Caution! The site can't guarantee, that text has age permission. The site is not recommended, if you are less than 18 years old.
The site shows example sentences for English words. How the word or phrase could be used in a sentence?
" ... Crowdsourcing can be a thrilling treasure hunt, but it creates a lot of noise, and sometimes the most valuable contributions get drowned out by the mob. As managers work with surveys and crowdsourcing tools, they come to realize the benefits and drawbacks of each approach. Technology has a tendency to be alienating, so many are looking for innovative ways to leverage it that are more relevant, harder to ignore and easier to target and sustain when engaging employees. ... "
" ... Freud had been blending and fading his face into the background of self-portraits using a variety techniques dating back to the 1950s. His head and bust are relegated to a detail, floating in the upper left corner and drowned in plant leaves in Interior with Plant, Reflection Listening (1967-1968). It’s more an interior painting than a self-portrait. Freud described his focus on plants in about 100 rarely displayed paintings as a “really biological feeling of things growing and fading.” ... "
" ... In each instance, it seemed like the problem was elegantly solved. However, the airline soon got complaints from passengers that the cabin was too quiet, resulting in them hearing unwanted sounds that were previously drowned out. The parents who used to pick up their kids on time now also started coming late as paying the fine removed the guilt and, in fact, gave them implicit permission to do so. The photo of the celebrity’s house gained more attention than ever because of the lawsuit, ensuring more people heard about the house than otherwise would have been the case. ... "
" ... “Every individual woman’s voice is drowned out by the voices of at least three, four or five men. The women who are given a platform in the Covid-19 story are rarely portrayed as authoritative experts or as empowered individuals, but more frequently as sources of personal opinion or as victims/people affected by the disease,” writes Luba Kassova, lead author of “The Missing Perspectives of Women In Covid-19 News.” ... "
" ... • Pleasers: Pleasers are people who find it very hard to say anything other than yes that obligations pile up and the internal voice pleading them to say “no” gets drowned out. By trying to please everyone they end up resentful of their to-do list and not focussing on what matters. Combatting the instinct people pleasing response start by reviewing what you’ve got in your calendar and the next time someone asks something of you, tell them you’ll get back to them later. It will buy you time to think about whether you truly want to say yes and, if not, to muster up the confidence to decline with more grace, less guilt. ... "