Sentence
in sentence
801 examples of Sentence in a sentence
When he was finally released at the end of his sentence, his story got even more Kafkaesque.
We've opened up space, regardless of being despised, for more conservative women to step in and make real changes, and the words "women" and "the priesthood" can now be uttered in the same
sentence.
Fix these pictures in your mind's eye and then jot down a
sentence
or two to describe them.
After all, you could memorize 5,000 words of Russian and still be barely able to construct a
sentence.
One of Milner's findings shed light on the obvious fact that although H.M. couldn't form new memories, he still retained information long enough from moment to moment to finish a
sentence
or find the bathroom.
The speech to song illusion captures how simply repeating a
sentence
a number of times shifts listeners attention to the pitch and temporal aspects of the sound, so that the repeated spoken language actually begins to sound like it is being sung.
And finally, even though liars keep descriptions simple, they tend to use longer and more convoluted
sentence
structure, inserting unnecessary words and irrelevant but factual sounding details in order to pad the lie.
For one, it can clarify ideas in a
sentence
that's already festooned with commas.
Even though the commas separate different parts of the sentence, it's easy to lose track of what belongs where.
But a semicolon can replace a conjunction to shorten a
sentence
or to give it some variety.
Bruno Giussani: I want to ask a couple of questions, Dambisa, because one could react to your last
sentence
by saying growth is also an ideology, it's possibly the dominant ideology of our times.
We already have many programs that claim to do just that, taking a word, sentence, or entire book in one language and translating it into almost any other, whether it's modern English or Ancient Sanskrit.
For a seemingly simple
sentence
like, "The children eat the muffins," the program first parses its syntax, or grammatical structure, by identifying the children as the subject, and the rest of the
sentence
as the predicate consisting of a verb "eat," and a direct object "the muffins."
Finally, it needs to understand the semantics, what the different parts of the
sentence
actually mean.
To translate this
sentence
properly, the program would refer to a different set of vocabulary and rules for each element of the target language.
The slightly higher overall sentencing rate for white defendants was due to the fact that cases with white victims were more likely to elicit a death
sentence
than cases where the victim was black, and most murders occurred between people of the same race.
"They were the best of times, they were the worst of times": the most famous opening
sentence
in English literature.
Now, I know some of you are thinking, global capital markets, positive social change, not usually in the same
sentence
or even the same paragraph.
Was your
sentence
actually grammatically incorrect?
you're going to respond to the most powerful word in that sentence, which is "terrified," and the answer is "Yes, I was" or "No, I wasn't."
Which is the hardest word to translate in this
sentence?
So if you're ever working as a translator and come across this
sentence
without any context: "You and you, no, not you, you, your job is to translate 'you' for yourselves" ... Well, good luck.
There's body language and vocal tone, changes in heart rate, complexion, and skin temperature, or even word frequency and
sentence
structure in our writing.
The
sentence?
Now, the Panic Monster explains all kinds of pretty insane procrastinator behavior, like how someone like me could spend two weeks unable to start the opening
sentence
of a paper, and then miraculously find the unbelievable work ethic to stay up all night and write eight pages.
We work at the level of the sentence, maybe the paragraph, the words, the punctuation.
We make suggestions to the author through the editor to improve the emphasis of a
sentence
or point out unintentional repetitions and supply compelling alternatives.
He added: "Surely, someone at The New Yorker knows the meaning of 'belied,' and that it is the opposite of how it is used in this
sentence.
And he's one of my favorites, even though he sometimes writes a
sentence
that gives a copy editor pause.
I decided that the hurricane conferred poetic justice on Sandy and let the
sentence
stand.
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