Which
in sentence
83315 examples of Which in a sentence
Today's kids play games in
which
they're expected to chat in text and voice, operate a character, follow long- and short-term objectives, and deal with their parents interrupting them all the time to talk to them.
They discovered it was the act of learning that produced the increased brain matter, not performance at the activity itself,
which
is a very interesting finding.
It also reinforced this idea,
which
should go over well here as well, that multilingual people outperform monolingual people on most standardized tests by about 15%.
All around us, Generation G's desire for game-like experiences is reshaping industries, from Foursquare,
which
caused the mobile social networking ecosystem to start, to companies like Nike, Coke, Chase, and also Kozinga,
which
owes much of its success to games.
Corporations have also become aware of the trend of gamification and the effect of games on people like Generation G. Gartner Group says that by 2015, 70% of all the Global 2000, the biggest companies in the world, will be actively using gamification, and 50% of their process of innovation will be gamified,
which
is an astonishing thing.
It's a world in
which
things move at faster pace than they did for you and me.
It's a world in
which
there are rewards everywhere for actions that people take.
A world in
which
there's extensive collaborative play.
In the end, those group exercises always boiled down to an individual score,
which
distorted the way that people behaved.
But, Generation G plays a lot of games that are purely collaborative, in
which
there is group value.
This is the prescription: if you have children or you work with children, or you desire to work with children, or you want to change he world, this is the absolute, positive best thing that you can do with your time, from now until I see you in the retirement home on the coast of Spain or in the virtual world, wherever you choose to retire,
which
is: get into the game with your kids.
These are contrails,
which
are artificial water clouds that are made by the passing of a jet engine.
I've noticed that there's a theme that's kind of developed at TED,
which
is kind of, "fear versus hope," or "creativity versus caution."
Now, this is not a 200-mile-wide crater, but then again, you can see the rock,
which
is sitting right here, about the size of a football, that hit that car and did that damage.
In the year 2005, NASA launched a probe called Deep Impact,
which
slammed a piece of itself into the nucleus of a comet.
The purpose wasn't to push it out of the way; the purpose was to make a crater to excavate the material and see what was underneath the surface of this comet,
which
we learned quite a bit about.
We invented something called an ion drive,
which
is a very, very, very low-thrust engine.
I'd go to the general store for a cup of coffee and a brownie, I'd ship my film to San Francisco, and lo and behold, two days later, it would end up on my front door,
which
was way better than having to fight the traffic of Hollywood.
Did you know that 80 percent of the information we receive comes through our eyes, and if you compare light energy to musical scales, it would only be one octave that the naked eye could see,
which
is right in the middle?
So these are just a few of an enormous number of gifts to
which
we can open your heart.
A couple of years ago, I read an article by New York Times writer Michael Pollan, in
which
he argued that growing even some of our own food is one of the best things that we can do for the environment.
Fast-forward two years later: we now have window farms,
which
are vertical, hydroponic platforms for food-growing indoors.
So to bring on more codevelopers, what we did was we created a social media site on
which
we published the designs, we explained how they worked, and we even went so far as to point out everything that was wrong with these systems.
But I think that Eleen expresses best what we really get out of this,
which
is the actual joy of collaboration.
And just this past February, I won two back-to-back World Cup gold medals — (Applause) —
which
made me the highest ranked adaptive female snowboarder in the world.
So when he gives me his final paper, in
which
he argues that the categorical imperative is perhaps too uncompromising to deal with the conflict that affects our everyday and challenges me to tell him whether therefore we are condemned to moral failure, I say, "I don't know.
Which
is a great place to do it because nobody cares.
And then I went home that night, and I had an even larger emotional meltdown,
which
I'll say more about in a minute.
In other words, I had drunk our great cultural Kool-Aid about regret,
which
is that lamenting things that occurred in the past is an absolute waste of time, that we should always look forward and not backward, and that one of the noblest and best things we can do is strive to live a life free of regrets.
But first I want to say that the intensity and persistence with
which
we experience these emotional components of regret is obviously going to vary depending on the specific thing that we're feeling regretful about.
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