Which
in sentence
83315 examples of Which in a sentence
These days an iPod Classic can hold 40,000 songs,
which
is to say eight billion dollars-worth of stolen media.
We heard a brilliant simple solution to not killing people in surgery,
which
is, have a checklist.
Which
means, yes, I have a little shame; no, I'm a sociopath.
I'm an industrial designer,
which
means I create all these cool things from ideas that we surround ourselves with, or in this case, geeky people surround themselves with, for the most part.
The downside about that is, there's something impersonal about lots of identical things, because when you're trying to design one thing for one person to solve one issue, you can't really do that when you're making things aimed more to a demographic model or to a marketing requirements document,
which
is what we live by.
The problem is, we're constrained by mass production,
which
makes a million identical things but can't make one unique, individualized thing.
Deborah wanted her curves back, but she also just wanted what came out of it to be really sexy,
which
is great for us to hear.
What happens if you take the tattoo,
which
is a combination of somebody's personal taste and choice, and their morphology, but now, let's say, you remove the person.
And in his last show,
which
I didn't design but I witnessed, he had self-actualized.
And the United States uses about 20 million barrels a day,
which
is about 25 percent of all the oil used everyday in the world.
And they claim they have 250 billion barrels of oil,
which
I do not believe.
CA: So what happened was that, through increased ability to use fracking technology, the calculated reserves of natural gas kind of exploded and the price plummeted,
which
made wind uncompetitive.
We found out that we could go to the source rock,
which
were the carboniferous shales in the basins.
Well there was a little piece of that Women's Health Initiative that went to National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute,
which
is the cardiology part of the NIH.
And if you did that angiogram,
which
is the red, you can see the man's disease.
So we hypothesized that female stem cells might be better at identifying the injury, doing some cellular repair or even producing new organs,
which
is one of the things that we're trying to do with stem cell therapy.
I am 17 years old and I am a nuclear physicist,
which
may be a little hard to believe, but I am.
And it slams together deuterium,
which
is just hydrogen with an extra neutron in it.
This is me at CERN in Geneva, Switzerland,
which
is the preeminent particle physics laboratory in the world.
One of my students came up after class, an introductory class, and she said, "You know, poetry is harder than writing,
" which
I found both erroneous and profound.
The name of the author is the first to go, followed obediently by the title, the plot, the heartbreaking conclusion, the entire novel,
which
suddenly becomes one you have never read, never even heard of.
And then he'd come down to New York City and I'd teach him what I knew,
which
was largely smoking and drinking.
I wrote this after a friend's funeral, but not so much about the friend as something the eulogist kept saying, as all eulogists tend to do,
which
is how happy the deceased would be to look down and see all of us assembled.
And when we lie down in a field or on a couch, drugged perhaps by the hum of a warm afternoon, they think we are looking back at them,
which
makes them lift their oars and fall silent and wait like parents for us to close our eyes.
And we have some wizard technology
which
I think has worked really well, and over the course of the time I've worked in intensive care, the death rate for males in Australia has halved, and intensive care has had something to do with that.
Which
is a familiar phrase to us.
Each of these would be an admission to an acute care hospital, at the end of which, or at some point during which, somebody says, enough is enough, and we stop.
And this one's the biggest growth industry of all, and at least six out of 10 of the people in this room will die in this form,
which
is the dwindling of capacity with increasing frailty, and frailty's an inevitable part of aging, and increasing frailty is in fact the main thing that people die of now, and the last few years, or the last year of your life is spent with a great deal of disability, unfortunately.
But we realized, of course, that we are dealing with cultural issues, and this is, I love this Klimt painting, because the more you look at it, the more you kind of get the whole issue that's going on here,
which
is clearly the separation of death from the living, and the fear — Like, if you actually look, there's one woman there who has her eyes open.
I do think we have to get political and start to reclaim this process from the medicalized model in
which
it's going.
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