Share
in sentence
6383 examples of Share in a sentence
In the last 20 years, it's really changed the way that we live and work, and the way that we see the world, and what's great is, we sort of think this is the next paradigm shift, because now we can literally take the content that we share, we discover, and that we enjoy and make it a part of the world around us.
I'd love to
share
with you some images of urban beehives, because they can be anything.
And I'm going to
share
my music with you, but I hope that I'm going to do so in a way that tells a story, tells a story about how I used boredom as a catalyst for creativity and invention, and how boredom actually forced me to change the fundamental question that I was asking in my discipline, and how boredom also, in a sense, pushed me towards taking on roles beyond the sort of most traditional, narrow definition of a composer.
There was the florist, and I can understand that, once again, we're putting pressure on the ontology of music as we know it conventionally, but let's look at one last piece today I'm going to
share
with you.
This is going to be a piece called "Aphasia," and it's for hand gestures synchronized to sound, and this invites yet another role, and final one I'll
share
with you, which is that of the choreographer.
I feel like I've got something to say and something to
share.
We have an instinct for language, allowing us to
share
the fruits of our ingenuity and experience.
What lessons might we have to
share?
But if we
share
those and we talk about stories, then we can inspire each other to get through our own bad experiences.
Ask us to
share.
But before I get to that, I want to
share
what it was like to witness this epidemic grow in Kensington.
So that's a very important part of the coalition system, and that's something that we
share
between humans and chimpanzees.
They
share
food very easily with everyone.
But I'm the oldest sixth grader you'll ever meet, so I get up every day with this tremendous amount of enthusiasm that I'm hoping to
share
with you all today.
Share
your passion.
Now, speaking of walls, I want to
share
with you the story of one wall in Cairo.
And we said to that public meeting in Todmorden, look, let's imagine that our town is focused around three plates: a community plate, the way we live our everyday lives; a learning plate, what we teach our kids in school and what new skills we
share
amongst ourselves; and business, what we do with the pound in our pocket and which businesses we choose to support.
We took the corner of the car park in the station that you saw, and we made vegetable beds for everybody to
share
and pick from themselves.
So I want to
share
with you a personal story about a turnaround or a transformation.
And I wanted to
share
that image with you of what I saw at that point.
So I want to
share
with you some of these bellwether signals, or signs, and winds of change that are sweeping this continent.
But there's a word about me that I should
share.
Now I am liberated from that commitment, as I am back at HBS, and what I'd like to do is
share
with you how far I have taken that liberty, which, it's baby steps, (Laughter) but I would just say I'm on my way.
The last work that I just wanted to
share
with you is "Blind Light," which is perhaps the most open work, and in a conference of radical openness, I think maybe this is as radical as I get, using light and water vapor as my materials.
Rimini Protokoll chooses 100 people that represent that city at that moment in terms of race and gender and class, through a careful process that begins three months before, and then those 100 people
share
stories about themselves and their lives, and the whole thing becomes a snapshot of that city at that moment.
We don't bump into every neighbor, so a lot of wisdom never gets passed on, though we do
share
the same public spaces.
So over the past few years, I've tried ways to
share
more with my neighbors in public space, using simple tools like stickers, stencils and chalk.
How can we
share
more memories of our abandoned buildings, and gain a better understanding of our landscape?
How can we
share
more of our hopes for our vacant storefronts, so our communities can reflect our needs and dreams today?
So with help from old and new friends, I turned the side of this abandoned house into a giant chalkboard, and stenciled it with a fill-in-the-blank sentence: "Before I die, I want to ..." So anyone walking by can pick up a piece of chalk, reflect on their life, and
share
their personal aspirations in public space.
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