Time
in sentence
51576 examples of Time in a sentence
At this ripe old age of 30, I've been thinking a lot about what it means to grow up in this horrible, beautiful time, and I've decided, for me, it's been a real journey and paradox.
I didn't actually claim the feminist label until I went to Barnard College and I heard Amy Richards and Jennifer Baumgardner speak for the first
time.
You have this situation where now they can pause and repeat their cousin, without feeling like they're wasting my
time.
They can watch at their own
time
and pace.
Probably the least-appreciated aspect of this is the notion that the very first
time
that you're trying to get your brain around a new concept, the very last thing you need is another human being saying, "Do you understand this?"
Someone wrote it on YouTube, it was a YouTube comment: "First
time
I smiled doing a derivative."
This is just an excerpt from one of those letters: "My 12 year-old son has autism, and has had a terrible
time
with math.
Maybe I give you a lecture ahead of time, and I give you a bicycle for two weeks, then I come back after two weeks, and say, "Well, let's see.
Because every
time
we've done this, in every classroom we've done, over and over again, if you go five days into it, there's a group of kids who've raced ahead and a group who are a little bit slower.
It makes you really wonder how much all of the labels maybe a lot of us have benefited from were really just due to a coincidence of
time.
So in a traditional model, most of the teacher's
time
is spent doing lectures and grading and whatnot.
Maybe five percent of their
time
is sitting next to students and working with them.
Now, 100 percent of their
time
is.
BG: Is this ready for prime
time?
If I search for something, and you search for something, even right now at the very same time, we may get very different search results.
And this was the big story of the day at that
time.
So "Iron Man" zips right out, and "Waiting for Superman" can wait for a really long
time.
You know we all want to be someone who has watched "Rashomon," but right now we want to watch "Ace Ventura" for the fourth
time.
This is my wife and I cooking breakfast in the kitchen, and as we move through space and through time, a very everyday pattern of life in the kitchen.
In order to convert this opaque, 90,000 hours of video into something that we could start to see, we use motion analysis to pull out, as we move through space and through time, what we call space-time worms.
So you've all, I'm sure, seen time-lapse videos where a flower will blossom as you accelerate
time.
And the [horizontal] axis is
time.
And all of the data, we aligned based on the following idea: Every
time
my son would learn a word, we would trace back and look at all of the language he heard that contained that word.
Now we freeze the action, 30 minutes, we turn
time
into the vertical axis, and we open up for a view of these interaction traces we've just left behind.
And now we take the power of data and take every
time
my son ever heard the word water and the context he saw it in, and we use it to penetrate through the video and find every activity trace that co-occurred with an instance of water.
A nation exploding in conversation in real
time
in response to what's on the broadcast.
And so let's fly back in
time
to that memorable moment.
It's about giving folks concerned about their water footprints a real opportunity to put water where it's critically needed, into these degraded ecosystems, while at the same
time
providing farmers a meaningful economic choice about how their water is used.
They get picked up by these creatures I've called uber-moms, who are highly successful career women who have taken
time
off to make sure all their kids get into Harvard.
And in the
time
since Galileo pointed that rudimentary telescope at the celestial bodies, the known universe has come to us through light, across vast eras in cosmic history.
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