Survival
in sentence
1210 examples of Survival in a sentence
They've been saddled with a name that speaks of sin and damned for their languorous lifestyle, which people seem to think has no place amongst the fittest in the fast-paced race for
survival.
And the book’s long overdue publication and
survival
against the odds is a testament to what Woland tells the Master: “Manuscripts don’t burn.”
I survived something that should not require
survival.
It had started with the education system, whose supply and quality is not equal for all; lack of economic opportunities that pushes these women to petty
survival
crimes; the health system, social justice system, the criminal justice system.
Existential risk is a threat to human survival, or to the long-term potential of our species.
The doctors told me and my parents, point-blank, that I had about a 35 percent chance of long-term
survival.
They're creating long-term stakes in the fisheries known as catch shares which get fishermen to be motivated not just in taking whatever they can from the ocean today but in its long-term
survival.
Every voice was telling her that what she did was right and necessary for China's
survival.
Across cultures and time periods, there's evidence of
survival
cannibalism, when people living through a famine, siege or ill-fated expedition had to either eat the bodies of the dead or starve to death themselves.
And
survival
is the key driver of evolution, and that's what we're talking about here: bacterial evolution.
My family's
survival
has informed my deep commitment to telling this migration story in a deep and nuanced way.
And Homo sapiens are one small leaf on a very extensive Tree of Life, which is densely populated by organisms that have been honed for
survival
over millions of years.
I call it perpetuation: the
survival
of the species and
survival
of ourselves, And those are both about perpetuating the genome.
Mangroves also prevent soil erosion, and they can be the first line of defense between storm surges, tsunamis and the millions of people who live next to these forests for their day-to-day
survival.
But I will not give up my efforts to bring indigenous communities to this fight for the
survival
of our planet.
The US government alone has spent over 100 billion on cancer research since the 1970s, with limited progress in regards to patient survival, especially for certain types of very aggressive cancers.
(Applause and cheers) I'm a marine biologist here to talk to you about the crisis in our oceans, but this time perhaps not with a message you've heard before, because I want to tell you that if the
survival
of the oceans depended only on people like me, scientists trading in publications, we'd be in even worse trouble than we are.
I've learned that as a conservationist, the most important question is not, "How do we keep people out?" but rather, "How do we make sure that coastal people throughout the world have enough to eat?" Our oceans are every bit as critical to our own
survival
as our atmosphere, our forests or our soils.
My earnest appeal to fish less took no account of what that might actually mean for people who depend on fishing for
survival.
And to get there, we all need to reimagine marine conservation as a narrative of abundance and empowerment, not of austerity and alienation; a movement guided by the people who depend on healthy seas for their survival, not by abstract scientific values.
Audience member: One of the things I've heard is that the real death cause when you get a flu is the associated pneumonia, and that a pneumonia vaccine may offer you 50 percent better chance of
survival.
That’ll help improve
survival
rates while leaving healthy tissues with reduced harm, making one of the best tools we have in the fight against cancer even better.
It's because when you live on four dollars a day, you're living on
survival
and you have to be sustainable.
I've come to think of fermentation, when harnessed by humans, as an advanced technological toolkit for our
survival.
Could it represent a new mode of
survival
if we harness it to completely change our industries?
After founding my company, Interface, from scratch in 1973, 36 years ago, to produce carpet tiles in America for the business and institution markets, and shepherding it through start-up and
survival
to prosperity and global dominance in its field, I read Paul Hawken's book, "The Ecology of Commerce," the summer of 1994.
They touch upon themes of
survival
and loss, love and the lack of it, ambitions and their unsatisfied reality.
We must establish a new social attitude to see migration as a benefit, a necessity for our global survival, not as a threat to our individual privilege.
Chasing her last chance of survival, the queen follows the raiding trail to the winning nest.
In many instances, a change that improves
survival
or reproduction in one sense may have cascading effects that carry their own risk.
Back
Next
Related words
Their
Which
Political
Would
About
People
World
Other
Human
Economic
Could
Ensure
There
Countries
Depends
Regime
Years
Against
Child
Struggle