Ratio
in sentence
1146 examples of Ratio in a sentence
The
ratio
of TPMs to engineers was around 1:50 at Uber.
In most low- and middle-income countries, for instance, the
ratio
of psychiatrists to the population is something like one for every one and a half million people, which literally means that 90 percent of the people needing mental health services will not get it.
In our mind, the relevant metric is: student-to-valuable-human-time- with-the-teacher
ratio.
One, the red line, is the
ratio
of British to Indian per capita income.
And the blue line is the
ratio
of American to Chinese.
That
ratio
in America would only cost a couple five years to earn, but in China it's 30 to 40 years with the skyrocketing real estate price.
And very quickly, my brain starts to think that's the accurate
ratio
of negative to positive in the world.
And I know this sounds like a lofty goal, and it is ridiculously ambitious, but today, our current operating model operates at a ten-to-one
ratio.
If we had used the One Laptop per Child model of a 1 to 1 ratio, then we would have benefited 1,650 users.
Now to conceal the shape, we changed the aspect
ratio
a little bit.
So what's the conversion
ratio
between Elon time and real time?
CA: So if I estimated that the conversation
ratio
for Elon time to your time is about 2x, am I a long way out there?
So, I wanted to know if this was possible to put this at an industrial level, so we made a large boat with a large sail, and with a very light hull, inflatable, very small footprint, so we have a very big size and power
ratio.
And this is called the three-to-one positive emotion
ratio.
If you are regularly achieving the three-to-one positive emotion ratio, if you are never sitting still for more than an hour at a time, if you are reaching out to one person you care about every single day, if you are tackling tiny goals to boost your willpower, you will live 10 years longer than everyone else, and here's where that math I showed you earlier comes in.
And if we change where we make the folds, if we change the folding ratio, then this cube turns into this one.
We can change the folding
ratio
again to produce this shape, or this shape.
In general, if we make a small change to the folding ratio, which is what you're seeing here, then the form changes correspondingly.
So now I'm not specifying a single
ratio
anymore to fold it, but instead I'm establishing a rule, I'm establishing a link between a property of a surface and how that surface is folded.
So this red line is the employment-to-population ratio, in other words, the percentage of working-age people in America who have work.
And then finally, the one statistic that I suspect many of the people in this room have seen: the export-to-GDP
ratio.
I've run several dozen such surveys in different parts of the world, and in all cases except one, where a group actually underestimated the trade-to-GDP ratio, people have this tendency towards overestimation, and so I thought it important to give a name to this, and that's what I refer to as globaloney, the difference between the dark blue bars and the light gray bars.
If you look at the OECD countries and how much they spend per domestic poor person, and compare it with how much they spend per poor person in poor countries, the
ratio
— Branko Milanovic at the World Bank did the calculations — turns out to be about 30,000 to one.
Now of course, some of us, if we truly are cosmopolitan, would like to see that
ratio
being brought down to one-is-to-one.
If we simply brought that
ratio
down to 15,000 to one, we would be meeting those aid targets that were agreed at the Rio Summit 20 years ago that the summit that ended last week made no further progress on.
And I think that we need to be more aware of, and we need to find the risk-benefit
ratio.
So I propose we have a Trump number, and the Trump number is the
ratio
of this man's behavioral repertoire to the number of neurons in his brain.
And the key thing is to have a
ratio
of drive to stop, to stop time, of about six or seven.
And here's an interesting ratio: Starting from zero in 1900, only 30 years later, the
ratio
of motor vehicles to the number of households in the United States reached 90 percent in just 30 years.
We know that their brain-to-body ratio, which is a physical measure of intelligence, is second only to humans.
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