Sentence
in sentence
801 examples of Sentence in a sentence
The way that this particular system works, you can start with any part of this
sentence.
Now we start with a different part of the
sentence.
This is —(Applause)— this is a representation of this
sentence
without language.
I could have started anywhere in the sentence, and I could have made this entire thing.
I developed this thing called the FreeSpeech Engine which takes any FreeSpeech
sentence
as the input and gives out perfectly grammatical English text.
So what's interesting about FreeSpeech is that when you create a
sentence
or when you create language, a child with autism creates language with FreeSpeech, they're not using this support language, they're not using this bridge language.
They're directly constructing the
sentence.
Wouldn't it be better if, while serving his sentence, Joe was able to train his amygdala, which would stimulate the growth of new brain cells and connections, so that he will be able to face the world once he gets released?
Still, it was enough to convict Brendan and
sentence
him to life in prison for murder and sexual assault in 2007.
Simone de Beauvoir begins her entire autobiography with the sentence, "I was born at four o'clock in the morning," which I had because someone else had emailed it to me, and when they did, I had another bump up in my entry for this, because porn star Ron Jeremy and feminist Simone de Beauvoir are not just different people.
When asked about the sentence, 'I only had a moment to peruse the manual quickly,' 66 percent of the [Usage] Panel found it unacceptable in 1988, 58 percent in 1999, and 48 percent in 2011."
Also, we have repetitive prosody now coming in, where every
sentence
ends as if it were a question when it's actually not a question, it's a statement?
If I'm going to use the word "Wednesday" in a sentence, and I'm coming up to the word, and I can feel that I'm going to stutter or something, I can change the word to "tomorrow," or "the day after Tuesday," or something else.
They respond when you understand the meaning of a sentence, but not when you do other complex mental things, like mental arithmetic or holding information in memory or appreciating the complex structure in a piece of music.
It may be uncomfortable for some to hear — business growth and lives saved somehow equated in the same
sentence
— but it is that business growth that allows us to keep doing more.
It's a really good
sentence
to keep in mind nowadays in an era saturated by images.
As you can see here, this Stanford-based system showing the red dot at the top has figured out that this
sentence
is expressing negative sentiment.
It doesn't matter who the man was, all that matters was that
sentence
ringing in my head: "I will not touch the deck till the end."
Mind you, this older gentlemen was serving a 33-and-a-third-to-life
sentence
in which he already had served 20 years of that
sentence.
About four months ago, we finally tied all this together and produced one of the first computer vision models that is capable of generating a human-like
sentence
when it sees a picture for the first time.
Because when I rendered his sentence, "Australia and China are enjoying a relationship of unprecedented closeness," in fact, what I said was that Australia and China were now experiencing fantastic orgasm.
With this probation
sentence
hanging over his head, Chuck sat his little brother down and began teaching him how to run from the police.
A volunteer would write a
sentence
on the chalkboard, and the other students had to guess whether it was a truth or a lie.
I don't even have to complete the
sentence.
Suddenly, infections that had been a death
sentence
became something you recovered from in days.
When you hear this sentence: "Thanks to cooperation, the whole is worth more than the sum of the parts."
And I kept hearing this pervasive sentence: "Oh, but things are so much worse now, things are so much worse."
The "but" in that
sentence
belies the inflexibility of the units, one fixed and fictional entity bumping up against another.
Every language communicates with pitch to varying degrees, whether it's Mandarin Chinese, where a shift in melodic inflection gives the same phonetic syllable an entirely different meaning, to a language like English, where a raised pitch at the end of a
sentence
... (Going up in pitch) implies a question?
Paul Warwick is now serving a
sentence
in the Michigan Department of Corrections, in prison, of 15 to 40 years.
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