Speaks
in sentence
585 examples of Speaks in a sentence
His legacy
speaks
for itself: 40 years of internal stability, a professional army that expanded Rome’s frontiers in all directions, and a government still remembered as a model of civic virtue.
The third point, probably, we really can be happy that we live in a democracy, because you can be sure that Russia and China are doing the same, but nobody
speaks
about that because nobody could do that.
Whence then am I? God
speaks
in a more formal English.
What's new is the scaling up and the faces of the doctors themselves: an ELAM graduate is more likely to be a she than a he; In the Amazon, Peru or Guatemala, an indigenous doctor; in the USA, a doctor of color who
speaks
fluent Spanish.
He moves his neck with ease, has had his feeding peg removed, breathes with his own lungs,
speaks
slowly with his own quiet voice, and works every day to gain more movement in his paralyzed body.
They're a voice that
speaks
out about the incredible richness of nature and the startling simplicity in the patterns that twist and turn and warp and evolve all around us, from how the world works to how we behave.
Everybody who
speaks
English decides together what's a word and what's not a word.
But one thing I know: One day, in a few decades, when our grandchildren surf the Net just by thinking, or a mother donates her eyesight to an autistic kid who cannot see, or somebody
speaks
because of a brain-to-brain bypass, some of you will remember that it all started on a winter afternoon in a Brazilian soccer field with an impossible kick.
StoryCorps
speaks
to our mortality.
One of my favorite educators, Brazilian author and scholar Paulo Freire,
speaks
quite explicitly about the need for education to be used as a tool for critical awakening and shared humanity.
Arabic script
speaks
to anyone, I believe; to you, to you, to you, to anybody, and then when you get the meaning, you feel connected to it.
Layla, who
speaks
fluent Twi, knows Accra like the back of her hand, but when we first met years ago, I thought, "She's not from Ghana."
He
speaks
Yoruba with an English accent, and English with a German one.
Whether we speak the words with our own voices, type them with our eyes, or communicate them non-verbally to someone who
speaks
them for us, words are among our most powerful tools.
In the simultaneous mode interpreters instantaneously translate a speaker's words into a microphone while he
speaks.
And the Mayor of Miami
speaks
for many when he says it is long past time this can be viewed through a partisan lens.
And it's obviously not the case that there was a liberal box to check on the application, but it
speaks
to a very real insecurity in these places that you have to pretend to be somebody you're not to get past these various social barriers.
He
speaks
English.
In his way, he
speaks
English as well.
But it also
speaks
to the panic, the literal terror, that the fear of fat can evoke.
I think this transition
speaks
more about the scholars who have interpreted her purpose than the actual purpose of the figurine herself.
Now, HAL was a fictional character, but nonetheless he
speaks
to our fears, our fears of being subjugated by some unfeeling, artificial intelligence who is indifferent to our humanity.
It's a painting that
speaks
to us, even screams to us, today.
You can't speak truth to power if the power
speaks
truth by definition.
It
speaks
to the history.
Just like a painter with colors, we are able to connect feelings and frequencies so that whenever one is approaching a car, we can feel an emotion which, besides fulfilling the legal requirements,
speaks
also about the character and the identity of the car.
She
speaks
and writes for women's and girls' issues and their rights.
In this passage from Sylvia Plath’s "The Bell Jar," a young woman imagines an uncertain future– and
speaks
to the universal fear of becoming paralyzed by the prospect of making the wrong choice.
So, Leticia Prado is an immigrant from Mexico, only has a sixth-grade education and
speaks
very limited English.
Also, deliberate avoidance of these conversations
speaks
volumes to our students because kids notice when their teachers, when their textbooks leave out the voices and experiences of people like women or people of color.
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