Time
in sentence
51576 examples of Time in a sentence
Maybe that's most of the
time.
I mean, architects have been thinking about these ideas for a long
time.
I've spent a lot of
time
in Finland at the design factory of Aalto University, where the they have a shared shop and shared fab lab, shared quiet spaces, electronics spaces, recreation places.
There's no reason why we can't dramatically improve the livability and creativity of cities like they've done in Melbourne with the laneways while at the same
time
dramatically reducing CO2 and energy.
The first
time
it was a C-section.
The second
time
was a procedure that involved local anesthesia.
Another time, she watched in horror as nurses watched a patient die because they refused to give her oxygen that they had.
And for the first time, Africa mattered more to me than ever before.
And at this time, when I was going through what I call my "pre-mid-life crisis," Africa was a mess.
It's the first
time
in the history of Ghana that a woman has been elected head of Student Government at any university.
A father came out of his house to tell his teenage son and his five friends that it was
time
for them to stop horsing around on the front lawn and on the sidewalk, to get home, finish their schoolwork, and prepare themselves for bed.
It happens to us in all the aspects of our life, all the
time.
So when I did the calculations for the lunar data and the solar data at that location on Earth at the
time
of the incident of the shooting, all right, it was well past the end of civil twilight and there was no moon up that night.
And then take photographs, and this is what the scene looked like at the
time
of the shooting from the position of the teenagers looking at the car going by and shooting.
But we don't have a lot of time, and I'd like to show you the artist's conception of how this system might look if we find ourselves in a protected bay somewhere in the world, and we have in the background in this image, the waste water treatment plant and a source of flue gas for the CO2, but when you do the economics of this system, you find that in fact it will be difficult to make it work.
If we imagine a five-day retention
time
for this system, we'd need 325 million gallons to accomodate, and that would be about 1,280 acres of these OMEGA modules floating in San Francisco Bay.
Jonathan Trent: So it's really gotten to a stage now in NASA where they would like to spin it out into something which would go offshore, and there are a lot of issues with doing it in the United States because of limited permitting issues and the
time
required to get permits to do things offshore.
He took skin biopsies, this
time
from people who had a disease, ALS, or as you call it in the U.K., motor neuron disease.
So basically what he did was to take a healthy cell and turn it into a sick cell, and he recapitulated the disease over and over again in the dish, and this was extraordinary, because it was the first
time
that we had a model of a disease from a living patient in living human cells.
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.
It can go on a long
time.
You have a pretty good idea of what they're feeling and thinking at this precise moment in
time.
Now believe it or not, normal, healthy, intelligent adults like you make errors about 50 percent of the
time
on that kind of trial.
We tell them, okay, we're going to do exactly the same thing but this
time
there's no director.
Okay, so if I just show you the percentage errors in a large developmental study we did, this is in a study ranging from age seven to adulthood, and what you're going to see is the percentage errors in the adult group in both conditions, so the gray is the director condition, and you see that our intelligent adults are making errors about 50 percent of the time, whereas they make far fewer errors when there's no director present, when they just have to remember that rule of ignoring the gray background.
In other words, everything you need to do in order to remember the rule and apply it seems to be fully developed by mid-adolescence, whereas in contrast, if you look at the last two gray bars, there's still a significant improvement in the director condition between mid-adolescence and adulthood, and what this means is that the ability to take into account someone else's perspective in order to guide ongoing behavior, which is something, by the way, that we do in everyday life all the time, is still developing in mid-to-late adolescence.
And this region, the regions within the limbic system, have been found to be hypersensitive to the rewarding feeling of risk-taking in adolescents compared with adults, and at the very same time, the prefrontal cortex, which you can see in blue in the slide here, which stops us taking excessive risks, is still very much in development in adolescents.
It's
time
to start designing for our ears.
Sound affects us physiologically, psychologically, cognitively and behaviorally all the
time.
(Hospital noises) When I was visiting my terminally ill father in a hospital, I was asking myself, how does anybody get well in a place that sounds like this? Hospital sound is getting worse all the
time.
Back
Next
Related words
First
Movie
Which
There
Would
About
Their
Could
People
Other
After
Years
Waste
Really
Think
Being
World
Should
Where
Again