cure them.
But
often
it's too late, and it's stage III or IV cancer, for example.
I love contemporary art, but I'm
often
really frustrated with the contemporary art world and the contemporary art scene.
And I
often
have to leave the freeway and look for different ways for me to try and make it home.
Very
often
when I meet someone and they learn this about me, there's a certain kind of awkwardness.
And in the end, quite often, the urge is stronger than they are and they blurt it out: "If I give you my date of birth, can you tell me what day of the week I was born on?" (Laughter) Or they mention cube roots or ask me to recite a long number or long text.
The world is richer, vaster than it too
often
seems to be.
Victims were
often
blamed, victims were
often
judged.
They're there 24/7, they're listening confidentially and quite
often
not giving any advice.
How
often
do we really ever listen without giving advice?
Quite
often
on the phone calls, an older person would say, "Could you give me some advice, please?"
Because when I talk about my life, I
often
say that I've been lucky.
Because it can be and so
often
is the power to save a life.
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