Someone
in sentence
6034 examples of Someone in a sentence
I just heard
someone
groan in the audience.
When
someone
tells you, "People don't care about privacy," consider whether the game has been designed and rigged so that they cannot care about privacy, and coming to the realization that these manipulations occur is already halfway through the process of being able to protect yourself.
When
someone
tells you that privacy is incompatible with the benefits of big data, consider that in the last 20 years, researchers have created technologies to allow virtually any electronic transactions to take place in a more privacy-preserving manner.
Usually when I say this,
someone
says, "Spotify!
First of all, of course I'm not someone, this old-fashioned person, market versus state.
It might have happened while we were playing an instrument, or looking into the eyes of
someone
we've known for a very long time.
You put on the uniform, and you become invisible until
someone
is upset with you for whatever reason like you've blocked traffic with your truck, or you're taking a break too close to their home, or you're drinking coffee in their diner, and they will come and scorn you, and tell you that they don't want you anywhere near them.
So in the flow of your days, in the flow of your lives, next time you see
someone
whose job is to clean up after you, take a moment to acknowledge them.
If you asked someone, "When was the last time you saw fresh flowers?" for many who grew up under civil war, the answer would be, "Never."
We could even have four thumbs together, and the way you win is you're the first person to pin
someone
else's thumb.
You guys know that the best way to release oxytocin quickly is to hold
someone
else's hand for at least six seconds.
Well, you would place a request via mobile phone, and
someone
would get the request immediately.
The slow pace of technological change in traditional societies means that what
someone
learns there as a child is still useful when that person is old, but the rapid pace of technological change today means that what we learn as children is no longer useful 60 years later.
Instead of just coming out of the prison with 46 pounds in their pocket, half of them not knowing where they're spending their first night out of jail, actually,
someone
meets them in prison, learns about their issues, meets them at the gate, takes them through to somewhere to stay, connects them to benefits, connects them to employment, drug rehabilitation, mental health, whatever's needed.
So
someone
who says they hate immigrants, I try to imagine how scared they must be that their community is changing from what they've always known.
Or
someone
who says they don't like teachers' unions, I bet they're really devastated to see their kid's school going into the gutter, and they're just looking for
someone
to blame.
You will ask
someone
on the street if they've heard of Microsoft.
And that's because shipping has very tight margins, and they want cheap fuel, so they use something called bunker fuel, which was described to me by
someone
in the tanker industry as the dregs of the refinery, or just one step up from asphalt.
So when you're done surveying, you take all this data and you punch it into a computer and you find
someone
that can draw really well, and you have them draft up a map that looks something like this, and it'll show you both a bird's-eye view of the passage as well as a profile view of the passage, kind of like an ant farm view.
Can you bring one of them to us?
" Someone
who is, as the Italians say, "gagootz."
Now a bias is a way in which we systematically get things wrong, ways in which we miscalculate, misjudge, distort reality, or see what we want to see, and the bias I'm talking about works like this: Confront
someone
with the fact that they are going to die and they will believe just about any story that tells them it isn't true and they can, instead, live forever, even if it means taking the existential elevator.
And I also started reckoning with this terrible question: If I'm not the tough person who could have made it through a concentration camp, then who am I? And if I have to take medication, is that medication making me more fully myself, or is it making me
someone
else?
And how do I feel about it if it's making me
someone
else?
If you were married to
someone
and thought, "Well, if my wife dies, I'll find another one," it wouldn't be love as we know it.
Someone
was asking me backstage today about meditation.
I went through a tribal exorcism in Senegal that involved a great deal of ram's blood and that I'm not going to detail right now, but a few years afterwards I was in Rwanda, working on a different project, and I happened to describe my experience to someone, and he said, "Well, that's West Africa, and we're in East Africa, and our rituals are in some ways very different, but we do have some rituals that have something in common with what you're describing."
And I remember being amazed at that point to think that
someone
who clearly had so many bad experiences with so many different treatments still had buried in him, somewhere, enough optimism to reach out for one more.
So at the top you have a socket, and this fits over
someone'
s residual limb, and everyone's residual limb is a little bit different.
Well, the standard is, is
someone
still wearing their knee six months later?
And we were really interested in who's more likely to offer help to another person:
someone
who's rich or
someone
who's poor.
Back
Next
Related words
Would
Movie
About
There
Their
Could
People
Really
Something
Think
Which
Should
Being
Actually
Where
Other
Going
Might
Through
First