Sentences with phrase «which wild ideas»

Which wild ideas fire up your curiosity or, better yet, get a thumbs - up from your students?

Not exact matches

This wild confusion is present in the minds of a small but financially powerful minority, though a much larger part of the population has a tendency to hold rigid ideas about the kinds of economic institutions in other nations with which we should cooperate.
Aaron comes up with the golden calf idea and the community goes wild, which proves that just because you are in a group of people gathered together to worship God doesn't mean you won't end up dancing around with something silly.
Sprinkling sugar and cinnamon on pumpkin which is part of a savory sheet pan dinner was already a wild idea for me and I just could not bring myself to use so much.
The idea of «reversal drives,» which would overwrite mutated genes with the original sequence, often arises as a promising solution to gene drives gone wild.
The idea has been to stop the wild virus circulating worldwide, at which point everyone in the world stops using the vaccine at the same time.
The sisters together are able to push Adam around rather like the females in a pride of lions, an idea reinforced by Gerd Zeiss's wild hair designs which incorporated actual animal furs.
Jerry voices his wild theories in a self - published newsletter (which lends the film its title), so when some government agents led by the mysterious Dr. Jonas (an underused Patrick Stewart) start chasing him, Jerry, his «friend» Alice Sutton (Roberts, well - cast), and the audience are led to believe that one of his wild ideas is indeed true.
It gives the idea of consumerism run wild the short shrift that it deserves (and the cynicism that an intervening quarter - century demands), touching on the original's explanation of the zombies» affinity for the shopping mall and the human heroes» delight at their newfound material wealth before becoming a bracing action film that, like Marcus Nispel's reworking of The Texas Chainsaw Massacre (the source of which didn't need updating as much as Dawn arguably did), is more firmly entrenched in the James Cameron Aliens tradition than the Seventies institution of disconcerting personal horror film.
«Education is fully populated with wild and crazy ideas, many of which don't work,» he says.
Customers come to us with their thoughts and ideas and MSO works with them to set boundaries within which they can then let their imaginations run wild.
- Kataoka believes the world of The Legend of Zelda: Breath of the Wild is the true protagonist of the game - at times, really beautiful and delicate, and other time's it's rough and ruthless - the natural beauty is one of the main appeals of the game - she wanted the music to not just reflect, but also enhance that appeal - she wanted the music to reflect the long History of Hyrule, but also the ordeals of the Link and Zelda of this particular entry - in order to express the idea of a world in ruin, yet so vibrant, she decided to use traditional instruments - these included the shinobue and the erhu, which are not commonly used in orchestras - these contrast the synthesizer sounds of the ancient civilization - the main theme includes chord progressions which are not really suited to classical music - Kataoka wanted reflect Link's 100 - year sleep in the main theme, which explains the rather strange break in the song - the break represents Link taking a «new breath», after 100 years in stasis - the break basically serves as the division between Zelda and the past, and Link and adventure in the present day - she usually does not pay much attention to such details, but had the opportunity to do so this time
- Aonuma and Miyamoto have played through BotW start to finish - the strangest thing Link can eat is «dubious food» which happens when you mess up cooking - «it's a secret» as to whether the Master Sword can break - Switch TV mode will have better resolution / sound than Wii U - Link can wear green, but it wasn't specified if this was his iconic green tunic - Link does no speak a full sentence - Link does not have a family - Breath of the Wild was the toughest Zelda game to create - companions outside of your horse include a wolf, but this was most likely referencing the wolf Link amiibo - the stamina meter can be upgraded - Link's last name is the same as Mario's according to Miyamoto, meaning it's Link Link - Link is not human - Breath of the Wild takes place after Ocarina of Time - Aonuma / Miyamoto are unsure what NX stood for, but they say it was probably for Nintendo X - you can eventually get a snowboard for a shield (this may be a joke)- you can not eat horses - the game does have big surprises - Miyamoto thinks that Pauline lives in New Donk City - Aonuma / Miyamoto say that Tingle is always happy and the devs love him - While there are multiple Links in games, it's always the same Mario in his adventures - the idea of Paper Zelda is discussed, and while the convo does seem playful, Aonuma says they're working on it.
Among an ever expanding (and as Karen Barad might say, «entangled») list, I am inspired by the complex and contradictory city I live in (the city of Chicago) and the incredible community of hard working, sincere, talented artists who I am surround by and have the privilege of working alongside and in collaboration with every day (too many and to diverse to name individually here) / / by mentors A. Laurie Palmer and Claire Pentecost and Anne Wilson and Ben Nicholson / / by Simon Starling and Andrea Zittel and Mark Dion and Sarah Sze and Phoebe Wasburn and Mierele Laderman Ukeles and Joseph Beuys and Eva Hesse and Hans Haacke and Robert Smithson / / by writers and philosophers Karen Barad and Jane Bennett and Rebecca Solnit and Italo Calvino and Steward Brand and the contributors to The Whole Earth Catalog (of which my father gave me his copies) and Ken Issacs and Carl Sagan and Neil deGrasse Tyson and William Cronon and Bruno Latour and Deluze and Guttari and Jack Burnham / / by ideas of radical intimacy and transformation and ephemerality and experimentation and growth and agency and mobility and nomadicism and balance and maintenance and survival and change and subjectivity and hylozoism and living structures / / by mycelium and soil and terracotta and honey and mead and wild yeast and beeswax and fat and felt and salt and sulfur and bismuth and meteorites and microbes and algae and oil and carbon and tar and water and lightening and electricity and oak and maple / / by exploration and navigation and «the Age of Wonder» and the Mir Space Station and the Deep Tunnel Project / / by Lake Michigan and the Chicago River and waterways and canals and oceans and puddles... to name a few.
In her «Charming the Wilds» solo exhibition at the AFA Gallery in Soho, New York, which will open on 14th June, this idea of «charm» will become truly apparent, casting a magic and beautiful side to the darkness.
We've also collected quite a few eminent person endorsements, which helps tell the world that this is not just a wild idea.
So you can blithely come out with a wild arsed idea without a grain physical evidence for its existence and a false claim that this represents ocean oscillations which you are able to substantiate.
Those of you who have not spent a couple of years living in the wilds of the Developing World — and this means not in a cushy hotel in the Capitals or an All - Inclusive walled Tourist Enclave — have no idea what is means to live without running water, without drinkable water, without sanitation (toilets, showers, bathtubs), without 24/7 electrical power which means no refrigeration, no safe food.
Expert, hardly, but you really need to get out more, expose yourself to ideas both strange and wild, see the common thread with which all of humanity weaves its myths.
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