Time
in sentence
51576 examples of Time in a sentence
This is affected massively by reverberation time, how reverberant a room is.
In a classroom with a reverberation
time
of 1.2 seconds, which is pretty common, this is what it sounds like.
What does it cost to treat a classroom down to that 0.4-second reverberation
time?
And in our offices, we spend a lot of
time
at work.
It's
time
to start designing for the ears.
One morning, when I was feeding my pigs, I noticed a particularly tasty-looking sun-dried tomato loaf that used to crop up from
time
to
time.
At the same
time
we throw away millions of tons of food waste which we could and should be feeding them.
Living in New York City, as I do, it's almost as if, with so many people doing so many things at the same
time
in such close quarters, it's almost like life is dealing you extra hands out of that deck.
And I get into the trauma room, and they're waiting for me, and the lights are there, and I'd been able to breathe a little more now, because the blood has left, had been filling up my lungs and I was having a very hard
time
breathing, but now it's kind of gone into the stretcher.
And later on, when I got out and the flashbacks and the nightmares were giving me a hard time, I went back to him and I was sort of asking him, you know, what am I gonna do?
It is
time
to be asking questions about technology.
It is
time
to demand fair-trade phones.
It's a great
time
to be a molecular biologist.
So social scientists have spent a lot of
time
looking at the effects of our body language, or other people's body language, on judgments.
Five years in grad school, a few years, you know, I'm at Northwestern, I moved to Harvard, I'm at Harvard, I'm not really thinking about it anymore, but for a long
time
I had been thinking, "Not supposed to be here."
And so, it was an incredibly painful
time
in my life, and yet it really started to give me the humility to start listening.
Completely failed, but over time, the women learnt to sell on their own way.
And with that confidence surge, I thought, "Well, it's
time
to create a real bakery, so let's paint it."
And so, I lived in Kigali for about two and a half years, doing these two things, and it was an extraordinary
time
in my life.
And it's really
time
we start thinking more creatively about how they can be fused.
We can continue going along at 12 dollars a net, and the customer pays zero, or we could at least experiment with some of it, to charge one dollar a net, costing the public sector another six dollars a net, give the people the dignity of choice, and have a distribution system that might, over time, start sustaining itself.
So we now start this journey by telling our students that God gave us NAND — (Laughter) — and told us to build a computer, and when we asked how, God said, "One step at a time."
It would say you're wrong most of the
time.
And it was really at the
time
I was wondering why doesn't the computer respond to sound?
So I made this as a kind of an experiment at the
time.
And then I spent a lot of
time
in the space of interactive graphics and things like this, and I stopped doing it because my students at MIT got so much better than myself, so I had to hang up my mouse.
It's paying a tribute to the wonderful typewriter that my mother used to type on all the
time
as a legal secretary.
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.
At the time, she didn't realize that she was actually hitting on a bigger idea she later called service networking.
It's only a matter of
time
before we'll be able to perform a Facebook- or Google-like search and see a complete picture of someone's behaviors in different contexts over
time.
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