Year
in sentence
18136 examples of Year in a sentence
In the past year, the Kepler space observatory has found hundreds of planets just around nearby stars, and if you extrapolate that data, it looks like there could be half a trillion planets just in our own galaxy.
I was the type and the kind of religious where kids kill themselves every single
year
because they're terrified of coming out to our community as gay.
And you'll never guess who went together to the dance later that
year.
R-star is the rate at which stars have been born in the Milky Way Galaxy over the last few billion years, so it's a number that is stars per
year.
Ultimately, with the passage of years, the survivors will increase in size, from that of a dinner plate at
year
one to that of a dinner table, in the case of one species at least, the leatherback, a decade or so later.
Using a hypothetical nesting season, for females may nest multiple times in a single year, of 1,000 eggs, for sake of ease.
We first proved that all apartments would have sufficient daylight through the
year.
But most importantly, we could prove that through the geometry of the building design, the building itself would provide sufficient shading to the courtyards so that those would be usable throughout the entire
year.
On a rare occasion, like in the
year
2000, someone can win the popular vote but fail to gain 270 electoral votes.
But for the first time, at the beginning of this year, the Cyclone Pam, which destroyed Vanuatu, and in the process, the very edges of it actually touched our two southernmost islands, and all of Tuvalu was underwater when Hurricane Pam struck.
AT: Well, I've been telling this story every
year.
We are still trying to assess what that loss would be because we actually closed it off at the beginning of this year, and so we will see by the end of this
year
what it means in terms of the lost revenue.
In the
year
400 C.E. the Celts in Britain were ruled by Romans.
He job-hops quite a bit, goes on a sojourn to India for a year, and to top it off, he has dyslexia.
2012 was set to be a very international
year
for the UK; it was the
year
of the London Olympics.
Only around 4.5 percent of the literary works published each
year
in the UK are translations, and the figures are similar for much of the English-speaking world.
So, for example, although well over 100 books are translated from French and published in the UK each year, most of them will come from countries like France or Switzerland.
But Rafidah's kindness proved to be the pattern for that
year.
In that case, as I found so often during my
year
of reading the world, my not knowing and being open about my limitations had become a big opportunity.
The books I read that
year
opened my eyes to many things.
Little by little, that long list of countries that I'd started the
year
with, changed from a rather dry, academic register of place names into living, breathing entities.
But cumulatively, the stories I read that
year
made me more alive than ever before to the richness, diversity and complexity of our remarkable planet.
As a country, we are sending millions of women back to work every year, incredibly and kind of horrifically soon after they give birth.
Statistically speaking, the shorter a woman's leave after having a baby, the more likely she will be to suffer from postpartum mood disorders like depression and anxiety, and among many potential consequences of those disorders, suicide is the second most common cause of death in a woman's first
year
postpartum.
As a country, do we care about the millions of babies born every
year
to working mothers?
One of the reasons I know this is that babies whose mothers have 12 or more weeks at home with them are more likely to get their vaccinations and their well checks in their first year, so those babies are more protected from deadly and disabling diseases.
So for all of these reasons, all of these ecosystem services, economists estimate the value of the world's coral reefs in the hundreds of billions of dollars per
year.
Corals are born in a number of different ways, but most often by mass spawning: all of the individuals of a single species on one night a year, releasing all the eggs they've made that
year
into the water column, packaged into bundles with sperm cells.
Taking these photos under the microscope every
year
is one of my favorite and most magical moments of the
year.
In fact, it's so rare, that last
year
it was listed as a threatened species on the endangered species list.
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