Outcome
in sentence
2560 examples of Outcome in a sentence
She's investing in the process, not in the
outcome.
As we grow up, we lose the ability to invest in the process, we start investing in the
outcome.
By definition the
outcome
is outside of our control, and if that's where we spend all of our emotional energy, we are going to get drained as we do.
But if, on the other hand, we said, "Here is the outcome, I am going to invest in the process and give it every single bit I could," every day is a blast, and you're well on your way to achieving the vision that I outlined to you.
Invest in the process, not in the
outcome.
An epic win is an
outcome
that is so extraordinarily positive, you had no idea it was even possible until you achieved it.
We want to imagine the best-case scenario outcome, and then we want to empower people to make that
outcome
a reality.
The only way to find its
outcome
is, effectively, just to watch it evolve.
And you cannot predict the
outcome
of human development.
If we had thought that the rules of the sports we care about are merely arbitrary, rather than designed to call forth the virtues and the excellences that we think are worthy of admiring, we wouldn't care about the
outcome
of the game.
And what we do, is we say that the ultimate
outcome
of a nation is how successful is it at creating happy and healthy lives for its citizens.
When it has a scarce resource that it wants to turn into a desirable outcome, it thinks in terms of efficiency.
And so in strict happy-planet methodology, we've become less efficient at turning our ultimate scarce resource into the
outcome
we want to.
They knew they were valued for what they were trying to do, not the
outcome.
But if we miss these, we're missing key important points, and the
outcome
is likely to feel unfair.
I didn't even bother to watch the whole thing because I'm sure I could guess the outcome, and the visual were the worst I have ever seen.
Finally I could not believe the complete omission of the 1763 Battle of Bushy Run that started as a re-run of Braddock's defeat but ended up as the victory that decided the
outcome
of Pontiac's War thanks to the wiles of the same Colonel Bouquet who certainly must rank as one of the most successful British commanders of this war.
The movie is very loosely based on the Richard Trenton Chase case, culling a few facts here and there to make a fake character and a different
outcome.
William Windom, as the soldier who is the last to "drop in" is the only one curious to make the effort, and it doesn't take long to figure the
outcome.
Luckily, there does seem to be somewhat a decent
outcome.
I am curious why the
outcome
of the game was altered though, I think it would have been just as dramatic if the real
outcome
was portrayed.
If you have no knowledge of mountaineering, give it a look: be prepared for some clichéd heroics (although no more clichéd than a hundred other passably diverting flicks), and a clichéd
outcome.
Words cannot do justice to the wooden acting, the stupid plotline, and the ever-predictable
outcome.
The pacing is poor, and often you'll sit there, being able to guess the
outcome
of every scene, predicting every joke, often thinking of a better one at the spot, bored out of your mind.
There are so many logical errors in this show it's barely worth me stating. 1) Mystic Gohan is non existent 2) Uub is as powerful as MAJIN BUU yet plays absolutely no role in the show, somehow he is easily overpowered by every bad guy 3) The whole Super Saiyan 4 idea is retarded and it's appalling that he loses to super 17 (which is the worst idea for a DB villain EVER) 4) Super Saiyan 4 Goku is no match for Super 17 but non transformed Goku using a move he learned in a movie that wasn't supposed to happen, kills him with ease 5) Vegeta is utterly useless 6) No character other than Goku has any impact to the
outcome
of the battles 7) The series ends with a spirit bomb...come on 8) Goku invincible?
The
outcome
of that sequence isn't explained, and Hugo's real estate dealings have nothing to do with the story.
The
outcome
is totally illogical and incomprehensible, no incriminating evidence is revealed to the spectator.
As the title suggests there is a philosophical, meritocratic thread running through this film: if a man has the talent and looks to find his way into society and money what might be the
outcome
if he is denied it for failing to have the X factor?
Watching the movie at 12.01 in the morning to see that major parts of the book were left out frustrated me, seeing that it affected the "different
" outcome
of the movie.
It's not supposed to have any significance other than getting Ben to loosen up a little, but the direction of the whole scene is wrong-headed, and the
outcome
is unseen because the idiot editor cuts away...or was that all the film he had?
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