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45 Sentences With "gets better at"

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

But, she gets better at it, and you will too.
Over time, the more you watch, Rheo gets better at identifying those you'd like.
For each problem Google solves this way, it gets better at solving other problems.
But that job is suddenly looking iffy as A.I. gets better at reading scans.
Over time, the chatbot learns which candidates work out, and gets better at sourcing them.
That should improve over time, however, as SpaceX gets better at refurbishing the cargo craft.
And when sites are attacked, Cloudflare gets better at what it does; its pattern recognition improves.
The cost drops over time as the factory produces more planes and gets better at making them.
As Ryan gets better at baseball, he proves to Chad that it isn't one or the other.
Until our society gets better at preventing violence, true crime stories will never be in short supply.
Google's digital butler, called "Assistant", gets better at performing tasks and answering questions the more it is used.
Twitter has been ramping up account take-downs as it gets better at spotting fake or abusive accounts.
So as machine learning gets better at understanding the brain, it may pick up new tricks and grow smarter.
Simply put, when a surgical team gets more practice fixing complicated heart defects, the team gets better at it.
As she gets better at her commands, your dog will earn achievements and badges, so you'll both get positive reinforcement.
As AI gets better at processing data, these could become truly useful assistants that perform ever more complex tasks for us.
But Tabakow believes that, as he gets better at the surgery, subsequent patients will recover even more function than Fidyka has.
As it's exposed to more DMs, in theory, it gets better at predicting which ones are harmful—and which ones are not.
As the car learns how to respond to those situations in a simulated environment, it gets better at reacting on the road.
The US military is an incredibly effective learning organization and every time it retakes the city of Fallujah, it gets better at it.
The company's speech recognition software becomes trained on the speaker's voice so it gets better at understanding their unique speech irregularities and pronunciations.
My honest feeling is that it's going to get a lot worse before it gets any better, if it gets better at all.
Unless the government gets better at helping the losers from free trade, anti-trade sentiment may one day rival the hysteria over foreign workers.
As AI gets better at extracting small tasks from our big projects, it could start tweeting us to-dos or hitting us up on Slack.
Most of the time, when a hitter suddenly gets better at making contact, it's because they've become better at recognizing pitches out of a pitcher's hand.
The system gets better at determining the right people to field questions based on its understanding of who has answered certain kinds of questions in the past.
Until our world gets better at robotics and the inevitable mechanical apocalypse dawns, you can check out the new season of Westworld starting April 22 on HBO.
The story gets better: at the time of the trial in July, the pill was nowhere to be found, and still hadn't been tested to determine its contents.
Unlike a traditional dashboard, the conversational interface gets better at its job of presenting relevant information the more it is used, and therefore becomes a more powerful decision support tool.
But each year it gets better at mitigating those issues and coming up with solutions, and it continues to prove it's as integral to the national discourse as it's ever been.
While it's only taking this mild approach for now, it wouldn't be a surprise if Twitter eventually takes more permanent actions as it gets better at picking up on this behavior.
Until the algorithm gets better at figuring out that there are two people in frame and understanding how to keep them both sharp, though, I'd recommend keeping it in regular mode for group shots.
The program is fed a massive data set — in this case celebrity photos — and then gets better at creating the desired result (in this case, realistic computer-generated faces) over a period of days or weeks.
More From PCmag Sync Your Philips Hue Lights With Movies, Game Ticketfly Goes Down After Hacker Steals Customer Info Alexa Gets Better at Identifying the Skill You Need Report: Fortnite Launching on Nintendo Switch The Trending section has also been mired in controversy.
He thinks the company can improve as AI gets better at understanding why the content in the video is bad, or at picking up signals about the behavior of the person posting the video (like if they'd been flagged for issues in the past).
Even if AI gets better at diagnosing diseases, people are still going to want a human doctor around to answer questions about the diagnosis and possible treatment options, to make sure the patient's overall treatment process stays on track, and provide a comforting bedside manner.
"People are so exhausted because they are always on," Steve Magness, co-author of "Peak Performance, " tells CNBC Make It. The problem is, no one gets better at their job just by pushing harder and harder, as New York magazine points out in an interview with Magness and his co-author, Brad Stulberg.
Meantime, I hope its humans + robot team gets better at picking trending stories for me, because right now they seem to rely on a feedback loop that overindexes whatever I clicked on last: I may have clicked on a story about "Saturday Night Live" last week, but I don't care about it today.
Pokédex: It is still inept at retaining electricity. When it is startled, it discharges power accidentally. It gets better at holding power as it grows older. The electricity that they do manage to keep stored is limited by their small electrical pouches in their cheeks.
Music games such as Sound Shapes use adaptive music as the goal of the game. As the player gets better at the game (and collects more 'coins'), the soundtrack (which is entirely composed of the melodies and beats created by these 'coins') intensifies as a sign that they're doing well.
Slowly she gets better at her work and begins to win some respect from Tony and his family, to which sympathy is added when they learn that she has a son she wants to regain. She gets involved in community activities and during rehearsals for a children's play she and Tony have an enjoyable tumble backstage. A day is set and on the morning of the wedding she is overjoyed to find that her father-in-law has brought Yohan, who thinks he would now prefer to live with Angèle and Tony.
Aristotle says we can dismiss the question of whether we live for pleasure or choose pleasure for the sake of living, for the two activities seem incapable of being separated.Book X.4.1175a10-20. Different activities in life, the different sense perceptions, thinking, contemplating, bring different pleasures, and these pleasures make the activities grow, for example a flute player gets better at it as they also get more pleasure from it. But these pleasures and their associated activities also impede with each other just as a flute player cannot participate in an argument while playing.
After watching them, he gets better at teaching and Mr. Burns sells Homer to Bourbon. Homer meets Neil deGrasse Tyson, Ken Jennings, Suze Orman, and Robert McKee, and sees them being introduced to a group of young female "students" who are actually life-like humanoid robots that will all get into Yale and earn "financial aid" that gets funneled directly to Bourbon. Six months later, Homer ruins Bourbon's integration of the robots at Yale University with a microaggression that makes them all explode. In the final scene, the teachers then start teaching Lisa, Marge, and Bart at the Simpson residence.
In 1986 she made her debut with the Opera Company of Philadelphia as Amelia in Verdi's Un ballo in maschera."VERDI'S 'UN BALLO' WITH 3 NEW SINGERS", The Philadelphia Inquirer, April 19, 1986 In 1987 Williams was a soloist in Gustav Mahler's Symphony No. 8 with the Chicago Symphony Orchestra and conductor James Levine."LEVINE'S MAHLER GETS BETTER AT END", John von Rhein, The Chicago Tribune, July 12, 1987 That same year she was the soprano soloist in Leoš Janáček's Amarus and in works by Giuseppe Verdi with the Collegiate Chorale and conductor Robert Bass at Carnegie Hall. She sang under Bass again at Carnegie Hall in 1989 as Maria in the New York premiere of Richard Strauss' Friedenstag.
Patients who fail treatment must be distinguished from patients who relapse. Patients who responded to treatment and appeared to be cured after completing a course of TB treatment are not classed as treatment failures, but as relapses and are discussed in a separate section below. Patients are said to have failed treatment if they # fail to respond to treatment (cough and sputum production persisting throughout the whole of treatment), or # only experience a transient response to treatment (the patient gets better at first, but then get worse again, all the while on treatment). It is very uncommon for patients not to respond to TB treatment at all (even transiently), because this implies resistance at base-line to all of the drugs in the regimen.

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