Today
in sentence
13926 examples of Today in a sentence
Keep in mind, with the digital technology that we have today, this thing was made out of about 14,000 pieces and there's no two pieces alike at all.
Today, each of these elements is opening up due to dramatic changes in the global environment.
You know, developing countries
today
will not simply accept solutions that are handed down to them by the U.S., Europe or the World Bank.
This is the new ecosystem of open-knowledge flows, not just traveling North to South, but South to South, and even South to North, with Mexico's Oportunidades
today
inspiring New York City.
Development institutions
today
are also opening for public scrutiny the projects they finance.
Governments
today
are opening up just as citizens are demanding voice and accountability.
So in the Philippines today, parents and students can give real-time feedback on a website, Checkmyschool.org, or using SMS, whether teachers and textbooks are showing up in school, the same problems I witnessed in Uganda and in Bihar.
Today, even Bihar is turning around and opening up under a committed leadership that is making government transparent, accessible and responsive to the poor.
So for instance, today, in Ghana, courageous reformers from civil society, Parliament and government, have forged a coalition for transparent contracts in the oil sector, and, galvanized by this, reformers in Parliament are now investigating dubious contracts.
Today, I'm inspired by these changes, and I'm excited that at the World Bank, we are embracing these new directions, a significant departure from my work in Uganda 20 years ago.
I'd like to talk
today
about the two biggest social trends in the coming century, and perhaps in the next 10,000 years.
Today
54 percent of people who are writers in America are women.
Today
I have just one request.
So magic is an excellent way for staying ahead of the reality curve, to make possible
today
what science will make a reality tomorrow.
Joker: Whoa, whoa, whoa, oh! (Music) MT: But today, I am performing for a different kind of audience.
Well,
today
I fuel a global organization that is fueled by those trips to the mailbox, fueled by the ways in which we can harness social media like never before to write and mail strangers letters when they need them most, but most of all, fueled by crates of mail like this one, my trusty mail crate, filled with the scriptings of ordinary people, strangers writing letters to other strangers not because they're ever going to meet and laugh over a cup of coffee, but because they have found one another by way of letter-writing.
And that can be seen directly through a microscope, and I'm going to show you some of this
today.
And microscopes that we have
today
can actually see individual atoms.
So what I've been trying to tell you
today
is things even as ordinary as a grain of sand can be truly extraordinary if you look closely and if you look from a different and a new point of view.
It lived for up to 42 years, and this bat's still alive in the wild
today.
So in Australia, "mo" is slang for mustache, so we renamed the month of November "Movember" and created some pretty basic rules, which still stand
today.
What I'd like to do with the rest of my time with you
today
is talk a little bit about one of the areas that we've been investigating, and that's mind-wandering.
In my talk today, I've told you a little bit about mind-wandering, a variable that I think turns out to be fairly important in the equation for happiness.
Today, I'm going to talk to you about sketching electronics.
So he's really responsible for a lot of what we consider modern in dictionaries
today.
And so, James Murray could get a job on any dictionary
today.
Over 2.5 billion people in the world
today
do not have proper access to water and sanitation.
Having put the product into practice, we are actually now on the verge of selling the product onto a multinational to take it to the retail market, and one question I have for the audience
today
is, on the gravel roads of Limpopo, with an allowance of 50 rand a week, I came up with a way for the world not to bathe.
Anybody do any writing
today?
The novelist Richard Ford speaks about a childhood challenge that continues to be something he wrestles with
today.
Back
Next
Related words
About
World
Would
People
Which
There
Their
Years
Still
Countries
Could
Global
Other
Economic
Going
Movie
Think
Where
Economy
Political