Deliver in a sentence as a verb

He's not going to deliver a result that you like.

If youre using an app to deliver content, youre doing it wrong.

Long hours obviously don't make sense if they're making you too tired to deliver results.

Many of them probably had high hopes that C++ templates would deliver on the same vision by then.

There can surely only be one perfect size to deliver an iPad experience???

I get that's expensive to deliver all those bytes to my home, but that's what precisely what I'm paying for.

We start with a hard, fuzzy problem and then add to it the pressure to deliver only feel-good solutions.

Most of the deadweight is outside Engineering teams because its hard to ******** when you have to deliver a product.

Verizon charges us for delivering the content we request.

Sadly, if you want thoughtful consideration of complex issues, he'll stand in the way of whoever would deliver.---------------There, how was that?

It is Verizon's customers who are pulling that traffic from NetFlix -- and they are paying Verizon to deliver it!!

Their banks will hear "Internet merchant did not deliver as promised" and sustain the chargeback automatically.

I don't know if its true, but I'm told you basically get fired at Facebook in the first year if you don't know how to deliver something of tangible value within that time.

Inventing a new method to deliver a new output can be creative, even inventive, including the choices of inputs needed and outputs returned.

From there, it's Hachette's responsibility to deliver the orders to an Amazon distribution center.

As I learned more about the company and its vision and spoke with Mark, the partnership not only made sense, but became the clear and obvious path to delivering virtual reality to everyone.

This includes new ways to write, understand, and collaborate on code, and the next generation of tools and infrastructure for delivering software continuously and reliably.

Even in my wildest dreams, I never imagined we’d come so far so fast.\nI’m proud to be a member of this community — thank you all for carrying virtual reality and gaming forward and trusting in us to deliver.

His first reaction was to block it via the firewall, but then he was smart enough to see it as an opportunity to invest in a technology that had actually been proven to deliver value by people within his own company.

After some prototyping, I decided to use a 2D camera and deliver the software as an app because I thought wide distribution and ease of use was more important than the fidelity and correctness of the data - ie, the "worse is better" approach.

Nothing that Watson learned from the Urban Dictionary could possibly be any dirtier than what I hear from enterprise people all the time:"We use our deep subject matter expertise to deliver value through actionable advice that enables our clients to harness the power of best practices in order to shift their paradigms and achieve 10X deltas against competitive industry metrics.

Deliver definitions

verb

deliver (a speech, oration, or idea); "The commencement speaker presented a forceful speech that impressed the students"

See also: present

verb

bring to a destination, make a delivery; "our local super market delivers"

verb

to surrender someone or something to another; "the guard delivered the criminal to the police"; "render up the prisoners"; "render the town to the enemy"; "fork over the money"

See also: render

verb

free from harm or evil

See also: rescue

verb

hand over to the authorities of another country; "They extradited the fugitive to his native country so he could be tried there"

See also: extradite deport

verb

pass down; "render a verdict"; "deliver a judgment"

See also: render return

verb

utter (an exclamation, noise, etc.); "The students delivered a cry of joy"

verb

save from sins

See also: redeem save

verb

carry out or perform; "deliver an attack", "deliver a blow"; "The boxer drove home a solid left"

verb

relinquish possession or control over; "The squatters had to surrender the building after the police moved in"

See also: surrender cede

verb

throw or hurl from the mound to the batter, as in baseball; "The pitcher delivered the ball"

See also: pitch

verb

cause to be born; "My wife had twins yesterday!"

See also: bear birth have