Subscribe
in sentence
83 examples of Subscribe in a sentence
Many of you probably
subscribe
to our polite cultural belief that we should respect religion.
But then, companies like Netflix, Amazon, HBO, said, "Actually, you know,
subscribe.
I
subscribe
to New Scientist, and recently they had an article about how the U.S. Army was training bumblebees to sniff out explosives.
They
subscribe
to you on YouTube and they want to watch everything you've made and everything you plan to make in the future because we are curious people and sparking curiosity is great bait.
You can
subscribe
to these.
I do not
subscribe
to Crochet Today! magazine, although it looks delightful.
I use the term "disabled people" quite deliberately, because I
subscribe
to what's called the social model of disability, which tells us that we are more disabled by the society that we live in than by our bodies and our diagnoses.
Some people, I remember we shared the reception desk periodically, and some parent called up irate that his son had given up Sports Illustrated to
subscribe
for Wired, and he said, "Are you some porno magazine or something?" and couldn't understand why his son would be interested in Wired, at any rate.
The thing is that I personally don't
subscribe
to such a pessimistic view.
that allows you to
subscribe
to 311 complaints around your own home, or around your office.
And do we really want to live in a society where people are denied their basic humanity if they don't
subscribe
to some arbitrary form of acceptable?
And through it all, that fierce little six-year-old has stayed with me, and she has helped me stand before you today as an unapologetic fat person, a person that simply refuses to
subscribe
to the dominant narrative about how I should move through the world in this body of mine.
It follows from that that all of the people in the world who say that they are Muslims can, in principle,
subscribe
to a wide range of different interpretations of what Islam really is, and the same is true of democracy.
I
subscribe
to the belief that adaptability itself is a form of intelligence, and our adaptability quotient, or AQ, is something that can be measured, tested and improved.
subscribe
to just be informed of what we're doing.
Most scientists today
subscribe
to a mechanistic view of the mind: we're the way we are because our brains are wired up as they are, our hormones are the way they are.
You can
subscribe
to updates from him.
If he is attempting to get people to
subscribe
to these opinions through this film, he fails miserably and (unintentionally) makes light of them.
I never thought a movie could make me regret the fact that I
subscribe
to the HBO service.
What I object to is the idea the need to denounce, which I
subscribe
to, is enough.
The arc as a whole was enjoyable enough as I'm one to
subscribe
to the maxim that ANY Who is good Who, but at the same time it's inevitable that this will be compared to the Dalek episode of the previous series.
Even if you
subscribe
to the knee-jerk anti-free-trade politics of this movie, it is still just the same tired note, played again and again and again.
As a huge fan of both series I
subscribe
to the latter belief, although the less charitable may not do.
There's Paul Dooley's Choleric Dr. Gil Gainey, who like a fish out of water (perhaps more like a seal) flops around frenetically, barking and exhorting the crowds to
subscribe
to his aquatic madness.
If you're going to accept whatever faith you
subscribe
to you can certainly accept a movie.
Heck, some of the metaphysical/religious concepts used are so... well, let's just say I don't
subscribe
to them and politely leave it there, suffice to say they're a bit corny and detracting, in an amalgamated "I've read a lot of spiritual books, but don't really know a thing about it" sort of way.
If people think this is good, they should
subscribe
to Telemundo and watch their telenovelas, for this is surely no better.
The frustrated viewer may be forgiven for concluding either that neither producer nor screenwriter had read anything relevant beyond a short encyclopaedia article or two (though, doubtless, both looked at many an illustration of the time: costumes and sets are largely accurate) or that both deliberately chose to reinforce the stereotypes to which the ignorant
subscribe
(Parliamentarians were dull, bigotted fools; Royalists were noble and brave; etc., etc., etc.).
So you pay to
subscribe
to cable television, and you can't expect too much.
I like the comments from CPB and PBS ombudsmen following an investigation into its airing on PBS, an allegedly non-partisan public channel: Using the words "slanted" and "no hint of balance," in the report, CPB Ombudsman Ken A. Bode concluded, "The producers apparently do not
subscribe
to the idea that an argument can be made more convincing by giving the other side a fair presentation."
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