Parts
in sentence
4611 examples of Parts in a sentence
That is one prominent feature, but it ignores some other
parts
and will leave you really confused if you're trying to understand how faces work.
Other
parts
of the world have been hit by storms in even more devastating ways.
I wanted to blow you all up to try and make a point, but — (Laughter) — TED, for health and safety reasons, have told me I've got to do a countdown, so I feel like a bit of an Irish or Jewish terrorist, sort of a health and safety terrorist, and I — (Laughter) — I've got to count 3, 2, 1, and it's a bit alarming, so thinking of what my motto would be, and it would be, "Body parts, not heart attacks."
I've also spent some time surveying audiences in different
parts
of the world on what they actually guess these numbers to be.
I've run several dozen such surveys in different
parts
of the world, and in all cases except one, where a group actually underestimated the trade-to-GDP ratio, people have this tendency towards overestimation, and so I thought it important to give a name to this, and that's what I refer to as globaloney, the difference between the dark blue bars and the light gray bars.
All of them, however, including myself, as we walk underneath those strange stone gargoyles just down the road, feel that we've become less than the sum of our parts, feel as though we have become profoundly diminished.
But, you know, in many
parts
of the world, governments are not interested in opening up or in serving the poor, and it is a real challenge for those who want to change the system.
Because the female
parts
of the brain are better connected, they tend to collect more pieces of data when they think, put them into more complex patterns, see more options and outcomes.
These are the kinds of stories that convinced me that letter-writing will never again need to flip back her hair and talk about efficiency, because she is an art form now, all the
parts
of her, the signing, the scripting, the mailing, the doodles in the margins.
And when
parts
of your job are not easy or fun, you kind of look for an excuse not to do them.
I think we should study all the words, because when you think about words, you can make beautiful expressions from very humble
parts.
And any time one of those little
parts
of the mobile changes, is touched, any time you touch a word, you use it in a new context, you give it a new connotation, you verb it, you make the mobile move.
Artists also speak about how some of their most powerful work comes out of the
parts
of life that are most difficult.
We use levers all the time, in tools, doorknobs, bicycle
parts.
It's the person that's sliding his hands up and down the levers, so the mechanism itself can be very simple and composed of bicycle
parts
you can get anywhere in the world.
Because those bicycle
parts
are so ubiquitously available, they're super-cheap.
They're made by the gazillions in China and India, and we can source them anywhere in the world, build the chair anywhere, and most importantly repair it, even out in a village with a local bicycle mechanic who has local tools, knowledge and
parts
available.
So I'm an academic at MIT, and I'm a mechanical engineer, so I can do things like look at the type of terrain you want to travel on, and figure out how much resistance it should impose, look at the
parts
we have available and mix and match them to figure out what sort of gear trains we can use, and then look at the power and force you can get out of your upper body to analyze how fast you should be able to go in this chair as you put your arms up and down the levers.
And these red dots show the most congested parts, which are the bridges that lead into the inner city.
And one day we hope that these tissues can serve as replacement
parts
for the human body.
They also had taken out numerous patents on essential
parts
of the airplane.
These were the men of the whaleship Essex, whose story would later inspire
parts
of "Moby Dick."
Unfortunately, I picture it made in Germany or Japan, but this amazing machine that's constantly scouring every bit of human endeavor and taking resources, money, labor, capital, machinery, away from the least productive
parts
and towards the more productive parts, and while this might cause temporary dislocation, what it does is it builds up the more productive areas and lets the less productive areas fade away and die, and as a result the whole system is so much more efficient, so much richer for everybody.
It's the framework onto which the other
parts
are bolted.
The male can't bite you, won't bite you, doesn't have the mouth
parts
to bite you.
So if there's a problem with a shortage of babysitters in some
parts
of the country and the problem is nobody can afford the vetting and training, an investor can pay for it and the system will tithe back the enhanced earnings of the individuals for maybe the next two years.
So he was learning many different core principles of design, about how to experiment with new ideas, how to take complex ideas and break them down into simpler parts, how to collaborate with other people on your projects, about how to find and fix bugs when things go wrong, how to keep persistent and to persevere in the face of frustrations when things aren't working well.
So these are systems which are made up of many interconnected or interacting parts: swarms of birds or fish, ant colonies, ecosystems, brains, financial markets.
So the whole is literally more than the sum of its
parts.
And all of this also means that you can forget about the individual
parts
of the system, how complex they are.
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