Realized
in sentence
2067 examples of Realized in a sentence
When I
realized
that, I literally wanted to throw up.
These events are always difficult, I had a relative who was being a bit difficult, my mum was not in a good place, and I can remember finding myself just before the whole thing started telling this story about something that happened in a 1970s sitcom, and I just thought at the time, I don't know why I'm doing this, and what I
realized
I was doing was I was coming up with something from somewhere I could use to make her laugh together with me.
And when we looked at the digital skeleton, we
realized
that yes, this was a dinosaur unlike any other.
It's extremely good at using available means to achieve a state in which its goal is
realized.
We
realized
that the most convenient way to highlight the presence of the probiotics, and hence, the presence of the tumors, was to get these bacteria to produce a signal that would be detectable in the urine, and so we specifically programmed these probiotics to make a molecule that would change the color of your urine to indicate the presence of cancer.
I don't think I
realized
this was so unusual at the time, and maybe I still haven't, because I'm still designing houses.
Now, I read Peter Singer's book in 1980, when I had a full head of lush, brown hair, and indeed I was moved by it, because I had become a lawyer because I wanted to speak for the voiceless, defend the defenseless, and I'd never
realized
how voiceless and defenseless the trillions, billions of nonhuman animals are.
And by 1985, I
realized
that I was trying to accomplish something that was literally impossible, the reason being that all of my clients, all the animals whose interests I was trying to defend, were legal things; they were invisible.
I began this sort of personal crusade against the mundane, because if there's one thing I've realized, it's that any career, even one as seemingly glamorous as surf photography, has the danger of becoming monotonous.
So in my search to break up this monotony, I
realized
something: There's only about a third of the Earth's oceans that are warm, and it's really just that thin band around the equator.
And I realized, all this shivering had actually taught me something: In life, there are no shortcuts to joy.
And so as I contemplated all of this and looked at what was happening, I suddenly
realized
that there was a paradox that was emerging inside of me, and the paradox was this: in all of those sermons that I preached decrying the violence, I was also talking about building community, but I suddenly
realized
that there was a certain segment of the population that I was not including in my definition of community.
After about two weeks of volunteering at the high school, I
realized
that the youth that I was trying to reach, they weren't going to high school.
Same with probation officers, same with judges, same with folks who were up that law enforcement chain, because they realized, like we did, that we'll never arrest ourselves out of this situation, that there will not be enough prosecutions made, and you cannot fill these jails up enough in order to alleviate the problem.
As I stood in that grocery store weeks later, I
realized
I had no idea of who to thank for this plenty, and no idea of how they were being treated.
At Cambridge, thousands of miles away from home, I
realized
I was spending more hours with my laptop than I did with any other human.
When I was running my first software company, I
realized
that we were getting stuck.
There was a lot of friction, but not much else, and I gradually
realized
the brilliant, creative people that I'd hired didn't know each other.
And when I reflected on my own career, and the extraordinary people I've had the privilege to work with, I
realized
how much more we could give each other if we just stopped trying to be superchickens.
Lorna and Judith
realized
that Kanner had been as wrong about autism being rare as he had been about parents causing it.
As one of them said, "It was like you looked around and
realized
there was more than one giraffe at the zoo."
There was the night Amber went out on mission, and in talking to the women of the house,
realized
that there was a barricaded shooter lying in wait for the Afghan and American forces who were waiting to enter the home.
Then I realized, "Oh my gosh!
But then I realized, "But I'm still alive!
And then I
realized
what a tremendous gift this experience could be, what a stroke of insight this could be to how we live our lives.
But I did the math, and I
realized
that my great-grandfather had been born exactly 118 years before that year, and I sat on his knee until I was 11 years old, and I
realized
it's nothing in time, nor in history.
And I quickly
realized
it wasn't just about energy.
It struck me that the system itself, the framework within which we live, is fundamentally flawed, and I
realized
ultimately that our operating system, the way our economy functions, the way our economy's been built, is a system in itself.
And as I looked at our global economy, I
realized
it too is that system, but it's a system that effectively can't run in the long term.
And I
realized
we've been perfecting what's effectively a linear economy for 150 years, where we take a material out of the ground, we make something out of it, and then ultimately that product gets thrown away, and yes, we do recycle some of it, but more an attempt to get out what we can at the end, not by design.
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