Second
in sentence
11407 examples of Second in a sentence
Second, the living conditions of the Syrians in the neighboring countries have been deteriorating.
And another thing that I believe is that to a large extent, what we are today paying for in Europe is the failures of integration models that didn't work in the '60s, in the '70s, in the '80s, in relation to big migration flows that took place at that time and generated what is today in many of the people, for instance, of the
second
generation of communities, a situation of feeling marginalized, having no jobs, having improper education, living in some of the neighborhoods that are not adequately provided by public infrastructure.
And this kind of uneasiness, sometimes even anger, that exists in this
second
generation is largely due to the failure of integration policies, to the failure of what should have been a much stronger investment in creating the conditions for people to live together and respect each other.
Second, growth will need to happen in a way that does not damage the land that provides us with the goods and services that support the human population.
In 1977, the physicist Edward Purcell calculated that if you push a bacteria and then let go, it will stop in about a millionth of a
second.
And the
second
group that we've followed was a group of boys from Boston's poorest neighborhoods, boys who were chosen for the study specifically because they were from some of the most troubled and disadvantaged families in the Boston of the 1930s.
And we know that you can be lonely in a crowd and you can be lonely in a marriage, so the
second
big lesson that we learned is that it's not just the number of friends you have, and it's not whether or not you're in a committed relationship, but it's the quality of your close relationships that matters.
The next time you get caught in a yawn, take a
second
to think about what just happened.
Second, we create our own echo chambers.
The passengers on the
second
bus are assigned powers of the next prime, 5.
So, a
second
tempting answer is, "19 miles/second around the Sun."
The first one is, you take that problem apart into its bits and pieces so that you can deeply analyze those bits and pieces, and then of course you do the
second
part.
Second, all the elements that had been accumulating in the core of the star, like carbon, oxygen, nitrogen, iron, as well as all of those formed in the supernova explosion, are ejected in to interstellar space where they mix with the gas that's already there.
The
second
tap that we need to open up to solve our urban water problem will flow with the wastewater that comes out of our sewage treatment plants.
In the
second
step in the process, we add a small amount of hydrogen peroxide and shine ultraviolet light on the water.
We've detected some chemicals that can make it through the first step in the process, but by the time we get to the
second
step, the advanced oxidation process, we rarely see any chemicals present.
After the
second
person sits down, only two people are left as candidates for the third chair.
Going from the beginning again, you can see that each of the four initial choices for the first chair leads to three more possible choices for the
second
chair, and each of those choices leads to two more for the third chair.
Well, if a new permutation of 52 cards were written out every
second
starting 13.8 billion years ago, when the Big Bang is thought to have occurred, the writing would still be continuing today and for millions of years to come.
It was a night like any other night, except here I was climbing the platonic peaks like Romeo on a
second
date.
In this lesson, we'll add the single experimental fact that whenever anyone measures just how fast light moves, they get the same answer: 299,792,458 meters every second, which means that when we draw light on our space-time diagram, it's world line always has to appear at the same angle.
Blood goes from one heart pump to the lungs, back to the
second
heart pump, which sends it to the body, and then back to the first pump.
The
second
one was written by an algorithm that took all the language from my Facebook feed on one day and then regenerated it algorithmically, according to methods that I'll describe a little bit later on.
And if you think the
second
poem was written by a human, put your hand up.
The answer is, the first poem was generated by an algorithm called Racter, that was created back in the 1970s, and the
second
poem was written by a guy called Frank O'Hara, who happens to be one of my favorite human poets.
So my
second
insight is that, when we take the Turing test for poetry, we're not really testing the capacity of the computers because poetry-generating algorithms, they're pretty simple and have existed, more or less, since the 1950s.
So what you are seeing now in China is a very similar process to the one that we had in Britain during the Industrial Revolution, especially the transition from the first to the
second.
In the 70s, we even moved it to the
second
Monday in October so people could get a nice three-day weekend, but I guess you folks just hate celebrations."
Second, liars tend to be more negative, because on a subconscious level, they feel guilty about lying.
And then you get a phone call from a newspaper that says: 'We found you to be positive six times for EPO." Second: "I lost myself in all of that.
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