Value
in sentence
5399 examples of Value in a sentence
Two thirds of the
value
of the world's oil and mining companies are now covered by transparency laws.
As a result, countries started to
value
the diversity of their people, and Peru was one of them.
Or in Peru, Pedro Miguel Schiaffino, a great chef and a good friend, who goes to the farthest corner of the Amazon looking for ingredients, traditions and craftsmanship, because he believes that by bringing them back to his restaurant he can convince the 10 million inhabitants of Lima that using these products will bring prosperity to these communities, while also showing respect and giving
value
to their cultural identity.
And curious to see if any of them made any noise, I dropped a hydrophone, an underwater microphone covered in rubber, down the mouth part, and immediately the critter began to absorb the microphone into its belly, and the tentacles were searching out of the surface for something of nutritional
value.
So in one level it went from something like 13 dollars to 266, literally in the space of four months, and then crashed and lost half of its
value
in six hours.
And it's currently around that kind of 110 dollar mark in
value.
So what's starting to happen, if you think about money, if you sort of boil money down to an essence, it is literally just an expression of value, an agreed
value.
So what's happening now, in the digital age, is that we can quantify
value
in lots of different ways and do it more easily, and sometimes the way that we quantify those values, it makes it much easier to create new forms and valid forms of currency.
They said, obviously tried to dissociate themselves from drugs, but said, "It reminds me of one thing and that's the
value
of the brand has stayed consistent."
CA: Your companies have had incredible PR
value
out of these heroics.
How much was the PR
value
part of this?
You know, it doesn't really have any
value
to a family with malaria except that it helps prevent malaria.
So let's imagine that our attacker, called Evil Hacker just for comedy value, inserts something a little nasty.
If we could entertain and
value
other kinds of knowledge about life, including other definitions of death, it has the potential to change the discussions that we have about the end of life.
V.C.s have always struggled to invest profitably in technologies such as energy whose capital requirements are huge and whose development is long and lengthy, and V.C.s have never, never funded the development of technologies meant to solve big problems that possess no immediate commercial
value.
Market exchange, they assume, doesn't change the meaning or
value
of the goods being exchanged.
But to have this debate, we have to do something we're not very good at, and that is to reason together in public about the
value
and the meaning of the social practices we prize, from our bodies to family life to personal relations to health to teaching and learning to civic life.
But once we see that markets change the character of goods, we have to debate among ourselves these bigger questions about how to
value
goods.
And the question is, how can we get business thinking to adapt this issue of shared
value?
This is what I call shared value: addressing a social issue with a business model.
That's shared
value.
Shared
value
is capitalism, but it's a higher kind of capitalism.
Shared
value
is when we can create social
value
and economic
value
simultaneously.
We can address shared
value
at multiple levels.
The governments that are making the most progress are the governments that have found ways to enable shared
value
in business rather than see government as the only player that has to call the shots.
At the time, these words were earmarked and targeted against the British, but over the last 200 years, they've come to embody what many Westerners believe, that freedom is the most cherished value, and that the best systems of politics and economics have freedom embedded in them.
Ethiopia's domestic market is about one billion dollars of
value.
And we feel that over the next five years, if Ethiopia can capture even 40 percent, just 40 percent, of the domestic market, and add just 25 percent
value
to that market, the
value
of the market doubles.
So we feel that we have a winning
value
proposition to transform farmers' choices, to grow our agriculture, and to change Africa.
So what can a business do today to actually use your total
value
chain to support a better quality of life and protect child rights?
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