Trillions
in sentence
220 examples of Trillions in a sentence
In both cases, "whatever it takes" meant
trillions
of dollars more in money-printing policies that continue today.
There are billions or
trillions
of w's, which represent the weights of all these synapses in the neural network.
This is running in real time on a mobile phone, and that's, of course, amazing in its own right, that mobile phones can do so many billions and
trillions
of operations per second.
Mothers aren't just eating for two, they're eating for two to the
trillions.
And you’re pulling back, connected across
trillions
of kilometers by gravity.
Trillions
of neutrinos, many generated by the sun, fly through us every second.
As we try to build this view, and try to educate ourselves about the enormity of our culture, the information that we have to work with is these gigantic numbers: numbers in the millions, in the hundreds of millions, in the billions and now in the
trillions.
Bush's new budget is in the trillions, and these are numbers that our brain just doesn't have the ability to comprehend.
So all of you who are sitting on
trillions
of dollars of cash, come to us.
So 214 trillion calories is a very large number, and not even the most dedicated of us think in the hundreds of
trillions
of calories.
And so, because of our coding strategy, we were able to package up all of our data in a way that allowed us to make millions and
trillions
of copies and still always recover all of our files back.
Child marriage is expected to cost the global economy
trillions
of dollars over the next 15 years.
And beyond the
trillions
of precise, 1-to-1 connections between neurons, some neurons also spray out neurotransmitters that affect many other neurons at once.
And the scary part about that was, sure, I learned a lot about marine life, but it taught me more about marine death and the extreme mass ecological fatality of fish, of marine life, marine mammals, very close biology to us, which are dying in the millions if not
trillions
that we can't count at the hands of plastic.
If you just walk outside, there are
trillions
of dollars that have been invested in infrastructure around the world, putting up wires to get power from where it's created to where it's used.
Trillions
of dollars a year are being brought into the region, so much of it being invested into China.
It is trillions, it's not billions.
But it's not enough because the biggest problems in our world need
trillions
not just billions.
More to the point, US corporations aren’t hoarding
trillions
of dollars in cash and refusing to make capital investments because the tax rate is too high, as Trump and congressional Republicans claim.
The IFFEd has brought universal education to the forefront of the World Bank’s plan to take development financing from “billions to trillions.”
The last Republican presidential candidate, Mitt Romney, and his vice-presidential running mate, Paul Ryan, campaigned in 2012 on a program that would likely have added
trillions
of dollars to the US debt over the next ten years, owing to tax cuts and increased defense spending.
The US government will no longer be able to afford to invest hundreds of billions of dollars (the cost in Iraq alone will run into the trillions) trying to supply other people with decent government.
The list of potential targets is impossibly long: 169 in all, toward which
trillions
of dollars will be spent.
That’s a political imperative: with corporations sitting on
trillions
of dollars in cash while ordinary Americans are suffering, lowering the average amount of corporate taxation would be unconscionable – and more so if taxes were lowered for the financial sector, which brought on the 2008 crisis and never paid for the economic damage.
All of this military activity costs hundreds of thousands of lives and
trillions
of dollars.
This means that over time, the advantage of moving toward freer trade grows dramatically bigger: the $120 billion benefit in 2015 grows to many
trillions
of dollars of annual benefits by the end of the century.
For example, the Kyoto Protocol would have cost
trillions
of dollars, but would have achieved a practically indiscernible difference in stemming the rise in global temperature.
National climate action plans – submitted by more than 180 countries – identify
trillions
of dollars of climate-related needs.
Thanks to the
trillions
of dollars of liquidity that major central banks have pumped in to the global economy over the past decade, asset markets have rebounded, company mergers have gone into overdrive, and stock buybacks have become a benchmark of managerial acumen.
The private sector can become a financier, shifting
trillions
of dollars of capital toward developing economies.
Back
Next
Related words
Dollars
Billions
Would
Which
Global
World
Financial
Economy
Investment
Banks
While
Their
Could
Worth
Spending
Large
Development
Countries
Climate
Years