Protecting
in sentence
1024 examples of Protecting in a sentence
Multinationals are
protecting
human rights.
I hate the idea that governments are not
protecting
human rights around the world.
As such, it does create a challenge to protect, but we also have a challenge
protecting
the species that move along with it.
It's
protecting
five World Heritage sites.
Beverly Joubert: We are truly passionate about the African wilderness and
protecting
the African wilderness, and so what we've done is we've focused on iconic cats.
It was absolutely amazing when she picked it up to safety,
protecting
it from the hyena.
And simply, if we can't protect them, we're going to have a job
protecting
ourselves as well.
The radiologists were, in turn, criticized for
protecting
their own financial self-interest.
You are
protecting
us by showing what is happening at Tahrir Square."
In some states, senior water rights holders can leave their water in the stream while legally
protecting
it from others, and maintaining their water right.
And it wasn't until this guy, Stephen Mather, a businessman from Chicago, wrote an angry letter to the Department of the Interior, saying, "You guys aren't doing a good enough job
protecting
and preserving these places."
"Each of you, all of you, have a role to play in
protecting
these places for future generations."
Almost all of these letters were saying, "Don't do it;
protecting
these places is the right thing to do."
The bottom line is: whether you're in it or you're searching for it, I believe marriage is an institution worth pursuing and
protecting.
Yeah, so we face one of the greatest grand challenges in all of human history today: the need to feed nine billion people and do so sustainably and equitably and justly, at the same time
protecting
our planet for this and future generations.
We conventionally divide space into private and public realms, and we know these legal distinctions very well because we've become experts at
protecting
our private property and private space.
MR: Our producers caught up with Kim Kardashian earlier today to find out what she was planning on wearing to her — MB: Eh? (Laughter) MR: It should do a pretty good job of
protecting
our ears from having to hear about the details of Kim Kardashian's wedding.
But as it turns out, for purposes of
protecting
your privacy at the expense of general GPS reliability, there's something even more potent and more subversive than a Wave Bubble, and that is a GPS spoofer.
We simply cannot tolerate GPS jammers and spoofers, and yet, given the lack of effective legal means for
protecting
our privacy from the GPS dot, can you really blame people for wanting to turn them on, for wanting to use them?
Now, behavioral economists might refer to this sort of thing as loss aversion We have a strong predisposition towards
protecting
what we feel is ours.
When you're touching your neck, you're really
protecting
yourself.
Imagine the staggering cost of
protecting
this vital infrastructure with levees.
These are tools that we created to protect us from harm, but what they're doing is
protecting
us from innovation now.
People you don't know come in and look at you and poke you and prod you, and when I tell cancer survivors that this tool we created to protect them is actually preventing their data from being used, especially when only three to four percent of people who have cancer ever even sign up for a clinical study, their reaction is not, "Thank you, God, for
protecting
my privacy."
And they're aimed at
protecting
the relationships.
So far, our atmosphere has done, and our magnetic field has done pretty well
protecting
us from this.
We need a NASA-like organization for ocean exploration, because we need to be exploring and
protecting
our life support systems here on Earth.
You see, you want to work on
protecting
the animals out there.
Most of that we'll do by expanding and
protecting
wildlands, by expanding and
protecting
the populations of endangered species.
So if I put this inside this water here, you can see a silver reflective coating around it, and that silver reflective coating is the layer of air that's
protecting
the water from touching the paddle, and it's dry.
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