Talking
in sentence
4194 examples of Talking in a sentence
And so, Anuj and Acumen have been
talking
about testing the private sector, because the assumption that the aid establishment has made is that, look, in a country like Tanzania, 80 percent of the population makes less than two dollars a day.
The next day I saw him
talking
to a customer at our tofu store, and he said, "You know, John's good at math." (Laughter) And that always stuck with me all my life.
Now, later that evening, the two self-confessed tech geeks starting
talking
about how cool it would be if some kind of eBay for errands existed.
Now users earn reputation in a whole range of ways, but it's basically by convincing their peers they know what they're
talking
about.
That compassion and that hope are why I travel all over,
talking
about this to anyone who will listen.
When I got these results, I started
talking
to doctors, and they told me not to tell anyone, and my reaction is, "Is that going to help anyone cure me when I get the disease?"
I'm not
talking
about the politics of health care, I'm
talking
about the way we scientifically approach health care.
I want to go back just to before the bang, to this idea of brand, and I was
talking
about Coke and Pepsi, etc.
Whatever the point, it gets to the heart of the problem, you're doing it, you're
talking
to them.
I heard people
talking
in that community hall about the struggles other people were going through.
We're
talking
about tradies.
They've never felt they can talk about their suicide attempt, but the HALT events, where there's no expectations for them to talk, makes them feel comfortable to start
talking.
But we're
talking
about perception here, right?
Well, it'd be amazing, since we're
talking
about an insect with only one million brain cells.
So nobody knows how bad this bias with the official statistics actually is, so I thought I would ask the person who's spearheading the effort to generate data on this, Pascal Lamy, the Director of the World Trade Organization, what his best guess would be of exports as a percentage of GDP, without the double- and triple-counting, and it's actually probably a bit under 20 percent, rather than the 30 percent-plus numbers that we're
talking
about.
It's the system by which we organize and exercise power, and there I'm
talking
about politics, because in politics, we're back to this system, this top-down hierarchy.
The other thing is that power is incredibly seductive, and you must have two real qualities, I think, when you come to the table, when you're dealing with power,
talking
about power, because of its seductive capacity.
So it was only just the other week that I heard London's Metropolitan Police Commissioner
talking
about why the police need access to all of our communications, spying on us without any judicial oversight, and he said it was a matter of life and death.
So he was
talking
about the law in Britain which is the Communications Data Bill, an absolutely outrageous piece of legislation.
The question of whether disgust ought to influence our moral and political judgments certainly has to be complex, and might depend on exactly what judgments we're
talking
about, and as a scientist, we have to conclude sometimes that the scientific method is just ill-equipped to answer these sorts of questions.
So I've been
talking
about this, suggesting, perhaps, that mind-wandering causes unhappiness, but all I've really shown you is that these two things are correlated.
And I'm not even
talking
about magazines.
And I'm not even
talking
about polysemy, which is the greedy habit some words have of taking more than one meaning for themselves.
We're
talking
to them about appreciating vultures, about the need from within to appreciate these wonderful creatures and the services that they provide.
And I'm not even
talking
about the American presidential race.
Here's the last one: You're
talking
to somebody, and you say, "Sorry, got work, gotta go."
We've been talking, I guess, about fires and caves and saber-toothed tigers.
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.
You remember those Astroturfing reviews that we were
talking
about before?
Now when you're
talking
about trying to travel long distances on rough terrain, I immediately thought of a mountain bike, and a mountain bike's good at doing this because it has a gear train, and you can shift to a low gear if you have to climb a hill or go through mud or sand and you get a lot of torque but a low speed.
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