Stitch
in sentence
34 examples of Stitch in a sentence
You can't fix that problem without addressing shame, because when they teach those folks how to suture, they also teach them how to
stitch
their self-worth to being all-powerful.
And we
stitch
them together like medieval monks, and we leave the normal stuff on the floor.
Then they stitched me up; they took an entire hour to
stitch
me up.
But perhaps the most exciting part about taking pictures from the air is we could later
stitch
these pictures together using special software to create a map of the entire landscape, and this map gives us crucial information for monitoring land use change, to let us know where and when plantations might be expanding, where forests might be contracting, or where fires might be breaking out.
This included software algorithms to predict what DNA to build, chemistry to link the G, A, T and C building blocks of DNA into short pieces, Gibson Assembly to
stitch
together those short pieces into much longer ones, and biology to convert the DNA into other biological entities, such as proteins.
We have to
stitch
together the output of multiple satellites with different viewing angles and orbits and carrying different camera equipment.
When a virus invades a bacterium, Cas proteins cut out a segment of the viral DNA to
stitch
into the bacterium’s CRISPR region, capturing a chemical snapshot of the infection.
So, for nervous introverts, it means that you can
stitch
away next to someone or a group of people and ask questions that you're thinking that often you don't get time to ask people, or you're too nervous to ask if you give them eye contact.
One, sometimes we work with art institutions where we will get over 150 people at the V&A who can come for hours, sit and
stitch
together on a particular issue, and then tweet what they're thinking or how it went, like this one.
And you can
stitch
all sorts of mathematical theorems onto these surfaces.
None can make a
stitch
in time.
We need to
stitch
back creation and execution.
We take ideas from other people, people we've learned from, people we run into in the coffee shop, and we
stitch
them together into new forms and we create something new.
This movie is an abortive, stillborn attempt to
stitch
together several bad movies and make some sort of extra-bad movie.
The rest of the cast is equally fine, with Cusack a
stitch
as the mixed-up fiancé and Dillon, Bob Newhart, Debbie Reynolds, Tom Selleck, and others on hand to delight the audience as well.
Thurman is a
stitch
posing alongside the highway trying to get a ride, but this pretty much put the kibosh on Phoenix's career.
Some of the cinematography is evocative, Shelley Duvall is a
stitch
in her debut as a tour guide, and Sally Kellerman looks every inch the glamourpuss as Bud Cort's vision of a "mother bird" (imagine Altman and producer Lou Adler explaining that role to her!).
It's one of those movies that puts a smile on face, and a
stitch
in your side.
In the case of this film, it's bringing in a plucky female cop and having her interview all the living characters they could muster from the previous films and
stitch
that into a new movie!
Jennifer Esposito is wonderful as a no-nonsense police lieutenant, Ann-Margret is a
stitch
as Fallon's tippling mother, and John Sierros (Broadway actor shamefully credited as 'Fat Cop') shines as a bamboozled police officer, but what happened to Queen Latifah?
Oh, and the death scene are a
stitch!
Wallace Shawn has a brief but important role as a fellow agent while Stephanie Miller, now a national talk show hostess, is a
stitch
as Shawn's reality-checking personal assistant.
Didi Conn is the only thing shining in Shining Time, created for US TV audiences to
stitch
together the excellent model railroad Thomas stories.
Trump’s top priority should be to
stitch
it back together; but his trade advisers do not understand this.
The core agenda is to
stitch
together a traditional free-trade agreement focused on industrial goods, agriculture, and textiles.
If, however, the opposition parties resolve their differences and manage to
stitch
together a firm common platform, they could force Jonathan into a runoff.
One Youth Courage award winner, Razia, who at the age of nine was forced to
stitch
footballs when she should have been in school, started her civil-rights work after Satyarthi rescued her.
That is also why the modest efforts now being undertaken by the alliance to assist America in trying to stabilize Iraq will not
stitch
NATO back together again.
But that may not matter, as new gene-editing technologies, like CRISPR-Cas9, enable scientists to
stitch
together complicated new organisms, using gene sequence information from organisms to which they do not have physical access.
What British imperial planners did was to
stitch
together three disparate provinces of the old Ottoman Empire and put at their head a prince from Hedjaz (now a part of Saudi Arabia).
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