Personal
in sentence
3773 examples of Personal in a sentence
It's an open-source GPS jammer, developed by Limor Fried, a graduate student at MIT, and Limor calls it "a tool for reclaiming our
personal
space."
Its jamming signals don't stop at the edge of your
personal
space or at the edge of your car.
So that's one of the reasons, from a
personal
experience, that I say let's channel these resources we get into something productive.
And now, today I want to tell you my
personal
observation in the past several years, from that wall.
I think the technicities of creativity can be taught and shared, and I think you can find out things about your own
personal
physical signature, your own cognitive habits, and use that as a point of departure to misbehave beautifully.
When I was hired by the Free Library in 2013, I specifically chose to work at McPherson because I understand what it's like to grow up in an environment where substance use disorder shapes the everyday, and I wanted to use those
personal
experiences as a guide for my work.
And their strength and their commitment provided support and stability for me and my siblings, and it was those
personal
experiences that brought me to McPherson.
Now, it wasn't until this point that I realized that these photos were such a huge part of the
personal
loss these people had felt.
They want positive actions they can engage in, and in their bones, they know it's time to take
personal
responsibility and invest in more kindness to each other and to the environment.
So I want to share with you a
personal
story about a turnaround or a transformation.
So with help from old and new friends, I turned the side of this abandoned house into a giant chalkboard, and stenciled it with a fill-in-the-blank sentence: "Before I die, I want to ..." So anyone walking by can pick up a piece of chalk, reflect on their life, and share their
personal
aspirations in public space.
I keep it with me to remind me of the ties that tie me to the young women I wrote about, ties that are not economic but
personal
in nature, measured not in money but in memories.
But what I do want to talk about is a
personal
challenge to reality that I take personally, and I want to preface it by saying that I absolutely love science.
Cities are places of celebration,
personal
expression.
Well, it wasn't that long ago we were asking, "Well, what would anyone do with a
personal
computer?"
It's spaces like these that spawned
personal
computing.
Why not
personal
biotech?
It's a tremendous
personal
triumph of going from first principles all the way to a fantastically complex and useful system.
It's about empowering people to make meaningful connections, connections that are enabling us to rediscover a humanness that we've lost somewhere along the way, by engaging in marketplaces like Airbnb, like Kickstarter, like Etsy, that are built on
personal
relationships versus empty transactions.
Yes, there's actually a four-stage, rigorous interview process that's designed to find the people that would make great
personal
assistants and weed out the dodgy Rabbits.
Now, I realize that this concept may sound a little Big Brother to some of you, and yes, there are some enormous transparency and privacy issues to solve, but ultimately, if we can collect our
personal
reputation, we can actually control it more, and extract the immense value that will flow from it.
In the 21st century, new trust networks, and the reputation capital they generate, will reinvent the way we think about wealth, markets, power and
personal
identity, in ways we can't yet even imagine.
And this is
personal
to me.
Beyond that, what I found most fascinating was the level of endemic corruption that I saw across all different countries, and particularly centered around the heart of power, around public officials who were embezzling the public's money for their own
personal
enrichment, and allowed to do that because of official secrecy.
Now, when you are about to say or do something, we can think, do I want this to be part of my legacy, part of my
personal
record?
The passion that that man has for his own
personal
growth is the most important thing.
Whether it was concocting delicious meals from stolen scraps from the warehouse, sculpting people's hair with toenail clippers, or constructing weights from boulders in laundry bags tied on to tree limbs, prisoners learn how to make do with less, and many of them want to take this ingenuity that they've learned to the outside and start restaurants, barber shops,
personal
training businesses.
I hope that instead of feeling anxious and worried that they don't fit in that one box or that their identity will become irrelevant someday, that they can feel free to experiment and to take control of their
personal
narrative and identity.
Each Zipcar replaces 15
personal
cars, and each driver drives about 80 percent less because they're now paying the full cost, all at once, in real time.
This does express the humanity of what's going on, and the
personal
relationships, but that is also like saying that it's the same thing as a yard sale or a bake sale or babysitting.
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