Points
in sentence
3133 examples of Points in a sentence
Everybody
points
and laughs, and they say, "He tried it a fifth time, and it still didn't work!
So that's two
points
for insects.
So that's three
points
for insects.
So that's four
points
for insects.
I can go on, and I could make many more
points
for insects, but time doesn't allow this.
But that response comes out of those 90
points.
And he said one day, "What's the shortest distance between two points?"
And he said, "That is the shortest distance between two points."
Baseball was transformed when the cash-strapped Oakland Athletics started recruiting players who didn't score highly on traditionally valued metrics, like runs batted in, but who had the ability to help the team score
points
and win games.
We've put a bunch of game mechanics in there, where you get badges, we're going to start having leader boards by area, you get
points.
Just the wording of the badging, or how many
points
you get for doing something, we see on a system-wide basis, like tens of thousands of fifth-graders or sixth-graders going one direction or another, depending what badge you give them.
And so let me list just a couple of the things I think this research
points
us toward trying to understand.
And having that kind of relationship, for me, turned out to be critical at many
points
in my career.
Political parties could and should be one of the basic entry
points
for people to get engaged in politics.
Four atoms of hydrogen, the four
points
of the tetrahedron, which means the little carbon atom.
An FM device in the cortex of the brain, the motor cortex, will send signals in real time to the motor
points
in the relevant muscles so that the person will be able to move their arm, let's say, in real time, if they've lost control of their arm.
And I could make the same
points
about the United States and the United Nations.
And here it is for the growth of a rat, and those
points
on there are data
points.
We looked at rooms that were mechanically ventilated, which are the data
points
in the blue.
So if you look at the green data points, which is air that's outside, you'll see that there's a large amount of microbial diversity, or variety of microbial types.
But if you look at the blue data points, which is mechanically ventilated air, it's not as diverse.
The data
points
that are closer together have microbial communities that are more similar than data
points
that are far apart.
And the first things that you can see from this graph is, if you look at the blue data points, which are the mechanically ventilated air, they're not simply a subset of the green data points, which are the outdoor air.
But you know, these stories, and lots of other experiments that we've done on conflicts of interest, basically kind of bring two
points
to the foreground for me.
And each of these witnesses that we plotted on the map, you could click on these small bullet points, and you could hear what they had to say, see their photographic image and at times, see their videographic images as well.
Anybody seen a ballet dancer's toes when they come out of the
points?
Galileo, 1609: he
points
his telescope up at the sky towards Saturn, and he sees for the first time in history what we now know are the rings of Saturn.
When I assign values to the vertical and horizontal elements, I can use the changes of those data
points
over time to create the form.
I want to go back though to this graph that I showed you earlier where we put it all together to make two
points.
So there's points, and these
points
are actually being cross-referenced.
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