Produce
in sentence
3221 examples of Produce in a sentence
No longer able to
produce
sufficient energy to maintain its structure, it collapses under its own gravitational pressure and explodes in a supernova.
So these two founders who had been such close friends and such close allies and such partners, then began to
produce
enmity.
It enables us to manage partisanship when that's possible, and it enables us actually to overcome partisan division and
produce
compromise, when and only when that is possible.
But this involved running a classifier thousands of times over an image, thousands of neural network evaluations to
produce
detection.
With our system, instead of looking at an image thousands of times to
produce
detection, you only look once, and that's why we call it the YOLO method of object detection.
This means they can eat everything from toxic waste to plastic, and they can
produce
waste products like oil and battery power and even tiny nuggets of real gold.
There are now four species that
produce
commercial beer.
Every day, you and I and everyone in this room and on this planet, are saved by similar soil bacteria that
produce
most of our antibiotics.
In this talk, he presents a new technique by which he can combine photographs and
produce
composite portraits.
For the second stage written test, it is required to write a 600-word essay like this one: [Discuss the rise and fall of the maritime trade in East and Southeast Asia in the 17th century ...] and as I have shown earlier, our robot took the sentences from the textbooks and Wikipedia, combined them together, and optimized it to
produce
an essay without understanding a thing.
As a species, we dig and scrape the Earth for resources, we
produce
energy, we raise animals and cultivate crops for food, we build cities, we move around, we create waste.
It is estimated that the Dutch
produce
4.3 billion tulip bulbs every year.
We worked on dance floors which
produce
electricity when you dance on them.
Manufacturers in one country
produce
products and they export them to consumers in other countries, and it feels like the manufacturing countries win and the importing countries lose.
And I work in the middle of a highly connected network of manufacturers all collaborating from around the world to
produce
many of the products we use today.
Many decades ago, he said that it's most beneficial for a country to focus on producing the products it can
produce
most efficiently and trading for the rest.
Companies today focus on manufacturing what they
produce
best and most efficiently, and they trade for everything else.
So this means they rely on a global, interconnected, interdependent network of manufacturers to
produce
these products.
In fact, that network is so interconnected it's almost impossible to dismantle and
produce
products in just one country.
Now, just think about this: even if we were able to dismantle this network and
produce
products in just one country, which by the way is easier said than done, we would still only be saving or protecting one out of 10 lost manufacturing jobs.
This tendency to look down on our own products and to see crops like fonio as simply "country peoples' food," therefore substandard, explains why even though we don't
produce
wheat in Senegal traditionally, it is far easier to find baguettes or croissants in the streets of Dakar than it is to find any fonio products.
I was also getting concerned about how disposable photography had started to feel in the digital world, and I really wanted to
produce
images that had a sense of worth again.
And I can squash that down to
produce
one image that is fully focused from front to back.
We'll be able to see rotating stars in our galaxy
produce
sinusoidal waves.
Every conference, podcast and dialogue around global food security starts with this question and goes on to answer it by saying we need to
produce
70 percent more food.
We could have a tipping point in global food and agriculture if surging demand surpasses the agricultural system's structural capacity to
produce
food.
And so when you look at the combined demand increase coming from India, China and the African continent, and look at it versus the combined increase in production coming from India, China, the African continent, North America, South America and Europe, you are left with a 214-trillion-calorie deficit, one we can't
produce.
The new question is, how do we
produce
214 trillion calories to feed 8.3 billion people by 2027?
There are factories around the world that are burning fossil fuels to
produce
carbon black, to make black inks that we use on an everyday basis.
In this system, they
produce
a lot of air bubbles and redistribute them across the whole of the ship, like an air carpet that reduces the water resistance when a ship is moving.
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