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23 Sentences With "be conscious that"

How to use be conscious that in a sentence? Find typical usage patterns (collocations)/phrases/context for "be conscious that" and check conjugation/comparative form for "be conscious that". Mastering all the usages of "be conscious that" from sentence examples published by news publications.

But, be conscious that fame is not validation for your craft.
Organizers appeared to be conscious that the raid would attract a global audience.
"We must be conscious that at any moment we may be deceived", Waszczykowski wrote.
My biggest takeaway is that funders ought to be conscious that funding will have side effects.
"We must be conscious that they present severe injuries," Martinez told a small group of journalists.
You have to pick whatever the director asks you to play in the movie, and be conscious that your character is an important, clever piece, but it's surrounded by so many other pieces You have to be conscious that you can't tell the whole story just with your eyes.
He added that Italy "must be conscious that their future is not combatting the euro zone with some extreme right ideas."
Image: AMCReality: A common assumption about machine intelligence is that it'll be consciousthat is, it'll actually think the way humans do.
We have many housing policies in place that help homeowners, but we need to be conscious that our housing policies are also benefiting renters.
"You need to be conscious that there could be an unexpected explosion," said Klemetti, who is an associate professor in the Department of Geosciences at Denison University.
And this is not very simple because one must be conscious that this represents strong difficult reforms for the Greek economy, the Greek society and also the Greek authorities.
"We just want people to be conscious that this is a decision that needs to be made and not have it be one that's made for us by inattentiveness," says Dreier.
I figured nothing would come of it beyond a handful of laughs — but maybe, just maybe Kevin would finally be conscious that there was someone else hiding in between his playlists.
As the country wrestles with a policy approach to reducing gun violence, lawmakers should be conscious that the spectrum for solutions could be recalibrated to account for the views of everybody else instead of multiple gun owners.
"He talked about how many Wyoming folks take a live-and-let-live approach to life, but we need to be conscious that everyone may not react the same way to differing value and belief systems," D'Onofrio added.
"They need to be conscious that they are not becoming party to rights violations ... (and) ensure that the host government meets its obligations to respect, protect, and fulfill the economic and social rights of its people," she said.
Investors must, however, be conscious that even if the risks of unfavorable electoral results in Europe appear relatively low, the ensuing fallout of a break-up of the euro zone would eclipse that of Brexit or Donald Trump's presidential victory.
I was especially trying to be conscious that there's a whole weird phenomenon where lesbian sex is fetishized by straight men, and trying to present a [vision of] female sexuality that can deflect that by virtue of the narrative that we're telling.
Ambisonics treats directions where no speakers are placed with as much importance as speaker positions. It is undesirable for the listener to be conscious that the sound is coming from a discrete number of speakers. Some simple decoding equations are known to give good results for common speaker arrangements. But Ambisonic Speaker Decoders can use much more information about the position of speakers, including their exact position and distance from the listener.
It is widely regarded as unprofessional for a biologist to say something like "A wing is for flying," although that is their normal function. A biologist would be conscious that sometime in the remote past feathers on a small dinosaur had the function of retaining heat, and that later many wings were not used for flying (e.g. penguins, ostriches). So, the biologist would rather say that the wings on a bird or an insect usually had the function of aiding flight.
Although the idea expressed in cogito, ergo sum is widely attributed to Descartes, he was not the first to mention it. Plato spoke about the "knowledge of knowledge" (Greek: νόησις νοήσεως, nóesis noéseos) and Aristotle explains the idea in full length: > But if life itself is good and pleasant…and if one who sees is conscious > that he sees, one who hears that he hears, one who walks that he walks and > similarly for all the other human activities there is a faculty that is > conscious of their exercise, so that whenever we perceive, we are conscious > that we perceive, and whenever we think, we are conscious that we think, and > to be conscious that we are perceiving or thinking is to be conscious that > we exist... (Nicomachean Ethics, 1170a25 ff.) In the late sixth or early fifth century BC, Parmenides is quoted as saying "For to be aware and to be are the same" (B3). Augustine of Hippo in De Civitate Dei (book XI, 26) writes "If I am mistaken, I am" ("Si…fallor, sum"), and also anticipates modern refutations of the concept. Furthermore, in the Enchiridion (ch. 7, sec.
Power wheelchairs are indicated for most clients who can no longer ambulate, as they do not have enough upper extremity strength to propel a manual wheelchair independently. DMD affects many people in their adolescence, so it is crucial for rehab therapists to be conscious that significant development may occur during this time. Without proper seating and postural support throughout development, deformation may occur. This could then result in dysfunctional positioning. It is important for rehab therapists to re-evaluate the fit of an individual’s wheelchair as often as every year during adolescence.
When in this use, the participle corresponds to a particular tense and mood of a simple indicative of any tense, and, if accompanied by the particle ἄν, to potential optative or potential indicative. Verbs taking such a participial clause as an object complement are: i) Verbs of perceiving, knowing, discovering, remembering and so on such as: "see that", "hear that", "perceive, notice that", "come to know, perceive, realize that", "not to know", "find (on arrival) that", "find that", "catch, detect someone doing something" (passive: ), "learn, know that", "know that", "know (as a witness), or be conscious that", "understand that", "consider that" "remember that", "forget that". ii) Verbs of presentation, i.e. verbs meaning '"announce, show, prove"' such as: "report that", (ἀπο-, ἐπι-) "show, explain, point out that", "prove that". :: Plato, Apology 27c :: I assume that you agree, since you don’t give any reply.

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