Words
in sentence
6945 examples of Words in a sentence
But I remember these words: "Don't limit your challenge, but challenge your limit.
So in other words, they could take the ships without wasting ammunition, or incurring casualties.
In other words, what if CRISPR also copied and pasted itself.
Or maybe it's the
words.
Now we can take these sounds and build
words
out of it.
So if we take Jim O'Grady and scramble the words, we'll get a list of
words.
JO: ... an animal ... assorted facts ... and right on ... pie man ... potentially ... my stories UH: And you can see that these
words
start to induce alignment in early language areas, but not more than that.
Now we can take the
words
and start to build sentences out of them.
And we believe that these responses in higher-order areas are induced or become similar across listeners because of the meaning conveyed by the speaker, and not by
words
or sound.
And if we are right, there's a strong prediction over here if I tell you the exact same ideas using two very different sets of words, your brain responses will still be similar.
And when I'm transmitting these
words
to your brains now, you have to reconstruct it in your mind.
It was like we were both heroes climbing up into a mountain range together and we kept arriving at new vistas, and these new, perfect constellations of
words
would come out of us to describe them.
And then, I also wasn't really shining in a certain area that I wanted to be, and you know, you look at those scores, and it wasn't bad, but it was not certainly predictive that I would one day make my living out of the artful arrangement of
words.
Words
were said to me that I never thought I would ever hear it said to my face by another human being.
And those words, they shattered my heart.
I told you today that someone said to me
words
that marked me, because I explained the same thing to my employees in Senegal.
OK, so, from here on, I have simple
words
for our "leaders."
In other words, maybe the problem isn't them, the vets; maybe the problem is us.
Or in other words, encouraging my students to become whistle-blowers.
But when we think about the term whistle-blower, we often think of some very descriptive words: rat, snake, traitor, tattletale, weasel.
And those are the nice words, the ones I can say from the stage.
It's one of my favorite words, because it's so literal.
So our way to solve this is to build the space of
words.
This is a huge space that contains all
words
in such a way that the distance between any two of them is indicative of how closely related they are.
So for instance, you want the
words "
dog" and "cat" to be very close together, but the
words "
grapefruit" and "logarithm" to be very far away.
And this has to be true for any two
words
within the space.
And there are different ways that we can construct the space of
words.
Another possibility is following the simple assumption that when two
words
are related, they tend to appear in the same sentences, in the same paragraphs, in the same documents, more often than would be expected just by pure chance.
And just to give you a flavor of how well this works, this is the result we get when we analyze this for some familiar
words.
And you can see first that
words
automatically organize into semantic neighborhoods.
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