Realized
in sentence
2067 examples of Realized in a sentence
I looked all over the country, and I found that between five and 10 percent of all U.S. jurisdictions actually use any type of risk assessment tool, and when I looked at these tools, I quickly
realized
why.
That's when I
realized
that the more complicated you make a machine, the more likely that it will fail due to something absolutely unexpected.
And one day, I was thinking about how all data has a location, and I
realized
that the answer had been staring me in the face.
Hence, Saminu left to the city, where he soon
realized
that life was not easy.
So when I
realized
that those same cues are also important for speaker identity, I had this idea.
And I
realized
something interesting: Avaz helps children with autism learn words.
And I
realized
that this particular configuration, this particular way of representing language, it allowed me to actually create very concise rules that go between FreeSpeech on one side and English on the other.
And he
realized
suddenly that the force that drew the apple down to the earth could be the same as the force regulating the motions of the planets and the moon.
Imagine what happened to the society when they
realized
that an English mom in her teacup actually was drinking a monster soup, not very far from here.
After making so many robes, I
realized
that the policies the Klan had in place or wanted to have in place a hundred years ago are in place today.
There was something else I
realized.
But one day, Rob noticed some faint signals coming out of the instrument that we dismissed as electronic noise for probably a year before we
realized
that it wasn't really behaving like noise.
And we
realized
there's really something here.
I
realized
that not everybody can be able to access what I was able to access.
For the first time, I
realized
people were smart 2,000 years ago.
The shaft of light beaming through the oculus was both beautiful and palpable, and I
realized
for the first time that light could be designed.
I also
realized
that I wasn't the first person to think that this place was really special.
I realized, when combined, you could create things that were amazing that couldn't be done in either domain alone.
But this past October, I
realized
that I'm only just beginning.
So that was our global thing, and then in the U.S., both of us have had amazing educations, and we saw that as the way that the U.S. could live up to its promise of equal opportunity is by having a phenomenal education system, and the more we learned, the more we
realized
we're not really fulfilling that promise.
We knew that 210 million women were saying they wanted access to contraceptives, even the contraceptives we have here in the United States, and we weren't providing them because of the political controversy in our country, and to me that was just a crime, and I kept looking around trying to find the person that would get this back on the global stage, and I finally
realized
I just had to do it.
Quickly looking at the arithmetic, I
realized
I could only actually make three of related design.
I
realized
that success is a moment, but what we're always celebrating is creativity and mastery.
But I stayed because I
realized
I was witnessing what's so rare to glimpse, that difference between success and mastery.
So he
realized
he had a set whose number of elements was larger than infinity.
And then in 1977, Benoit Mandelbrot, a French mathematician,
realized
that if you do computer graphics and used these shapes he called fractals, you get the shapes of nature.
So after the weird, disorienting success that I went through with "Eat, Pray, Love," I
realized
that all I had to do was exactly the same thing that I used to have to do all the time when I was an equally disoriented failure.
As we did this, though, it was really quite humbling, because we
realized
that there was not simply one gene for autism.
But as that idea started to fade away, as sports scientists and coaches
realized
that rather than the average body type, you want highly specialized bodies that fit into certain athletic niches, a form of artificial selection took place, a self-sorting for bodies that fit certain sports, and athletes' bodies became more different from one another.
We've got many trials going on in the community and in schools, and through the lessons that we've learned in the field, we've
realized
it's extremely important to share the data in non-medical jargon so that people understand what we're examining and what that means to them.
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