Should
in sentence
40487 examples of Should in a sentence
Maybe we
should
look not just here but in remote places where their might be a distinct genetic context, there might be environmental factors that protect people.
and looking within ourselves for information we used to say we
should
go to the outside, to experts, and to be willing to share that with others.
And I graduated high school without ever going to the cafeteria, where I would have sat with the girls and been laughed at for doing so, or sat with the boys, and been laughed at for being a boy who
should
be sitting with the girls.
But properly understood and wisely practiced, identity politics
should
expand our idea of what it is to be human.
Identity itself
should
be not a smug label or a gold medal, but a revolution.
A few things you
should
know about me: I'm an action-oriented overachieving math and theater nerd, who ended up with an MBA.
So it's ironic that the landscape I'd worked so hard to escape from, and the community that I'd more or less abandoned and exiled myself from
should
be the very landscape, the very community I would have to return to to find my missing muse.
And with each passing year, this nonobservation, this lack of evidence for any alien activity gets more puzzling because we
should
see them, shouldn't we?
Without doubt, we
should
spend more on the search.
Now you might think this just shows that I've given you the wrong definition and that I
should
come up with some other definition and test it against these cases and try and find something that captures atheistic Judaism, atheistic Hinduism, and atheistic Buddhism as forms of religiosity, but I actually think that that's a bad idea, and the reason I think it's a bad idea is that I don't think that's how our concept of religion works.
Now, in a perfectly rational world, these
should
be the same number, but we overpay for the opportunity to indulge our current preferences because we overestimate their stability.
Here's what you
should
do to fix it.
They grab the spotlight for causes they support, forcing us to take note, acting as a global magnifying glass for issues that we are not as aware of but perhaps we
should
be.
Welcome to "Five Dangerous Things You
Should
Let Your Children Do."
And so the very next lecture I gave in a conference, I talked about my science, and then I talked about the importance of the subjective and emotional aspects of doing science and how we
should
talk about them, and I looked at the audience, and they were cold.
I have an entire file in my office of newspaper articles which express concern about illegitimate words that
should
not have been included in the dictionary, including "LOL" when it got into the Oxford English Dictionary and "defriend" when it got into the Oxford American Dictionary.
They try to provide us some guidance about words that are considered slang or informal or offensive, often through usage labels, but they're in something of a bind, because they're trying to describe what we do, and they know that we often go to dictionaries to get information about how we
should
use a word well or appropriately.
Now usage notes involve very human decisions, and I think, as dictionary users, we're often not as aware of those human decisions as we
should
be.
And what
should
I do with their pronouncements?"
That is and
should
be the extent of our authority.
What I'm saying is, we
should
be less quick to decide that that change is terrible, we
should
be less quick to impose our likes and dislikes about words on other people, and we
should
be entirely reluctant to think that the English language is in trouble.
We shouldn't think that all hard choices are big.
We also shouldn't think that hard choices are hard because we are stupid.
If alternatives are equally good, you
should
just flip a coin between them, and it seems a mistake to think, here's how you
should
decide between careers, places to live, people to marry: Flip a coin.
We shouldn't assume that the world of is, of lengths and weights, has the same structure as the world of ought, of what we
should
do.
If there's a best alternative, then that's the one you
should
choose, because part of being rational is doing the better thing rather than the worse thing, choosing what you have most reason to choose.
So when we face hard choices, we shouldn't beat our head against a wall trying to figure out which alternative is better.
Instead of looking for reasons out there, we
should
be looking for reasons in here: Who am I to be?
The idea was to make the proof that cultural buildings
should
not be intimidating.
They
should
create a sense of curiosity.
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