Shows
in sentence
6217 examples of Shows in a sentence
And this
shows
the percent.
This is a map that
shows
where we've put our spacecraft on the surface of Mars.
This makes for some pretty spectacular light
shows.
And research
shows
that when students learn to make this kind of energized determination instead of anxiety, they perform better on tests.
And, Leah adds with a grin, "Kavita, we especially are proud of our Christmas music, because it
shows
we are open to religious practices even though Catholic Church hates us LGBT."
And in fact, what I then started looking into in a little more detail, the Red List
shows
about 23,000 species that are considered threatened at one level or another, coming from the International Union for the Conservation of Nature, the IUCN.
And the research that's been done
shows
that there's probably one one-hundredth of the animals on the landscape there that there used to be.
To me, this story
shows
perfectly the work of record diggers at its best.
A recent look at the UK music market
shows
that the top one percent of artists in the UK are actually earning 77 percent of the total revenues inside the music industry.
And it
shows
our love for discovering music and introducing music both old and new.
Whatever kind of music you like, there are so many websites, radio shows, DJs, record stores out there that are just waiting to share their discoveries with you.
And analysis
shows
if you want to be among the most favorite TED speakers, you should let your hair grow a little bit longer than average, make sure you wear your glasses and be slightly more dressed-up than the average TED speaker.
For those of you who saw "An Inconvenient Truth," the most important slide in the Gore lecture is the last one, which
shows
here's where greenhouse gases are going if we don't do anything, here's where they could go.
And this picture here, it's really interesting, it
shows
two things: First of all, it's in black and white because the water was so clear and you could see so far, and film was so slow in the 1960s and early 70s, you took pictures in black and white.
The other thing it
shows
you is that, although there's this beautiful forest of coral, there are no fish in that picture.
This picture here
shows
the trophy fish, the biggest fish caught by people who pay a lot of money to get on a boat, go to a place off of Key West in Florida, drink a lot of beer, throw a lot of hooks and lines into the water, come back with the biggest and the best fish, and the champion trophy fish are put on this board, where people take a picture, and this guy is obviously really excited about that fish.
Now, I was paid in dollars as a consultant, and I looked at my income tax return and tried to ask myself: "Is there a line in my return, which
shows
how much of this income has gone to the people whose knowledge has made it possible?
This here shows, on the Y-axis, the increase in the probability that a person is obese given that a social contact of theirs is obese and, on the X-axis, the degrees of separation between the two people.
And at the same time I was watching Jacques Cousteau's
shows
on TV, with all this richness and abundance and diversity.
David Milch, creator of "Deadwood" and other amazing TV shows, has a really good description for this.
He swore off creating contemporary drama,
shows
set in the present day, because he saw that when people fill their mind with four hours a day of, for example, "Two and a Half Men," no disrespect, it shapes the neural pathways, he said, in such a way that they expect simple problems.
The top curve
shows
the body weight of a genetically obese mouse that eats nonstop until it turns fat, like this furry tennis ball.
This is an aerial picture that I made that
shows
the Gulf of St. Lawrence during harp seal season.
This is a photo of a lemon shark pup, and it
shows
these animals where they live for the first two to three years of their lives in these protective mangroves.
This is a photograph that
shows
a hatchling about to taste saltwater for the very first time beginning this long and perilous journey.
But what they can't deal with is anthropogenic stresses, human things, like this picture that
shows
a leatherback caught at night in a gill net.
This photo
shows
an animal popping its head out at sunset off the coast of Florida.
This is a picture that
shows
the tail of a right whale.
This photograph
shows
my assistant standing on the bottom at about 70 feet and one of these amazingly beautiful, 45-foot, 70-ton whales, like a city bus just swimming up, you know.
And yet, what behavioral economics
shows
time after time after time is in human behavioral and behavioral change there's a very, very strong disproportionality at work, that actually what changes our behavior and what changes our attitude to things is not actually proportionate to the degree of expense entailed, or the degree of force that's applied.
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