Speaking
in sentence
2037 examples of Speaking in a sentence
So this is the discovery of a lost voice from antiquity,
speaking
to us, not from the grave, because his grave doesn't exist, but from the Athenian law courts.
And it really upset me to think that my race made it harder for them to see me as a student who loved reading, writing and
speaking.
But soon after I announced that John Derbyshire would be
speaking
on campus, student backlash erupted on social media.
And
speaking
of values: I've noticed that in the discussion about moral persuasion online and when I'm talking with people, more often than not, there is a weird bias.
And
speaking
of design, you'll notice that I already broadened the discussion, because it's not just persuasive technology that we're talking about here, it's any piece of design that we put out here in the world.
Now, in this series he's
speaking
with the aid of a computer, which actually makes identifying the ends of sentences fairly easy.
As a result, the Me Too movement is upon us, and survivors everywhere are
speaking
out to demand change.
I think it's a bit of a joke for an editor of a paper to choose a photographer to open a
speaking
event.
Now,
speaking
of walls, I want to share with you the story of one wall in Cairo.
I went to university in Johannesburg, South Africa, and I remember the first time a white friend of mine heard me
speaking
Setswana, the national language of Botswana.
I know that many people here have been splendidly
speaking
about the digital world and the possibility for cooperation, but [have you] seen what the digital world has done to American politics these days?
But I had three days of life support, and everybody was expecting, due to just the massive amount of what they had had to do that I wasn't going to make it, so it was three days of everybody was either waiting for me to die or poop, and — (Laughter) — when I finally pooped, then that somehow, surgically speaking, that's like you crossed some good line, and, um — (Laughter) — on that day, the surgeon came in and whipped the sheet off of me.
Here, I am
speaking
directly to you, the TED community, and to all those who might be watching on a screen, on your phone, across the world, in the Congo.
For some people it's
speaking
at a school board meeting.
I know famous musicians, I know actors and film stars and millionaires and novelists and top lawyers and television executives and magazine editors and national journalists and dustbinmen and hairdressers, all who were looked after children, fostered, adopted or orphaned, and many of them grow into their adult lives in fear of
speaking
of their background, as if it may somehow weaken their standing in the foreground, as if it were somehow Kryptonite, as if it were a time bomb strapped on the inside.
Most linguists agree that we started
speaking
somewhere between 50,000 and 100,000 years ago.
I don't know what they talked about, but they were doing a lot of talking, and like I said, there's a lot of humans evolving speaking, about 100 billion people in fact.
In life, we all have tempests to ride and poles to walk to, and I think metaphorically speaking, at least, we could all benefit from getting outside the house a little more often, if only we could summon up the courage.
So
speaking
of love and the brain, there's a researcher, known to some as Dr. Love, who claims that scientists have found the glue that holds society together, the source of love and prosperity.
My story begins when I was in New York City for a
speaking
engagement, and my wife took this picture of me holding my daughter on her first birthday.
If we were
speaking
Mandarin Chinese with each other, though, I wouldn't have that luxury.
So for example, if I'm
speaking
in English, I have to speak grammatically differently if I'm talking about past rain, "It rained yesterday," current rain, "It is raining now," or future rain, "It will rain tomorrow."
Okay, this morning I'm
speaking
on the question of corruption.
When we get together with friends and family and we discuss crime in our country, crime in Belmont or crime in Diego or crime in Marabella, nobody's
speaking
about corruption.
When the Commissioner of Police comes on TV to talk about crime, he isn't
speaking
about corruption.
And we know for sure when the Minister of National Security is
speaking
about crime, he's not talking about corruption either.
We're standing today in the Central Bank, and the Central Bank is responsible for a lot of the things I'm going to be
speaking
about.
We're
speaking
about the fact that across the terrace, the next tower is the Ministry of Finance, and there's a lot of connection with us today, so we're
speaking
within your temple today.
I'm going to have my own lexicon
speaking
here today.
We had the journalist [Heather] Brooke
speaking
about her battle against government corruption, and she introduced me to this website, Alaveteli.com.
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