Today
in sentence
13926 examples of Today in a sentence
And she said, "I'm very sorry to tell you this, but my head teacher pulled me out of class
today
and told me I'm not allowed to take pictures in the lunch room anymore.
I want each of us to be able to engender more trust tomorrow, literally tomorrow, than we do
today.
I think what's so brilliant about the festivals, the new festivals, is that they are really fully capturing the complexity and the excitement of the way we all live
today.
How can we share more of our hopes for our vacant storefronts, so our communities can reflect our needs and dreams
today?
Cooling systems
today
collectively account for 17 percent of the electricity we use worldwide.
That's half our electricity supply
today.
A 10 or 20 percent improvement in the efficiency of every cooling system could actually have an enormous impact on our greenhouse gas emissions, both
today
and later this century.
Well, we believe the most direct way to save energy with this technology is as an efficiency boost for
today'
s air-conditioning and refrigeration systems.
So I hope that's a message that you all take on
today.
It's time to think again, to reimagine the shape of progress, because today, we have economies that need to grow, whether or not they make us thrive, and what we need, especially in the richest countries, are economies that make us thrive whether or not they grow.
It was invented in the 1930s, but it very soon became the overriding goal of policymaking, so much so that even today, in the richest of countries, governments think that the solution to their economic problems lies in more growth.
We're financially addicted to growth, because
today'
s financial system is designed to pursue the highest rate of monetary return, putting publicly traded companies under constant pressure to deliver growing sales, growing market share and growing profits, and because banks create money as debt bearing interest, which must be repaid with more.
If we can harness
today'
s technologies, from AI to blockchain to the Internet of Things to material science, if we can harness these in service of distributive design, we can ensure that health care, education, finance, energy, political voice reaches and empowers those people who need it most.
It's a phase, but many economies like Ethiopia and Nepal
today
may be in that phase.
Well today, I'm very pleased to report to you that there have been many experiments in task shifting in mental health care across the developing world over the past decade, and I want to share with you the findings of three particular such experiments, all three of which focused on depression, the most common of all mental illnesses.
Still, today, armed with that knowledge that ordinary people in the community can be trained and, with sufficient supervision and support, can deliver a range of health care interventions effectively, perhaps that promise is within reach now.
We didn't have a blog, let alone a dozen twitter accounts like we have
today.
Today
we have technology that lets us express ourselves a great deal, perhaps a little too much.
The same can be said for our social systems, for our systems of government, where, at the very least, flow offers us a helpful metaphor for understanding what the problem is, what's really broken, and the urgent need that we have, that we all feel today, to redesign the flow of our institutions.
So complain as we might, what actually can replace what we have
today?
Today
we have the opportunity, and we have the imperative, to create thousands of new ways of interconnecting between networks and institutions, thousands of new kinds of juries: the citizen jury, the Carrotmob, the hackathon, we are just beginning to invent the models by which we can cocreate the process of governance.
And I want to be clear to mention that this open government revolution is not about privatizing government, because in many cases what it can do when we have the will to do so is to deliver more progressive and better policy than the regulations and the legislative and litigation-oriented strategies by which we make policy
today.
Paris was a series of these little villages that came together, and you still see that structure
today.
Actually, we could do this
today.
So we've looked at articulating mirrors of the facade that can throw shafts of sunlight anywhere into the space, therefore allowing you to shade most of the glass on a hot day like
today.
I truly believe that stem cell research is going to allow our children to look at Alzheimer's and diabetes and other major diseases the way we view polio today, which is as a preventable disease.
Because if you don't close that gap, you really are exactly where we are
today.
There are lots of descriptions of adolescence in history that sound very similar to the descriptions we use
today.
So almost 400 years ago, Shakespeare was portraying adolescents in a very similar light to the light that we portray them in today, but
today
we try to understand their behavior in terms of the underlying changes that are going on in their brain.
And that's still the case for many, many teenagers around the world
today.
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