World
in sentence
39079 examples of World in a sentence
But it was a sense of pride that we made things, that the
world
around us was made by us.
And so it's a very interesting phenomenon that's going across the
world.
Well, if I haven't convinced you that you're a maker, I hope I could convince you that our next generation should be makers, that kids are particularly interested in this, in this ability to control the physical
world
and be able to use things like micro-controllers and build robots.
And so, if you have any interest in understanding the world, looking at how people amuse themselves is a really good way to start.
Only 10 minutes off the men's
world
record, Paula Radcliffe is essentially unbeatable.
In that very short learning curve, you've gone from broken organs up to the fact that you're only 10 minutes off the male
world
record.
You take a runner like Ann Trason or Nikki Kimball or Jenn Shelton, put them in a race of 50 or 100 miles against anybody in the world, and it's a coin toss who's going to win.
What if the only natural advantage we had in the
world
was the fact that we could get together as a group, go out there on that African savanna, pick out an antelope, go out as a pack, and run that thing to death?
Now let's take a bow to the "Kama Sutra," the
world'
s first book on the pleasures of sensual living.
And so that year, I started to build this robot, Kismet, the
world'
s first social robot.
And as grandma-bot, she can now play, really play, with my sons, with her grandsons, in the real
world
with his real toys.
And so I have a new project in my group I wanted to present to you today called Playtime Computing that's really trying to think about how we can take what's so engaging about digital media and literally bring it off the screen into the real
world
of the child, where it can take on many of the properties of real-world play.
So here's the first exploration of this idea, where characters can be physical or virtual, and where the digital content can literally come off the screen into the
world
and back.
It turns out that kids love it when the character becomes real and enters into their
world.
And when it's in their world, they can relate to it and play with it in a way that's fundamentally different from how they play with it on the screen.
So changes that children make in the real
world
need to translate to the virtual
world.
So here, Nathan has changed the letter A to the number 2. You can imagine maybe these symbols give the characters special powers when it goes into the virtual
world.
So they are now sending the character back into that
world.
The other thing that I have realized, that the woman is the most strong person all over the
world.
There's a
world
of beauty and efficiency to explore here using nature as a design tool.
So I went to Louisburg, North Carolina, southeast of the United States, and I entered the
world
of whistling.
And I hope you'll come with me on my basic premise that words matter, that they shape the way we understand ourselves, the way we interpret the
world
and the way we treat others.
And that the highest human calling is to look for this light, to point at it when we see it, to gather it up, and in so doing, to repair the
world.
Rachel Naomi Remen says this is an important and empowering story for our time, because this story insists that each and every one of us, frail and flawed as we may be, inadequate as we may feel, has exactly what's needed to help repair the part of the
world
that we can see and touch.
Stories like this, signs like this, are practical tools in a
world
longing to bring compassion to abundant images of suffering that can otherwise overwhelm us.
No scientists dispute this curve, but laboratories all over the
world
are trying to figure out why it works this way.
So we've been studying the babies using a technique that we're using all over the
world
and the sounds of all languages.
Well, babies all over the
world
are what I like to describe as "citizens of the world."
So the question arises: When do those citizens of the
world
turn into the language-bound listeners that we are?
So babies absorb the statistics of the language and it changes their brains; it changes them from the citizens of the
world
to the culture-bound listeners that we are.
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