Insulate in a sentence as a verb

The higher a pad's R-value, the better you can expect it to insulate you from cold surfaces.

It all sounds like work, but mainly serves to insulate them from the harsh reality that nobody wants their product.

Mexico earn a sizable fraction of GDP from tourism, they'll do all the can to insulate tourists from the violence.

Eventually they realized that helium is injected on a outer ring of injectors to insulate the bell.

To insulate those sellers against Bitcoin fluctuations, the eBay-like drug site also offers a hedging service.

One warning with this kind of behavior is that it doesn't actually insulate you from the insanity of the environment.

Things such as moving heat from the motor into the battery-pack and, when it detects cold temperatures, closing shutters at the front of the car to insulate it.

Ostensibly because of a libertarian outlook, but I can't help but notice that it allows them to 1. milk the fad while it's booming and 2. better insulate themselves from lawsuits.

Any solution to copyright woes that involves attempting to stop the copying of bits will fail, it's like trying to insulate current by attempting to dry water.

We imagine complex and esoteric threats to problems we might someday have - we architect futuristic protocols to insulate against those threats.

The absolutely deplorable level of "oversight" performed by Congress is a direct function of the degree to which they've been able to insulate themselves from the electorate.

If they were selling trendy iPhone cases and had bitten off more orders than they could presently chew, then an X% rolling reserve for Y days would likely be sufficient to insulate against the risk of some orders not shipping.

It may be the circles I run in but the people I know who homeschool do so for the 'There is No Speed Limit' effect rather than to indoctrinate their kids with some religious belief or insulate them from ideas that conflict with such religious indoctrination.

And ridiculous exaggerations such as yours allow you to more fully insulate yourself from facts: because you're under attack and your freedom is at risk, you have to protect yourself from these terrible people, and therefore, their beliefs.>So why don't people "believe" in climate change?

This will let you qualify for owner-occupied rates on the mortgage and insurance, likely insulate you from a condo agreement which would forbid renting, and means that you're the primary party who'd suffer from guest misbehavior, which strikes me as socially optimal.

Insulate definitions

verb

protect from heat, cold, or noise by surrounding with insulating material; "We had his bedroom insulated before winter came"

verb

place or set apart; "They isolated the political prisoners from the other inmates"

See also: isolate