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The site shows example sentences for English words. How the word or phrase could be used in a sentence?
" ... By creating standards about how we describe the attributes of food—how and where it was grown, cooked, or processed, to how it can or should be consumed—in this way, we’ll be able to digitize food. Why does that matter? The Internet of Food will define the “lingua franca” enabling ag and food to be more traceable, transparent and trustworthy, empowering all of us with more precise and personalized food, diet, and health choices. From precision agriculture to precision health, we can start to build and connect the knowledge bases that, once we have in place, permit us to apply all kinds of machine learning and artificial intelligence to food, agriculture, and health: From predicting optimal crops to plant, and most appropriate cultivation techniques, to suggesting foods for consumers that increase health and delight while meeting their personal ethical and religious standards. ... "
" ... Data is inseparable from the future of work as more organizations embrace data to make decisions, track progress against goals and innovate their products and offerings. But to generate data insights that are truly valuable, people need to become fluent in data—to understand the data they see and participate in conversations where data is the lingua franca. Just as a professional who takes a job abroad needs to immerse herself in the native tongue, businesses who value data literacy need ways to immerse their people in the language of data. ... "
" ... For all its safety, Java has never been revered for its performance. But as its importance as a lingua franca has grown, so too has the need for speed. Twitter’s VM team, for example, has spent considerable time tweaking its Java-based code to run faster in the cloud—and is thrilled with the savings GraalVM enables. ... "
" ... There are hotels that have extraordinary locations, and then there is the Villa Principe de Leopoldo. This small luxury hotel is set on a hilltop, the Collina d’Oro or Little Hill of Gold, above the Swiss city of Lugano, in the canton of Ticino, where Italian is the lingua franca. It's also a hotel where it helps to have your own little hill of gold to take care of the bill. The clientele give fresh meaning to the term “well-heeled,” and while you likely won’t recognize anyone, they carry themselves with the assurance of guests who are quite at home here. ... "
" ... “Um”s, “ah”s, “and”s, and “like”s are the lingua franca of teen speak, but they also create bridges — artificial bridges — between clauses and sentences. So do “which”s, “therefore”s, “wells”s, “so”s, and “but”s, words which occur in the speech pattern of all demographic segments. When presenters arbitrarily populate their narratives with these artificial bridges, it produces a long, unbroken string of verbiage — a flatline pattern that makes it difficult for audiences to process and, worse, makes the speaker appear rushed and harried. ... "