Places
in sentence
3259 examples of Places in a sentence
Do you know, in some states across America you need less identification to open up a company than you do to get a library card, like Delaware, which is one of the easiest
places
in the world to set up an anonymous company.
Going to war with people who are not our enemy in
places
that are not a threat doesn't make us safe, and that applies whether it's in Iraq or on the Internet.
You can fundamentally change your reaction to things so that it allows you to go
places
and see things and do things that otherwise would be completely denied to you ... where you could see the hardpan south of the Sahara, or you can see New York City in a way that is almost dreamlike, or the unconscious gingham of Eastern Europe fields or the Great Lakes as a collection of small puddles.
The net effect of that is that our people who are overseas in dangerous places, whether they're diplomats or military, and our allies who are in similar situations, are at greater risk because we don't see the threats that are coming their way.
I think that we have never been in a time where there are more
places
where things are going badly and forming the petri dish in which terrorists take advantage of the lack of governance.
And so you have a lot of those arcs of instability in the world right now, in
places
like Syria, where there's a civil war going on and you have massive numbers, thousands and thousands of foreign fighters who are coming into Syria to learn how to be terrorists and practice that activity, and lots of those people are Westerners who hold passports to European countries or in some cases the United States, and so they are basically learning how to do jihad and have expressed intent to go out and do that later on in their home countries.
You've got
places
like Iraq, which is suffering from a high level of sectarian violence, again a breeding ground for terrorism.
We visited the great museums and historic buildings of both Europe and the Middle East, but to encourage my growing interest in science and technology, they would simply drop me off in
places
like the London Science Museum, where I would wander endlessly for hours by myself studying the history of science and technology.
Guess where those
places
are?
What attracts people to successful public spaces, and what is it about unsuccessful
places
that keeps people away?
I studied this park very early on in my career because it happened to have been built by my stepfather, so I knew that
places
like Paley Park didn't happen by accident.
But my question was, why weren't there more
places
with greenery and
places
to sit in the middle of the city where you didn't feel alone, or like a trespasser?
I wanted to be able to create
places
that would give you the feeling that you got in Paley Park, and not allow developers to build bleak plazas like this.
In this photo, everything looks very finished, but that granite edge, those lights, the back on that bench, the trees in planting, and the many different kinds of
places
to sit were all little battles that turned this project into a place that people wanted to be.
And if we had to go up, we had to go up in
places
where you wouldn't need to own a car.
So in the areas where we zoned for significant development, I was determined to create
places
that would make a difference in people's lives.
I wanted to make sure that there were tree-lined paths from the upland to the water, that there were trees and plantings everywhere, and, of course, lots and lots of
places
to sit.
Well now, all over New York City, there are
places
where you can find your very own seat.
And what we learn can lead us to new kinds of robotic flyers that can expand our vision of important and remote
places.
Sometimes we'd go clockwise, sometimes counterclockwise, to all those different places, and we didn't really live together until that Saturday morning.
Something worthy, by the way, so addiction and infatuation don't count, because we all know that those are not safe
places
to live.
We can link global experts with people in the most rural, difficult-to-reach
places
that are beyond the end of the road, effectively putting those experts in their homes, allowing us to make diagnoses and make plans for treatment.
Along with the pubic hair and the hair in the armpits, new glands start to secrete in those places, and that's what's making the change in smell.
We know that we're headed for climate change, which is going to change rainfall patterns, making some areas drier, as you can see in orange, and others wetter, in blue, causing droughts in our breadbaskets, in
places
like the Midwest and Central Europe, and floods in others.
If we do a few simple things in targeted places, we can bring our fisheries back and use them to feed people.
So we think we can work in a limited number of
places
to make the fisheries come back.
But what do we have to do in these
places?
We know because we've seen it happening in a lot of different
places.
It can be when you catch fish using gears that have been prohibited, when you fish in
places
where you're not supposed to fish, you catch fish that are the wrong size or the wrong species.
Maybe we should look not just here but in remote
places
where their might be a distinct genetic context, there might be environmental factors that protect people.
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