Really
in sentence
32169 examples of Really in a sentence
Audience: T, E, D. Charles Hazlewood: Yeah, you sound a bit more like cows
really
than human beings.
Of course there's a grimmer side to that truth, which is that it's actually taken decades for the world at large to come to a position of trust, to
really
believe that disability and sports can go together in a convincing and interesting fashion.
It was a
really
extraordinary moment.
Now in this room with these four disabled musicians, within five minutes a rapt listening, a rapt response and some
really
insanely beautiful music.
Now, we had lots of neighbors in our Brooklyn neighborhood, and some of them were
really
very helpful for my parents.
Some of them were
really
afraid of contagion, and they wouldn't even walk in front of our house.
I think this was a time when my family
really
began to realize what disability meant to some people: fear.
But in reality, I don't know why I was
really
surprised by this story, because when I was five years old, and my mother, like mothers and fathers all across the United States, was taking me to school to enroll, she pushed my wheelchair to the school in walking distance to our house, pulled the wheelchair up the steps into the school, and we were greeted by the principal.
Not
really
greeted.
This is a
really
important time in my life, because it would be the first time that I
really
would be challenging the system, me, and although I was working with a lot of other friends who had disabilities who were encouraging me to move forward with this, it was nonetheless quite frightening.
But I was
really
very lucky.
I had a friend who was a disabled student at Long Island University and was also a stringer at the "New York Times," and he was able to get a reporter to write a
really
good piece about what had happened and why he thought what had happened was wrong.
So we feel
really
strongly that our US Senate needs to do its job, that our Senate needs to enable us as Americans not only to be able to assist disabled people and governments around the world to learn about the good work that we've been doing, but it's equally important that disabled people have the same opportunities to travel, study and work abroad as anyone else in our country.
I meet disabled people who have been offered jobs by businesses because they live in a country where there's a quota system, and in order to avoid a fine, they will hire you and then tell you, "You don't need to come to work because we
really
don't need you in the facility."
We wanted to know if babies and young children could understand this
really
profound thing about other people.
So there are two
really
remarkable things about this.
The first one is that these little 18 month-old babies have already discovered this
really
profound fact about human nature, that we don't always want the same thing.
They depend on their moms to drop worms in their little open mouths for as long as two years, which is a
really
long time in the life of a bird.
Now there are two things that are
really
interesting about this.
And there's been a bunch of interesting studies recently that have shown this playing around is
really
a kind of experimental research program.
If you look at the way children play, when you ask them to explain something, what they
really
do is do a series of experiments.
And if you actually look in their brains, you see that they're flooded with these neurotransmitters that are
really
good at inducing learning and plasticity, and the inhibitory parts haven't come on yet.
So when we say that babies and young children are bad at paying attention, what we
really
mean is that they're bad at not paying attention.
But really, it kind of means this: for the journalists, people like me, it means accepting that you can't know everything, and allowing other people, through technology, to be your eyes and your ears.
And I believe this can be a
really
empowering process.
This is, for me, where it got
really
interesting.
And I realized: this is
really
something quite significant.
We don't
really
understand it, but once you let go of a piece of information, it travels like wind.
And I should say at this stage that one
really
important dimension to all of this for journalists who utilize social media and who utilize citizen journalism is making sure we get our facts correct.
And during a lot of this work, we found something, or I found something, that
really
fascinated me, and maybe you can remember it.
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