Views
in sentence
1691 examples of Views in a sentence
And at the time there was a good bit of skepticism about his
views.
Going to a mosque regularly is actually linked to having more tolerant
views
of people of other faiths and greater civic engagement.
To start with, you have to understand that to get
views
like this, most of my time is spent up high, and I'm usually in a cherry picker or a crane.
We need to encourage, even on a local and national level, more movement, more participation, more interaction with people who we don't know and whose
views
we might not necessarily agree with.
It had over two million
views
in just a few days.
We comment on the news, we post our
views
on social media, we march, we protest ... But who among us is working on solutions, big solutions to big issues, like gun violence, mistreatment of workers, flood, famine, drought?
And that video got over five million
views
on Youtube.
They're cute, they're lovable, and judging by the 26 billions
views
of over 2 million YouTube videos of them pouncing, bouncing, climbing, cramming, stalking, clawing, chattering, and purring, one thing is certain: cats are very entertaining.
He was easy and pleasant to talk to, but on the other hand, I couldn't stand the idea of having so much in common with someone who had such clearly racist
views.
I'm not saying that their behavior is acceptable, but I have learned to distance myself from the hateful
views
without distancing myself from the person who's expressing those
views.
And at the time, my religious
views
were very extreme.
They have changed my
views.
They may have very egalitarian views, in fact.
David Brooks, who has earned the wrath of many of [The New York Times's] left-leaning readers because of his conservative views, and more recently, perhaps, some of the right-leaning readers because of his criticism of some aspects of Trump.
So the mere fact of your disagreeing with me is implicitly an insult not only to my views, but to my intelligence, too.
And I think it explains why partisans on both sides of the aisle keep reaching for this, frankly, antiquated, early modern language of civility precisely when they want to communicate that certain people and certain
views
are beyond the pale, but they want to save themselves the trouble of actually making an argument.
Similarly, being civil can't be the same as being nice, because being nice means not telling people what you really think about them or their wrong, wrong
views.
In expensive cities like New York, it has the magical power of being able to multiply real estate values by allowing views, which is really the only commodity that developers have to offer to justify those surreal prices.
The trouble with Google filters, Facebook friends and reading the news by narrowcasting rather than broadcasting means that we're surrounded almost entirely by people like us whose views, whose opinions, whose prejudices, even, are just like ours.
And Cass Sunstein of Harvard has shown that if we surround ourselves with people with the same
views
as us, we get more extreme.
They both meant it, and there was some truth to each of their claims, because each side was grossly exaggerating the
views
of the other in order to fight their war.
These two gentlemen here have perfect hairdos, but they give us very different
views
of the world.
I'd just spent about six months working on album that I'd poured my heart and my soul into, and it was getting about three plays per day on Myspace at the time, and I was getting more and more depressed when I started noticing these other people who were playing guitar and singing and putting videos on this new site called YouTube, and they were getting 300,000
views.
This is an actual snapshot of my YouTube dashboard from a 28-day period that shows one million
views
and 166 dollars of ad earnings for those
views.
And when they upload a video, it gets somewhere around 15,000
views
to 100,000
views.
I think when we hear numbers like that, when we hear "15,000 views," and we see content like this, we just snap categorize it as being not as legitimate as a morning show that you'd hear on the radio or a talk show that you'd see on NBC or something But when "Kinda Funny" launched on Patreon, within a few weeks, they were making 31,000 dollars per month for this show.
The "Dot Collector" collects these
views.
With each of these views, we can explore the thinking behind the numbers.
Here's an example of a vote that we took where the majority of people felt one way ... but when we weighed the
views
based on people's merits, the answer was completely different.
And then there's a part of our brain which
views
all of this as attacks.
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