Words
in sentence
6945 examples of Words in a sentence
I've struggled to say those words, because I didn't want to be defined by them.
Words
cannot express the pain I felt, the confusion that I felt, because now I realized that what was done to me was a terrible thing that in this society was called barbaric, it was called mutilation.
It begins with a clean sheet of paper, a felt marker, and without using any words, you begin to draw how to make toast.
We're going to do a song by David Mash called "Listen: the
Words
Are Gone," and maybe I'll have
words
come back into me afterwards if I can relax.
So you can imagine that with fMRI scanners today, we can decode the imagined words, images and dreams of those being scanned.
In other words, what these females are doing is they're laying 68 percent of their eggs in the medicinal milkweed.
Architects are no longer these mysterious creatures that use big
words
and complicated drawings, and you aren't the hapless public, the consumer that won't accept anything that they haven't seen anymore.
In the
words
of Dr. Robert Block, the former President of the American Academy of Pediatrics, "Adverse childhood experiences are the single greatest unaddressed public health threat facing our nation today."
Seeking a collaborative and reflexive approach, I asked them to write their own
words
and ideas on prints of their own images.
Over the next eighteen months, those
words
would blossom into One Hundred Years of Solitude.
It's a game where you take turns saying
words
that start with the last letter of the previous word.
You can play Shiritori as you like: "neko, kora, raibu, burashi," etc, etc. [Cat, cola, concert, brush] Many random
words
will come out.
You force those
words
to connect to what you want to think of and form ideas.
You just have to choose
words
at random.
You can flip through a dictionary and choose
words
at random.
The point is to gather random words, not information from the category you're thinking for.
That image will automatically be related with future
words.
Because the sunshine kid was bright, with a warm personality, And inside he burned savagely Hurt by the
words
and curses of the shadowy folk who spoke holes in his soul and left cavities, And as his heart hardened, his spark darkened, Every time they called him names it cooled his flames, He thought they might like him if he kept his light dim But they were busy telling lightning she had terrible aim, He couldn’t quite get to grips with what they said, So he let his light be eclipsed by what they said, He fell into a Lone Star State like Texas, And felt like he’d been punched in his solar plexus.
When we met Vineet, his company was about, in his words, to become irrelevant.
There are no
words
for the depths of loneliness I reached in that very thin border between sanity and madness.
Here's another thing we're doing: During the talks this morning, we've been automatically scraping Twitter for the TED2015 hashtag, and we've been doing an automated sentiment analysis, which means, are people using positive
words
or negative
words
or neutral?
A few days later, the Starr Report is released to Congress, and all of those tapes and transcripts, those stolen words, form a part of it.
Millions of people, often anonymously, can stab you with their words, and that's a lot of pain.
So in other words, collectively as a society, we're very much blind, because our smartest machines are still blind.
In 2009, the ImageNet project delivered a database of 15 million images across 22,000 classes of objects and things organized by everyday English
words.
Just like the brain integrates vision and language, we developed a model that connects parts of visual things like visual snippets with
words
and phrases in sentences.
I've learned about the poetry and the wisdom and the grace that can be found in the
words
of people all around us when we simply take the time to listen, like this interview between a betting clerk in Brooklyn named Danny Perasa who brought his wife Annie to StoryCorps to talk about his love for her.
They're just about the most powerful
words
we can say to one another, and often that's what happens in a StoryCorps booth.
They asked me to come up with a very brief wish for humanity, no more than 50
words.
So I thought about it, I wrote my 50 words, and a few weeks later, Chris called and said, "Go for it."
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