Thought
in sentence
15627 examples of Thought in a sentence
First, it would be to understand that it could be considered a cooperative, and this is a
thought
from the Brazilian legal scholar Roberto Mangabeira Unger.
So when IDA asked for help, I decided to launch CanDo seven months early, with very little money, and many people, including myself,
thought
I had finally gone mad.
It's become the dominant school of
thought
in computer science.
Now I trained in medicine in India, and after that I chose psychiatry as my specialty, much to the dismay of my mother and all my family members who kind of
thought
neurosurgery would be a more respectable option for their brilliant son.
And in closing, when you have a moment of peace or quiet in these very busy few days or perhaps afterwards, spare a
thought
for that person you
thought
about who has a mental illness, or persons that you
thought
about who have mental illness, and dare to care for them.
I
thought
I would start with a very brief history of cities. Settlements typically began with people clustered around a well, and the size of that settlement was roughly the distance you could walk with a pot of water on your head.
I testified to that to the court, and while the judge was very attentive, it had been a very, very long hearing for this petition for a retrial, and as a result, I noticed out of the corner of my eye that I
thought
that maybe the judge was going to need a little more of a nudge than just more numbers.
I said, "Your honor," and I don't know whether I was emboldened by the scientific measurements that I had in my pocket and my knowledge that they are accurate, or whether it was just sheer stupidity, which is what the defense lawyers
thought
— (Laughter) — when they heard me say, "Yes, Your Honor, I want you stand right there and I want the car to go around the block again and I want it to come and I want it to stop right in front of you, three to four feet away, and I want the passenger to extend his hand with a black object and point it right at you, and you can look at it as long as you want."
None of those teenagers who identified him
thought
that they were picking the wrong person.
None of them
thought
they couldn't see the person's face.
And as he watched the disease unfold, he was able to discover that actually the motor neurons were dying in the disease in a different way than the field had previously
thought.
So that is terrific, and we thought, all right, as we're trying to solve this problem, clearly we have to think about genetics, we have to think about human testing, but there's a fundamental problem, because right now, stem cell lines, as extraordinary as they are, and lines are just groups of cells, they are made by hand, one at a time, and it takes a couple of months.
So we looked at this, and we thought, okay, artisanal is wonderful in, you know, your clothing and your bread and crafts, but artisanal really isn't going to work in stem cells, so we have to deal with this.
Now that might sound bad, but actually this is a really important developmental process, because gray matter contains cell bodies and connections between cells, the synapses, and this decline in gray matter volume during prefrontal cortex is
thought
to correspond to synaptic pruning, the elimination of unwanted synapses.
I'd seen bins full of food being locked and then trucked off to landfill sites, and I thought, surely there is something more sensible to do with food than waste it.
And I thought, well this could serve as a symbol for today.
I thought, "My goodness, what taboo have I broken?
I thought, "My God, you know, I go around the world telling people to stop wasting food.
And then I go out, and they work on me for the rest of the night, and I needed about 40 units of blood to keep me there while they did their work, and the surgeon took out about a third of my intestines, my cecum, organs I didn't know that I had, and he later told me one of the last things he did while he was in there was to remove my appendix for me, which I
thought
was great, you know, just a little tidy thing there at the end.
I
thought
you might have gotten strength from your hair like Samson, and you're going to need all the strength you can get."
I
thought
so.
And with that confidence surge, I thought, "Well, it's time to create a real bakery, so let's paint it."
We
thought
the hitting-it-out-of-the-box number was 150,000 nets a year.
And that some of the channels we
thought
would work didn't work.
But I
thought
it'd be neat for the square to respond to me, and my kids were small then, and my kids would play with these things, like, "Aaah," you know, they would say, "Daddy, aaah, aaah."
As an example of authoritarianism, I was in Russia one time traveling in St. Petersburg, at a national monument, and I saw this sign that says, "Do Not Walk On The Grass," and I thought, oh, I mean, I speak English, and you're trying to single me out.
After my review, I thought, "I know what joy feels like, but what is it, exactly?"
Then you have to update your model based on the signals coming back, and you have to do something that is interesting, which is you have to do a kind of depth of
thought
assay.
Let me leave you with one
thought
in closing.
Now actually, in 1993, the researchers who did that 1980 study, that early study, published a mea culpa, an apology to the scientific community, in which they said, "When we carried out our study in 1980, we
thought
that the increased death rate that occurred in the lorcainide group was an effect of chance."
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