How to Use large language model in a Sentence
large language model
noun-
Why write this column, if a large language model can do it?
—Louisa Thomas, New Yorker, 26 Apr. 2026
-
The benchmark does not ask the large language model what the words mean.
—Rutvik Desai, The Conversation, 26 Feb. 2025
-
There was no way that a large language model could have seen them before.
—Vauhini Vara, New Yorker, 20 Dec. 2025
-
Ankar wants to use large language models to streamline that process.
—Jeremy Kahn, Fortune, 17 Dec. 2025
-
That is the foundation of how large language models are built.
—Byjennifer C. Wolfe, Forbes.com, 2 July 2026
-
Work with large language models also commences at this stage.
—Joe McKendrick, Forbes, 24 Dec. 2024
-
Much of the progress to date has been made on the back of large language models that benefit from scale.
—Paulo Carvão, Forbes.com, 21 Aug. 2025
-
The large language models are there — but the business models aren’t.
—Brian Merchant, Los Angeles Times, 14 Dec. 2023
-
To put guardrails around chatbots and other large language models.
—Fortune Editors, Fortune, 26 Sep. 2023
-
But a large language model does not lend itself to clean unit measurement.
—James Broughel, Forbes.com, 6 June 2026
-
Yet this is what large language models (LLMs) do.
—Bruce Schneier, IEEE Spectrum, 21 Jan. 2026
-
The chips will not be used for training giant large language models, Song said.
—Katie Tarasov,jonathan Vanian, CNBC, 11 Mar. 2026
-
None of this implies that large language models should be rejected.
—Walter Quattrociocchi, Scientific American, 18 Feb. 2026
-
Today’s large language models can write sonnets and debug code.
—Nicole Fraenkel, Fortune, 6 Mar. 2026
-
Today’s large language models have no such linkage built into them by people.
—Robert Wright, Fortune, 24 June 2026
-
Such errors are endemic to the current crop of large language models.
—Dhruv Khullar, New Yorker, 22 Sep. 2025
-
What Pavlick means, on the most basic level, is that large language models are black boxes.
—Gideon Lewis-Kraus, New Yorker, 9 Feb. 2026
-
Over the past few years, large language models have brought surprises, and some of them are concerning.
—Robert Wright, Fortune, 24 June 2026
-
So far, with large language models, nearly everyone is saying yes too.
—Jonathan L. Zittrain, The Atlantic, 21 May 2025
-
Google inked a $60 million deal to use the platform’s content to train large language models.
—Reed Albergotti, semafor.com, 24 Oct. 2025
-
Users only need to pay for the cost of running the underlying large language models.
—CNBC, 11 Mar. 2026
-
But now, a large language model can read and summarize thousands of books during a single lunch break.
—Steve Nadis, Wired News, 1 June 2025
-
This explains several of the ways in which large language models can be so frustrating.
—Kelsey Piper, Vox, 20 Sep. 2024
-
These large language models also can hallucinate, or make things up.
—Idaho Statesman, 13 Oct. 2025
-
But not nearly as many understand how the large language models used by AI work.
—Eric Bangeman, Ars Technica, 25 Dec. 2023
-
Because of that, large language models end up trained on all the bias baked into standardized human texts and ideas.
—Laura Aull, The Conversation, 20 Mar. 2026
-
Amazon is lacking the data and chips needed to run the large language model for its new voice assistant.
—Morgan Haefner, Quartz, 17 June 2024
-
These large language models are perceived as code generators that can do anything.
—Tobias Burns, CNBC, 29 June 2026
-
What’s different now is that today’s voice AI is built on large language models.
—Gelila, Forbes.com, 16 Sep. 2025
-
As more than one executive tells me, large language models like DeepSeek are no longer enough.
—Evelyn Cheng, CNBC, 30 Mar. 2026
Some of these examples are programmatically compiled from various online sources to illustrate current usage of the word 'large language model.' Any opinions expressed in the examples do not represent those of Merriam-Webster or its editors. Send us feedback about these examples.
Last Updated:
