Sentences with phrase «mean in the complicated world»

Not exact matches

«And the way the world is now means that people get information and have debates in far more complicated than ever before.
In a world where issues are ever more complicated, where ideas are ever more complex, and where politicians and teachers and preachers are less and less sure of themselves, we ask: what does it all mean?
My basic concern is to throw some light on what it means to live as a morally responsible citizen in this complicated world.
Her Sam is a complicated young lady, no means a perfect kid, but someone who is trying to discover herself in this grand world.
Through these complicated and resonant characters, as well as its deft examination of timely matters like trauma, abuse, and sexism in the world of stand - up comedy, All About Nina offers insight into what it means to be a talented, creative woman today.
The title Another Brooklyn might evoke contemporary real - estate pitches about up - and - coming urban environments (e.g., «Boise, Idaho, is poised to become another Brooklyn»), but in Woodson's novel set in the 1970s, «Brooklyn,» particularly its working - class Bushwick neighborhood, means something much different and more complicated: «I watched my brother watch the world, his sharp, too serious brow furrowing down in both angst and wonder.
This is also complicated by an increasing prevalence of winner - takes - all network effects in what's become a digital / software - driven world — to win the prize, and / or feed the «flywheel» (lower prices means greater volume means lower prices...), many companies are willing to accept short / medium term reduced profitability, or even losses, as they seek to capture much larger future profits.
Vieira's investigation of common materials in unlikely ways, in addition to her exploration of how complicated and semi-uniform structures can be built out of imprecise objects and gestures, serve as means by which to examine how we shape a coherent world out of disparate and uncoordinated parts.
McDonough, chair of the art history department at Binghamton University, asks whether the objects Gates makes «exist between anthropology and the avant - garde,» the meaning of «complicated equity,» the ways in which the viewer or audience experiences his work, and «How does the outside world shape a set of definitions for you and how do you negotiate them?»
In the complicated world of life insurance insurable interest and medical releases this means two hurdles cleared at once.
a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z