Sentences with phrase «to exist as someone know something»

Before the internet existed as we know it today, deaf people didn't have an easy way to communicate long distance.
Before computers existed as we know them, data was processed by women, often black women.
Humanity would not exist as we know it if humans had not released CO2.
Not to mention — this country would not exist as we know it if our forefathers just «tried to get along» with their neigbhors.
Sadly, the concept of «Irony» doesn't really exist as we know it in the Japanese language).
The Mini brand, of course, hasn't always existed as we know it today — a subsidiary of BMW.
But even if the company were to cease to exist as we know it today, it wouldn't have to be the end for Nintendo.
And so had it not been for the relationship between our planets and debris belts, Earth would probably not exist as we know it.
The CBA's Nigel Lithman QC told BBC Radio 4's Today programmes: «If these cuts are not addressed, then the British justice system, which is held in such high esteem around the world, will cease to exist as we know it and the British public can no longer expect true justice to be delivered.
Can Carrie defeat Goldigore in time or will Christmas cease to exist as we know it?
When the plan was unveiled, he said he became more concerned that if expansion continues at the current pace, L.A. Unified would cease to exist as we know it.
«It will not exist as we know it,» Okamoto said.
«Without the Suprematist Composition paintings, the art being made today would not exist as we know it
Douglas Inkley, NWF Senior Science Advisor and senior author of a report to The Wildlife Society, notes, «We face the prospect that the world of wildlife that we now know — and many of the places we have invested decades of work in conserving as refuges and habitats for wildlife — will cease to exist as we know them, unless we change this forecast.»
Douglas Inkley, National Wildlife Federation senior science advisor, notes, «We face the prospect that the world of wildlife that we now know — and many of the places we have invested decades of work in conserving as refuges and habitats for wildlife — will cease to exist as we know them, unless we change this forecast.»
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