Sounds
in sentence
1911 examples of Sounds in a sentence
It
sounds
more inflationary already, doesn't it.
And when you get to language, you see that it becomes a word whose look, the way it looks and the way it sounds, has absolutely nothing to do with what it started with, or what it represents, which is the bowl of soup.
It looks and feels like it sounds: Wormwood Scrubs.
SP: Well, that
sounds
good in theory, but has it worked that way in practice?
It
sounds
like a really dry and technical thing, doesn't it?
CA: But it
sounds
like what you're saying is that when it comes to the Internet at large, any strategy is fair game if it improves America's safety.
It
sounds
totally crazy.
Sounds
straightforward, right?
(Tapping sounds) We embed this material into the synthetic skin that attaches my bionic limb to my biological body.
Sounds
pretty easy, pulling CO2 out of the air.
This
sounds
formidable, but brilliant engineers, colleagues of mine at JPL, came up with a fabulous design for how to do that and it looks like this.
When they’re read by your computer’s audio software, the numbers determine how quickly the coils in your speakers should vibrate to create
sounds
of different frequencies.
I know it
sounds
complicated; it's not.
Now that
sounds
like an incredibly straightforward question to answer, and that's what Howard thought.
It's not as hard as it sounds, I promise.
And I found poems by Andrew Marvell and Matthew Arnold and Emily Dickinson and William Butler Yeats because they were quoted in science fiction, and I loved their
sounds
and I went on to read about ottava rima and medial caesuras and enjambment and all that other technical stuff that you care about if you already care about poems, because poems already made me happier and sadder and more alive.
Saying "Yes, and
" sounds
like this.
It
sounds
like this: "Scoop, scoop!
" Sounds
like this.
And I really began to feel that if you were lucky enough to walk around the candlelit temples of Tibet or to wander along the seafronts in Havana with music passing all around you, you could bring those
sounds
and the high cobalt skies and the flash of the blue ocean back to your friends at home, and really bring some magic and clarity to your own life.
And then if you go to the left, right, it
sounds
like an elephant in pain.
And when you put that together, you get something that
sounds
like this.
And this is what it
sounds
like when there's 1,000 people.
Now, as exciting as that sounds, when I first started doing cyber — (Laughter) — when I first started doing cyber, I wasn't sure that sifting through ones and zeros was what I wanted to do with the rest of my life, because in my mind, cyber was keeping viruses off of my grandma's computer, it was keeping people's Myspace pages from being hacked, and maybe, maybe on my most glorious day, it was keeping someone's credit card information from being stolen.
It
sounds
like agile software development, A/B testing and iteration, and what we thought you could only do with software kids in Shenzhen are doing this in hardware.
It's more than making nice sounds, and it's more than making nice songs.
It
sounds
menacing, doesn't it?
It
sounds
Machiavellian inherently.
So if we turn the brain around a little bit, here's a region in dark blue that we reported just a couple of months ago, and this region responds strongly when you hear
sounds
with pitch, like these.
(Cello music) (Doorbell) In contrast, that same region does not respond strongly when you hear perfectly familiar
sounds
that don't have a clear pitch, like these.
Next to the pitch region is another set of regions that are selectively responsive when you hear the
sounds
of speech.
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