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The site shows example sentences for English words. How the word or phrase could be used in a sentence?
" ... 1. Don't drive with your pet in the front seat. In the event of a collision, a dog/cat can be thrown from the seat into the windshield, even if restrained. Unless the passenger side airbag is disengaged, the airbag deployment can be dangerous to a small pet. ... "
" ... At 40 mph the test showed nominal intrusion into the passenger compartment, but at 50 mph the damage was much more severe, wrecking the driver’s-side door opening, dashboard and foot area. Increasing the speed to 56 mph caused even greater damage to both the vehicle and the driver, with the crash test dummy’s sensors indicating severe neck and lower leg injuries. At the two higher speeds, the upward movement of CR-V’s steering column caused the dummy’s head to go through the deployed airbag and smash against the wheel. Sensors indicated a high risk of fractures to the face and even severe brain injury. ... "
" ... During assessments at both 50 and 56 mph impact speeds, the steering wheel's upward movement caused the dummy's head to go through the deployed airbag, the report stated. As a result, the face smashed into the steering wheel, indicating a high risk of facial fractures and severe brain injury. ... "
" ... The GV80 comes with 10 airbags, including a front-center airbag, along with vehicle stability management system, electronic stability control with traction control system, anti-lock braking, brake assist, blind-spot collision avoidance assist with rear cross-traffic collision-avoidance assist, lane departure warning with lane-keeping assist and lane-following assist, forward collision-avoidance assist with pedestrian detection, lane-change oncoming, junction-turning, junction-crossing, lane-change side and evasive steering torque assist, driver attention warning, safe exit assist with power child lock, and more. ... "
" ... These numbers sound fantastic at first, but careful study of the vocabulary reveals a problem. The NHTSA statistic is about “crashes” while Tesla speaks of “accidents.” Telsa has declined to reveal what it means by “accident” and what the difference is. NHTSA is counting crashes reported to the police. It is suspected Tesla might be listing crashes with an airbag deployment, which would get reported back to Tesla. It is not known if Teslas report smaller dings back to HQ. Without a way to figure out what Tesla means by an accident, one can’t compare the numbers, and Tesla should not imply you can. It has declined to comment on this issue. ... "