Space
in sentence
4234 examples of Space in a sentence
We can all watch in private, in our own time and space, and no one need ever know that we've clicked on the screen to watch.
And when the action is pre-recorded and takes place in a distant time and space, watching seems like a passive activity.
Yet in this emptying space,
space
glimmers, becoming visible.
My mind became a tool that I could use to either close down to retreat from my reality or enlarge into a gigantic
space
that I could fill with fantasies.
Here's why: Einstein's equations of general relativity describe
space
and time as a kind of inter-connected fabric for the universe.
This means that what we know of as
space
and time exist only as part of the universe and not beyond it.
Now, when everyday objects expand, they move out into more
space.
But if there is no such thing as
space
to expand into, what does expanding even mean?
If we think of raisins as a stand-in for galaxies, and batter as the
space
between them, we can imagine that the stretching or expansion of intergalactic
space
will make the galaxies recede from each other, and for any galaxy, its faraway neighbors will recede a larger distance than the nearby ones in the same amount of time.
It's only in the dark void between galaxies where expansion wins out, and
space
stretches.
From asteroids capable of destroying entire species, to gamma-ray bursts and supernovae that could exterminate life on Earth, outer
space
has no shortage of forces that could wreak havoc on our tiny planet.
But there’s something in
space
that seems more terrifying than any of these – something that wipes out everything it comes near.
A black hole is an object so dense that
space
and time around it are inescapably modified, warped into an infinite sink.
Fortunately, we’re able to observe their effect on the
space
around them.
Unlike their stellar cousins, supermassive black holes aren’t wandering through
space.
India has a
space
program and millions of people without toilets.
Cities like London, New York, and Hong Kong are running out of burial
space.
Even in places where
space
isn’t so tight, cemeteries permanently occupy land that can’t be otherwise cultivated or developed.
Along with these more conventional practices, people can now have their remains shot into space, used to fertilize a tree, or made into jewelry, fireworks, and even tattoo ink.
And this kind of reminds me of what we've been seeing in the cryptocurrency space, at least in 2017, where the only thing that's been going up faster than the markets themselves is the number of "senior investment specialists" who have been appearing out of nowhere.
And in a really short
space
of time, something new started to grow: a relationship between the team and the workers.
From these contexts was born an installation in the art
space
of the Queensland University of Technology in Brisbane.
And then we can gather information about how they use space, how they move through the landscape, what are their priority habitats, and so much more.
In the past year, the Kepler
space
observatory has found hundreds of planets just around nearby stars, and if you extrapolate that data, it looks like there could be half a trillion planets just in our own galaxy.
We've opened up space, regardless of being despised, for more conservative women to step in and make real changes, and the words "women" and "the priesthood" can now be uttered in the same sentence.
They do this by bringing two particles together and orienting them correctly in
space
so that the two can meet at the correct configuration and allow a reaction to take place.
We've developed technologies that can send signals into
space
and humans to the moon, but we've also developed technologies that can destroy the environment, that can wage war with weapons and biological terrorism.
Our buildings are prototypes, ideas for how the
space
of living or how the
space
of working could be different, and what a
space
of culture or a
space
of media could look like today.
And the detailed quality of everything we designed was about animating the
space
and giving the
space
to the inhabitants.
A little piece of math: if we count all the green that we left on the ground, minus the footprint of the buildings, and we would add back the green of all the terraces, we have 112 percent green space, so more nature than not having built a building.
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