Turns
in sentence
3483 examples of Turns in a sentence
But it
turns
out in the 18th century, people didn't really care about that at all.
But it
turns
out this is just a reminder that, although this is a lot of fun, when you interpret these graphs, you have to be very careful, and you have to adopt the base standards in the sciences.
And it
turns
out that there are three main messages used by the donor agencies for these condoms: fear, financing and fidelity.
Turns
out to be just what I was looking for: a ritual that's less about dying and more about opening the door to whatever comes next.
It's an idea for a new kind of school, which
turns
on its head much of our conventional thinking about what schools are for and how they work.
She, it
turns
out, has a non-accredited correspondence course PhD from somewhere in America.
Actually, it
turns
out that your risk of breast cancer increases slightly with every amount of alcohol you drink.
Well, it
turns
out that what happens is the negative data goes missing in action; it's withheld from doctors and patients.
Like, when you see that progress bar, it sort of locks your attention in a tractor beam, and it
turns
the experience of waiting into this exciting narrative that you're seeing unfold in front of you: that somehow, this time you've spent waiting in frustration for the computer to do something, has been reconceptualized as: "Progress!
I mean, it wasn't an accident that I was a rich kid picking on a poor kid, or that Vicky, it
turns
out, would eventually end up being gay.
They have sorts of ingredients that you brush on a piece of chicken or fish, and it
turns
it to look like beef.
Well it
turns
out, we have many different alternatives for such a set of building blocks.
So this also
turns
out to be extremely robust.
Well it
turns
out that the secret was broccoli.
But if we turn to evolution for an answer to this puzzle of why we spend so much time taking care of useless babies, it
turns
out that there's actually an answer.
If we look across many, many different species of animals, not just us primates, but also including other mammals, birds, even marsupials like kangaroos and wombats, it
turns
out that there's a relationship between how long a childhood a species has and how big their brains are compared to their bodies and how smart and flexible they are.
Well it
turns
out that the babies, the New Caledonian crow babies, are fledglings.
But when anger
turns
to contempt, you've been dismissed.
We're not smarter now than they were then; it just
turns
out it's really hard to think of things, but once you've thought of them, it's easy to understand.
Well, it
turns
out it's not the Holy Grail.
Well it
turns
out that Carl Norden, as a proper Swiss, was very enamored of German engineers.
Turns
out it wasn't so easy.
But knowing that molecule is valuable, because it tells us how to turn up this behavior and what
turns
it off.
It
turns
out that driving, with its associated design implementation and regulatory hurdles, is actually a harder problem to solve than flying.
And so they take it in
turns
to apply the force they've just experienced back and forward.
And if we look at what we start with, a quarter of a Newton there, a number of turns, perfect would be that red line.
Now it
turns
out, we are extremely stereotypical.
And so it
turns
out we're so stereotypical, our brains have got dedicated neural circuitry to decode this stereotyping.
It
turns
out Microsoft is not the only company whose body is lying across the railroad tracks today.
Every six months until they're six years old, we're going to be doing about 250 children, watching exactly how the gyri and the sulci of the brains fold to see how this magnificent development actually
turns
into memories and the marvel that is us.
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