Sea
in sentence
2756 examples of Sea in a sentence
You probably know it better as a
sea
monkey.
So just to make sure, I insisted that we build a mock-up in wood, at scale, of the railing and the
sea
wall.
We can do the same thing with ships at
sea.
When I was a kid, high school specifically, I was told that I would be at
sea
in the new global economy if I did not know Japanese.
On the human side, Walter Starck, an oceanographer, has been painting his wetsuit since the 1970s, and anthropologically, Pacific island tribes painted themselves in bands in a
sea
snake ceremony to ward off the shark god.
This is a picture of
sea
ice taken flying over the Arctic.
This is the impact of the ozone hole on
sea
level pressure, so low pressure, high pressures, around the southern oceans, around Antarctica.
We can look at the impacts of storms on
sea
salt particles in the atmosphere.
Wild turkeys are seen as only slightly more dangerous than
sea
otters, and pandas are twice as lovable as ladybugs.
So whenever they'd launch a big ship, they would invite some dignitary up from London on the train to make a speech, break a bottle of champagne over the bows, launch it down the slipway into the river and out to
sea.
And this is my office, on the
sea.
We're going to go on a dive to the deep sea, and anyone that's had that lovely opportunity knows that for about two and half hours on the way down, it's a perfectly positively pitch-black world.
The blue
sea
has clean air above it and forms pretty few clouds; there's almost no rain there.
And, finally, like the heart: pumping water from outside, from the sea, into the forest.
If there is a desert in the continent with a nearby sea, evaporation's greater on the sea, and it sucks the air above the desert.
The air above the
sea
is sucked into the continent and humidity is imported.
This pump that sucks the moisture into the continent also speeds up the air above the sea, and this prevents hurricane formations.
It would lead to changing deserts, changing rivers, changing patterns of hurricanes, changing
sea
levels, hundreds of millions of people, perhaps billions of people who would have to move, and if we've learned anything from history, that means severe and extended conflict.
Orwell feared the truth would be concealed from us, and Huxley feared we would be drowned in a
sea
of irrelevance.
And what I admire and appreciate about this project, aside from the fact, including the fact that it's based on real human need, is that it's a fantastic example of courage in the face of a
sea
of irrelevance.
We need to build a log cabin, if you will, at the bottom of the
sea.
We've only had about a dozen or so scientific labs at the bottom of the
sea.
One of the most precious gifts that we had underwater is that we had WiFi, and for 31 days straight we were able to connect with the world in real time from the bottom of the
sea
and share all of these experiences.
What if, in between the city and the
sea
we have a forest, a forest that doesn't try to resist the energy of nature, but dissipates it by introducing friction?
I had a chance to rule out a stroke in this chimpanzee and make sure that this gorilla didn't have a torn aorta, evaluate this macaw for a heart murmur, make sure that this California
sea
lion's paricardium wasn't inflamed, and in this picture, I'm listening to the heart of a lion after a lifesaving, collaborative procedure with veterinarians and physicians where we drained 700 cc's of fluid from the sac in which this lion's heart was contained.
Seagulls fly overhead, and you feel like you're next to the sea, that you're really close to the beach.
And NASA have calculated that the
sea
level will rise, it is definite, by one meter in the next 100 years, the same time that my mum has been on planet Earth.
This is more than what the Amazon River, which is the largest river in the world, puts in the
sea
per day, which is 17 billion tons.
So does what we do early on, where the microbiome is changing so rapidly, actually matter, or is it like throwing a stone into a stormy sea, where the ripples will just be lost?
Glaciers and
sea
ice that have been with us for millennia are now disappearing in a matter of decades.
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