Sentences with phrase «lot like human»

The very hyper movement is often accompanied by vocalizations that sound a lot like a human laugh.
Cat cold symptoms look a lot like human cold virus symptoms.
«Carbon release back then looked a lot like human fossil - fuel emissions today, so we might learn a lot about the future from changes in climate, plants, and animal communities 55.5 million years ago.»
Although the fruit fly bristle channel behaves a lot like human hair cells, not everyone is convinced.
Around seven weeks after birth, rats hit puberty and begin to act a lot like human teens.
To the pagan, idol worshiping sailors, Jonah's suggestion sounded a lot like human sacrifice to YHWH.
Mutual funds are a lot like humans: there's a lot of them and no two are alike.
The results: Dogs are a lot like humans.
If ants» vast array of abilities gives you pause, consider this: In many ways, they're the one animal outside the primate family that acts an awful lot like humans.
It's possible, therefore, that if engineers programmed bipedal robots to prioritize energy minimization, they'd end up with robots that walk and run a lot like humans do.
Dogs are a lot like us humans.
They play a lot like the Humans do in StarCraft.

Not exact matches

If your business model revolves more around river tours and large bodies of water, the mighty kraken, complete with lots of morbid jokes about your service to the creature, ferrying tourists to feed its unending hunger for human flesh, may do a better job of making your employees feel like they are part of something greater.
ut the company — whose machines are designed to supplement rather than supplant human security guards, and take care of monotonous tasks like scanning license plates in a parking lot — also has a closer view than most of the emerging and unpredictable world of robot - people interactions.
He admitted to Nelson that he didn't like a lot of the CGI human footage he'd seen in movies.
A lot of human nature will drive us to do the small things that make us look busy and feel like we've somehow contributing to the company.
Now for the inevitable caveat: there's still a lot of work to be done before this type of technique could be applied to larger animals like pigs, sheep, and (potentially), one day, humans.
True innovation, Peter Diamandis says, means accepting risk — and failure Peter Diamandis sees a future filled with brilliant innovation — with cars that drive themselves, software that can diagnose illnesses and humans populating new planets like subdivisions — but not without a lot of failure before we get there.
«For Treasuries, the share of transactions by primary dealers has dwindled by more than half to 4 percent since the end of 2008,» with electronic traders like Citadel expanding their role as dealers, and the complaints about the Treasury market sound a lot like the complaints in the equity markets about human market makers being replaced by algorithmic traders.
A lot of us are associated with groups like this, groups that, at least in our lifetime, aren't going to move away from traditional Christian teaching regarding human sexuality and marriage.
«I'm able to feel and like my own strength as a human being... I'm doing a lot less of this god - making of authority people.»
It sounds like the group doing this survey found a lot of volunteerism in young Jews and wants to find a way to co-op that volunteerism as a Jewish attribute instead of what it is, a human attribute, compassion.
From the vantage point of Humanity 3.5, the insistence on faster solutions to human limitations seems a lot like an inability to come to a mature reckoning with finitude and death.
But like with a lot of other supernatural religious as.sertions, human discoveries made the absudities of such claims apparant.
Jeremy and Glenn — I don't think that Brian would say he doesn't believe in absolute truth — I could be wrong but I think he would say something like... he doesn't believe that any human has (at least up to this point) been able to know absolute truth and that he believes there is a lot more of absolute truth to be known and that he doesn't believe that it is as narrow or «little» as so many try to make it.
I don't like how these books talk a lot about how the author went about discovering their «never - before - seen - by - anyone - else» insight into the human condition.
Seeking to understand the true teachings of Christ by reading the Bible is a lot like trying to understand the lives of pre-historic humans by reading their abandoned camp sites using the science of paleontology.
Amen.The thing is too many people from both sides try to disprove the other, Scientist (well some) will say there is no God Ala Hawkings here and then some believers will say that evolution or anything pertaining to science that they don't understand is false.I don't believe that science and God are mutually exclusive.For me personally science helps to explain a lot of things regarding creation, almost like giving me a window into how creative God is.I believe that God uses science to show us how awesome he is.To me science does not disprove Gods existence it actually reaffirms it on a human logic level, for me.You may disagree, that's fine, but this is just how I see it.
I told them that to me, this sounds a lot like the ancient Gnostic and Docetic heresies which taught that Jesus wasn't fully human.
«We're doing a lot to understand the components of fishes, like omega - 3 fatty acid, and their impact on human, environmental and animal health.
Some automation technologies — like robust human - machine interfaces (HMIs)-- offer a lot of advantages in packaging production.
well i get where you come from but i wouldnt call it less passionate but more practical, i just do nt like to be butthurt ^ ^ i am fan of arsenal to enjoy the time i spend on football but if it ends in failures i try to get over its and be constructive about it, and i am not a fan of people who cant control their anger pains and have to project their frustrations onto the people who could be held responsible but not in this scale, in my opinion of the society humans should be able to control their emotions a bit and never stoop as low as to be abusive and i do think that a lot of comments on justarsenal were abusive and sorry but i do nt think of it as passionate an extreme example would be ultras you could call them muuuuch more passionate than me but in my opinion they are just scum of football, but of course i do nt want to compare the JA - commenters to ultras xD i just tried to illustrate my opinion ^ ^
Wenger has proven to know more than any of us... he is human and makes mistakes but he is a lot better than people like you or me at understanding football.
(i know there are a lot of hardcore fans in the world, and let me tell you i love football and love arsenal even more but lets be honest, its just a game) than the rights of human called human rights if you havent heard of it and the freedom of people, then there is something fundamentally wrong with you and your belief, like with the most people on this world who go on babbling about conservative sh $ %
Like, look, most humans are doing a lot in their lives, and we're all just doing our best to not f*ck any of it up too badly.
I think most mom's will agree that breastfeeding doesn't make them feel very sexy, I mean some mothers have even said it feels a lot like being a cow, being constantly milked, essentially a food source for another, smaller, human being.
personal preferences, influenced by recent Western cultural values and social ideology, NOT studies of the natural biology and needs of the human infant have argued against babies arousing at night to feed a lot; and, indeed, the «sleep like a baby» or «shush the baby is sleeping» model, while some kind of western ideal is NOT what babies are designed to do nor experience, and it is definitely not in their own biological or emotional or social best interest.
She likes humans a lot better than cats, and is by far the most territorial of the four, chasing away feral cats, and winning several neighbourhood fights.
With all the safety concerns regarding soft bedding items in cribs, you have to sift through a lot of changing opinions, but most of the official guidelines pertain to infants under 12 months of age (from organizations like The U.S. Consumer Product Safety Commission, the American Academy of Pediatrics, and the National Institute of Child Health and Human Development).
«It's a tightknit community, but it's also a tight field, in that a lot of people are interested in the same overall questions» — for example, what are the evolutionary histories of humans, charismatic large animals like polar bears, and essential agricultural crops like maize.
«We don't know a lot about what human remains look like when a shark gets a hold of it,» said Allysha Winburn, a forensic anthropologist at the lab.
They found that one group of flies, with a mutation in the gene they would later call Wide Awake (or Wake for short), had trouble falling asleep at night, a malady that looked a lot like sleep - onset insomnia in humans.
Fossil bones and stone tools can tell us a lot about human evolution, but certain dynamic behaviours of our fossil ancestors — things like how they moved and how individuals interacted with one another — are incredibly difficult to deduce from these traditional forms of paleoanthropological data.
Human activities, like spreading cities, transport and construction, generate a lot of noise that travels faster in water than in air.
... The projects that are ongoing, like the Human Cancer Genome Project, [have] really opened up a lot of possibilities to understand the molecular basis of cancer.
«However, while these encouraging results in mice mean that the zinc finger looks like a good candidate to take forward to human trials, we still need to do a lot of work first to answer important questions around the safety of the intervention, whether repeat treatments are effective, whether there might be longer - term side effects, and whether we can extend and increase the benefits beyond six months.
In fact, the building process looks a lot like the construction of human - made buildings, minus the architectural plans.
POWER PUNCH Certain sugar molecules in human breast milk act a lot like superheroes, fostering beneficial microbes and banishing harmful ones.
«There is a still a lot of critical work that needs to be done in order to improve human rights on the ground in places like Sri Lanka, Egypt, Ukraine, Venezuela and overlooked areas of the globe such as Western Sahara and Dagestan.»
Most algorithms focus on the center of the face where humans use lots of different cues about a person, like the part of their hair.
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