Sentences with phrase «tiny changes in a person»

Not exact matches

For your first tests, look for the big things that everyone will see: don't worry about changing a few words in a paragraph somewhere on one page which might be only seen by a tiny portion of people.
These figures demonstrate the relatively tiny number of people who actively change election results in the UK.
People are keenly sensitive to variations in facial skin tone, changes in pupil dilation, tiny head motions, even subtle delays in response, and perhaps to other cues not yet identified.
Any action that you take in China, however tiny, it will affect 1.3 billion people,» said Xuedu Lu, adviser on climate change at the Asian Development Bank (ADB).
A new «motion microscope» reveals tiny changes in objects — and people — that appear to be stock - still
9:12 - Robert Pacifici of CHDI: one tiny change, the HD mutation, causes lots of changes in the biology of people who carry it
In the movie, a technological solution to climate change shrinks people so they can live in tiny but lavish communities that consume far fewer resources than human - sized oneIn the movie, a technological solution to climate change shrinks people so they can live in tiny but lavish communities that consume far fewer resources than human - sized onein tiny but lavish communities that consume far fewer resources than human - sized ones.
They are the same exact people with one tiny thing changed in their path, and it caused things to naturally fall in another direction.»
«We saw some really crude scenes, people hitting dogs, people living on top of garbage,» said Contadini, «but the change had to be made in tiny ways — improving their lives so that the people will want to improve their own surroundings.»
Half a million dollars put forth by over 13,000 people is not exactly chump change, yet seemingly this tiny development team has managed to spend the lot before the company finally gave in.
I've always known that life involves thousands of daily choices, most tiny, some life changing, and many made in a thoughtless robotic way as we respond to each day's events and the people around us.
Following this, the artist made a series of changing rooms based again on his Pico studio in Leo Castelli's galleries on Greene Street and 420 West Broadway in New York City from 1986 to 1987; a cardboard room filled with «three tiny blue paper cutout birds» 5 in an attic of the Fridericianum museum at documenta IX, in Kassel, Germany, in 1992; the transformative Red Room, from 2000 to 2007, an installation resembling a janitor's storeroom of everything - but - the - kitchen - sink, exclusively in orange - to - deep - red colors; and Transparent Room, 2010, a mysterious and immensely heavy translucent structure with clear items to house and clothe a person, including a sink, bed, shirts, and shoes.
That may be changing here in Canada, though: we visited Canada's first official tiny house festival over the weekend, along with hundreds of curious people who descended upon Lantier, a small municipality an hour and a half north of Montreal, Quebec, which recently approved a sustainable housing development for small homes under 1000 square feet in size, without basements.
Tiny homes and micro-apartments may have their detractors, but it's becoming clear that as society's socio - economic fabric is changing, more and more young people are seeing the disadvantages of being bogged down by debt, wasteful habits and a conventional home in the suburbs stuffed to the gills with «stuff».
122, Bob (Sphaerica): I think that I more or less agree with you, except that I haven't seen the tiniest bit of action taken on climate change in the U.S., so it's hard to worry much about people «demonizing CO2 ″ or «ANY of the efforts made by politicians» because there is nothing to see.
You get a measure of these changes from the old pictures in Ny - Alesund's tiny museum, dedicated to the miners who first created this little community and dug in blizzards, winters of total darkness and bitter cold until 1962, when explosions wrecked the mine, killing 22 people.
I think that I more or less agree with you, except that I haven't seen the tiniest bit of action taken on climate change in the U.S., so it's hard to worry much about people «demonizing CO2» or «ANY of the efforts made by politicians» because there is nothing to see.
Do you want to move into a tiny house because you want to change your career, hate your job, don't like where you live, are frustrated with corrupt corporations, or maybe just because you just want to spend more time with the people in your life?
I'm not able to solve the truly important issues, like how to end conflicts in the middle east or turn the corner on global warming or prevent starvation in Africa, but I can offer info that helps people make the change to tiny living, reduce their expenses, and spend time in ways they find most fulfilling.
The OTIS project is a natural off - shoot of the growing «tiny homes» movement; in an era of urgent concerns around climate change, many people feel helpless to have an impact.
Already a lot is starting to change (tiny house communities are popping up, people are getting variances to live in their tinys, some towns are doing away with their minimum square footage codes, and the IRC has even taken out a significant section of the national code mandating how small a room needs to be).
Whether you're interested in meeting like - minded people or making changes to the zoning regulations, joining a local Meetup is a great place to dip your feet in the Tiny House community pool!
How many people changed their opinions about evolution, in even the tiniest detail, when Piltdown Man was revealed to be a hoax?
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