Year
in sentence
18136 examples of Year in a sentence
Over the course of this
year
that we spent flying back and forth, we realized we had fallen in love with the place.
So we took this kind of nebulous idea and have worked really closely with Dr. Zullinger for the past
year
on writing this as a one-year curriculum offered at the high school level to the junior class.
So the first project, which will be built next summer, is an open-air farmers' market downtown, followed by bus shelters for the school bus system in the second
year
and home improvements for the elderly in the third
year.
It's one project per year, and it makes the youth the biggest asset and the biggest untapped resource in imagining a new future.
The highest level of deaths on the battlefield was recorded between 1998 and 2001, with about 80,000 soldiers, policemen and rebels killed every
year.
1877 is also the
year
we found a way to get around the Fort Laramie Treaties.
This is the
year
of the Wounded Knee Massacre.
Every
year
when it comes to the cotton harvest, the government shuts down the schools, puts the kids in buses, buses them to the cotton fields to spend three weeks harvesting the cotton.
Green School is going into its third
year
with 160 children.
They fly 65,000 kilometers in less than a
year.
And its culminating
year
that's going to be launched in October.
And I know that kids get concussed every
year.
In fact, more than four million people sustain a concussion every year, and these data are just among kids under 14 who were seen in emergency rooms.
We are missing the story of Nehia, a Palestinian woman in Gaza who, the minute there was a cease-fire in the last
year'
s war, she left out of home, collected all the flour and baked as much bread for every neighbor to have, in case there is no cease-fire the day after.
Did you know that one
year
of the world's military spending equals 700 years of the U.N. budget and equals 2,928 years of the U.N. budget allocated for women?
After a year, you can't get insurance on everything you have in it, only on 70 percent.
I have a little acorn here that I picked up while I was walking on the path earlier this
year.
There was an estimation, a conservative estimation, a couple of years ago that the U.S. economy benefited by 57 billion dollars per
year.
And so I looked up what the economy was paying for the war in Iraq in the same
year.
You're eating at least 500 grams per
year.
It's being produced in large amounts, 150 to 180 metric tons per
year
in the Canary Islands in Peru, and it's big business.
In the developed world it's on average 80 kilograms per person per year, which goes up to 120 in the United States and a bit lower in some other countries, but on average 80 kilograms per person per
year.
It's 25 kilograms per person per
year.
And there's about 6,000 people last
year
that walked on a landmine, but worldwide last year, almost 1.9 million died from tuberculosis as a first cause of infection.
Knowing that a missed patient by microscopy infects up to 15 people, healthy people, per year, you can be sure that we have saved lots of lives.
It turned out that the clothes I was sorting though at these thrift stores represented only a small fraction of the total amount of garments that we dispose of each
year.
In the US, only 15 percent of the total textile and garment waste that's generated each
year
ends up being donated or recycled in some way, which means that the other 85 percent of textile and garment waste end up in landfills every
year.
This means that almost 13 million tons of clothing and textile waste end up in landfills every
year
in just the United States alone.
The unfortunate reality is, not only do we waste a lot of the things we do consume, but we also use a lot to produce the clothes that we buy each
year.
On average, a household's purchase of clothing per
year
requires 1,000 bathtubs of water to produce.
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