Use in sentence of “genetic information”

How to use in-sentence of “genetic information”:

– RNA is the carrier of genetic information in certain viruses, especially the retroviruses like the HIV virus.

– Lederberg and Tatum showed that the bacterium “Escherichia coli” entered a sexual phase during which it could share genetic information through bacterial conjugation.

– Lederberg and his graduate student Norton Zinder went on to show in 1952 that bacteriophages could transfer genetic information between bacteria in “Salmonella”.

– The genetic information is in the DNA of the chromosomes.

– This is because a lot of molecular biology techniques rely on DNA sequencing, so whenever the results of an experiment are published, the genetic information of the subject used is also put on full display.

Use in sentence of genetic information
Use in sentence of genetic information

Example sentences of “genetic information”:

– Nucleic acids allow organisms to transfer genetic information from one generation to the next.

– All three Kornbergs have worked to understand how genetic information is used in cells.

– For many years, genetic information was thought to be in cell cell protein.

– Joshua Lederberg and his graduate student Norton Zinder showed in 1952 that bacteriophages could transfer genetic information between bacteria in “Salmonella”.

– Before mitosis, the cell creates an identical set of its own genetic information – this is called replication.

– In 1959, Roger Kornberg’s father, Arthur Kornberg, received the Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine for studies of how genetic information moves from one DNA molecule to another.

– In DNA replication DNA polymerase “reads” a piece of DNA that’s already there and uses it to make a new piece that is exactly the same as the old piece.The primary role of DNA polymerases is to accurately and efficiently replicate the genome in order to ensure the maintenance of the genetic information and its faithful transmission through generations.

– In this process the cell Transcription reads the genetic information of the translates it into a protein.

– She developed theories to explain the control of genetic information from one generation of maize plants to the next.

- Nucleic acids allow organisms to transfer genetic information from one generation to the next.

- All three Kornbergs have worked to understand how genetic information is used in cells.
- For many years, genetic information was thought to be in cell cell protein.

– The genetic information transferred is often beneficial to the recipient.

– However, in 1970 when Howard Temin and David Baltimore both independently discovered the enzyme responsible for reverse transcription, the possibility that genetic information could be passed on in this manner was finally accepted.

– Eukaryotes store their genetic information on chromosomes in the cell nucleus.

– RNA polymerase is the enzyme that copies genetic information from DNA to RNA for specific genes.

– The purpose of a vector which transfers genetic information to another cell is typically to isolate, multiply, or express the insert in the target cell.

– It overturned the central dogma of molecular biology because it showed that genetic information could traffic both ways between DNA and RNA.

– Tatum and his student Lederberg showed that “Escherichia coli” could share genetic information through recombination.

Example sentences of “foremost”

How to use in-sentence of “foremost”:

– He is widely called as one of New Jersey’s foremost trial lawyers and has been lead counsel in some of the most important trials in the state.

– He was the foremost geologist of his day, and an influence on the young Charles Darwin.

– Lingodbhava is a Shaiva sectarian icon where Shiva is depicted rising from the Lingam that narrates how Shiva is the foremost of the Trimurti; Brahma and Vishnu are depicted bowing to Lingodbhava Shiva in the centre.

– Sugar had been referred to as “Runyonesque” by Bob Costas, and “one of the foremost historians alive” by the “Boston Globe”.

– Five of the Guards regiments are “infantry”, which means that they are “foot soldiers” and are Foot Guards, and the senior two regiments are “cavalry” meaning they are first and foremost armoured soldiers who also have a ceremonial role “mounted” on horses for ceremonial duty.

– Liu disappeared from public life in 1968 and was called the “commander of China’s bourgeoisie headquarters”, China’s foremost “capitalist-roader”, and a traitor to the revolution.

Example sentences of foremost
Example sentences of foremost

Example sentences of “foremost”:

- He was one of the world's foremost exponents of the theory and practice of internationalism.

- She is the world's foremost expert on chimpanzees.

– He was one of the world’s foremost exponents of the theory and practice of internationalism.

– She is the world’s foremost expert on chimpanzees.

– His political instinct, his abundance of ideas and his forcible, mordant style would have given him a foremost position at any time and in any country; in Spain, and in his own period, they placed him beyond all rivalry.

– He was thought to be one of the foremost yoga teachers in the world.Aubrey, Allison.

– A good locksmith craftsman working in the field of locksmith must first and foremost have good operational instruments that are powerful enough to complete any job.

– This King Arthur shows greatness by making peace between the two foremost peoples in the England of his era.

– The Mark Twain Prize is America’s foremost award for humor.

– Paramathma is the first and foremost atman.

– The foremost center of worship of Khandoba in Maharashtra is in Jejuri.

– Many of the foremost works on Adams’ life are from the late 19th and early 20th centuries.

– From modest beginnings three decades ago, Yunus has, first and foremost through Grameen Bank, developed micro-credit into an ever more important instrument in the struggle against poverty.

Some example sentences of “provisions”

How to use in-sentence of “provisions”:

– From 1936 to 1949, this was a popular uprising against the anti-Catholic Mexican government of the time, set off specifically by the anti-clerical provisions of the Mexican Constitution of 1917.

– During his long reign, Henry’s kingdom would experience relative peace and prosperity until he began having trouble with his barons due to his high handed governing style, which compelled the Barons to impose the Provisions of Oxford limiting royal power in 1258.

– These provisions were based on the case of Titus Oates, whose lies under oath caused the execution of many innocent people.

– The ship broke up, destroying the provisions and coal.

– The war resulted in famine, Padraig Lenihan, Confederate Catholics at War p112, ‘As late as 1650, provisions were cheaper in Ireland than in England; the famine of 1651 onwards was a man made response to stubborn guerrilla warfare.

Some example sentences of provisions
Some example sentences of provisions

Example sentences of “provisions”:

- After Napoleon's defeat, Saxony had to cede large territory to Prussia under the provisions of the Congress of Vienna.

- In WMF's, two provisions would seem to apply to this situation.
- The provisions of Roerich’s concept are based on the idea that the primary duty of the state is to preserve the national culture.

– After Napoleon’s defeat, Saxony had to cede large territory to Prussia under the provisions of the Congress of Vienna.

– In WMF’s, two provisions would seem to apply to this situation.

– The provisions of Roerich’s concept are based on the idea that the primary duty of the state is to preserve the national culture.

– His plan was to go to Tahiti and perhaps on to the SpainSpanish colonies on the coast of Chile to buy provisions and bring them back to Sydney.

– It also sets out various provisions regarding the publication or broadcast of election advertising and election results.

– Bills that contain provisions significantly relating to taxation or public financepublic expenditure are introduced into the House of Commons in the UK; in Canada and Ireland, this is the law.

– The human rights organization EZLN, a revolutionary Mexican grass roots movement, is a strong opponent of NAFTA and points out how its provisions only make the economic situation worse for the poorest in Mexico and better for multi-national corporations.

– The Indian Independence Act was subsequently repealed in Article 395 of the Constitution of India and in Article 221 of the Constitution of Pakistan of 1956, “Article 221: The Government of India Act, 1935, and the Indian Independence Act, 1947, together with all enactments amending or supplementing those Acts, are hereby repealed: Provided that the repeal of the provisions of the Government of India Act, 1935, applicable for the purposes of Article 230 shall not take effect until the first day of April, 1957.” both constitutions being intended to bring about greater independence for the new states.

– Consequently, under the provisions of Title 43, U.S.Code, section 1458, the Department of the Interior assumed responsibility for the civil administration of the U.S.

– This template has provisions for four sections: General characteristics, performance, armament, and avionics.

More in-sentence examples of “provisions”:

- There have been criticisms against CBD that the Convention has been weakened in implementation due to the resistance of Western countries to the implementation of the pro-South provisions of the Convention.

- A primary motivation for this clause was to validate the equality provisions contained in the Civil Rights Act of 1866, which guaranteed that all people would have rights equal to those of all citizens.
- The provisions relating to Kansas Territory formed the last eighteen sections.

– There have been criticisms against CBD that the Convention has been weakened in implementation due to the resistance of Western countries to the implementation of the pro-South provisions of the Convention.

– A primary motivation for this clause was to validate the equality provisions contained in the Civil Rights Act of 1866, which guaranteed that all people would have rights equal to those of all citizens.

– The provisions relating to Kansas Territory formed the last eighteen sections.

– Under the incorporation doctrine, most provisions of the Bill of Rights now also apply to the state and local governments.

– These contracts were notorious for allowing the studios to dictate the public and private lives of the performers who signed them, and most did not have provisions to allow the performer to end the deal.

– Ukraine does not specify languages by name, but rather ratifies on behalf of “the languages of the following ethnic minorities of Ukraine”: July 2007, Ukraine’s entry on the states the following “Ukraine declares that the provisions of the Charter shall apply to the languages of the following ethnic minorities of Ukraine : Belarusian, Bulgarian, Gagauz, Greek, Jewish, Crimean Tatar, Moldavian, German, Polish, Russian, Romanian, Slovak and Hungarian”.

– The meetings produced a new Constitution that was the same as the 1891 draft, but with added provisions for responsible government.

– These are citations to the constitutional and statutory provisions that were the primary basis for the decision only.

– Research that consists of collecting and organizing material from existing sources within the provisions of this and other content policies is encouraged: this is “source-based research”, and it is fundamental to writing an encyclopedia.

– Despite provisions ins both traties for minority guarantees those of the Versailles-treaty were to be assureed by the League of Nations a new “jailhouse of nations”, similar to that of tsarist Russia, against whose repression the heroes of Congress-Poland had so valiantly struggled, was brought into existence.

– Ammunition, supplies, and provisions were unloaded from ships at the port, then moved to Allied forces.

– A partial repeal occurs when a specified part or provision of a previous act is repealed but other provisions remain in force.

– Agriculture and food production changed in recent times, with the government bringing in special provisions to increase productivity on the limited land available.

– Fuel and limited provisions are available at Cooinda and there is also a small airstrip for scenic flights.

– Under the provisions of the Antarctic Treaty System, to which New Zealand is a signatory, no nation may make efforts to enforce sovereignty or territorial claims over the Antarctic continent proper.

– Under the provisions of Qatar’s sponsorship law, sponsors have the unilateral power to cancel workers’ residency permits, deny workers’ ability to change employers, report a worker as “absconded” to police authorities, and deny permission to leave the country.

– The station is one of those which were classified as “Prime stations” because of their provisions for more services than other stations.

– Since neither side has conceded ground, India has proposed that the maritime boundary could be demarcated first, as per the provisions of Technical Aspects of Law of Sea.

– Controversially, the Canadian government became involved on its own accord in the referendum despite the provisions of the provincial “Referendum Act”, which tightly restricted all campaigning to the designated “Yes” and “No” committees with set budgets.

– The Constitution empowers the President to dissolve the National Assembly in his discretion if a situation has arisen in which the Government of the Federation cannot be carried out in accordance with the provisions of the Constitution and an appeal to the electorate is necessary.

– A competing theory, however, suggests that a later amendment conflicting with an already-ratified Corwin Amendment could either explicitly repeal the Corwin Amendment or be inferred to have partially or completely repealed any conflicting provisions of an already-adopted Corwin Amendment.

– There are articles on the forced repatriation of refugees, and provisions that they should not be harmed.

– This is probably because of the relatively complicated set of provisions provided by the sport’s law-making body, the IFAB for deciding if a player in an offside position is actually guilty of an offside offence by becoming involved in active play.

– Further, portions of some Congressional acts, such as the provisions for the effective dates of amendments to codified laws, are themselves not codified at all.

– All legal systems have provisions for making decisions in disputes.

– An army of 15,000 marched into Devon, attracting support in terms of provisions and recruits as they went.

– The provisions of the Calendar Act 1750, implemented in 1752, altered the official British dating method to the Gregorian calendar with the start of the year on January 1.

– China, while a civil law country, has followed much of the US Federal Rules of Evidence in their ” Uniform Provisions of Evidence”.

– The wording of the Eighth Amendment is almost the same as three of the provisions in the EnglandEnglish Bill of Rights of 1689.

– The Congress shall have power to enforce, by appropriate legislation, the provisions of this article.

– Richard Nixon was the first president to fill such a vacancy under the provisions of the Twenty-fifth Amendment when he appointed Gerald Ford.

– The center’s design included special provisions to address concerns regarding earthquakes and fires.

– Japan occupied nearly all the land of Josun dynasty which was not prepared for war and tried to supply military provisions through the sea route of Jeolla-do province.

– Lieutenant- General Jagjit Singh Aurora gives a solemn assurance that personnel who surrender will be treated with dignity and respect that soldiers are entitled to in accordance with the provisions of the Geneva Convention and guarantees the safety and well-being of all PAKISTAN military and para-military forces who surrender.

– The legislation set no guidelines or criteria for educational programs and had no provisions for enforcement.

– When the Monsopies begins, the provisions flow away in the mud.

– In February 2017, a bi-partisan group wrote a bill that would repeal the pass-through income exemption, the “most important provisions of Brownback’s overhaul”, and raise taxes to make up for the budget shortfall.

– The latest date of the vote is determined by the fixed-date provisions of the Canada Elections Act, which requires federal elections to be held on the third Monday in October in the fourth calendar year after the polling day of the previous election.

– There are special provisions for handling doublet earthquakes, the small number of large earthquakes where the main rupture is interrupted or delayed, resulting in two shocks of similar magnitude, usually within minutes to days of each other.

– Unlike special airport trains at other airports, they do not have special provisions for customers with luggage.

– The basic needs of the fort were met by a mixture of direct manufacturingproduction, purchase and requisition; in one letter, a request for money to buy 5,000 “modii” shows that the fort bought provisions for a considerable number of people.

– Wikimedia Commons does not, however, allow the upload and usage of non-free content under fair-use provisions of copyright law.

– Some degradation factors can be controlled by provisions in the ed packaging.

– This law and other “gozinesh” provisions require a “religious screening” for people who want to access employment, education, and a range of other areas.

– The council areas were created on 1 April 1996, under the provisions of the Local Government etc.

– They are the remnants of the estimated 200,000 Greeks who were permitted under the provisions of the Treaty of Lausanne to remain in Turkey following the Population exchange between Greece and Turkey1923 population exchange, which involved the forcible resettlement of approximately 1.5 million Greeks from Turks from all of Greece except for Western Thrace.

“bunk” some example sentences

How to use in-sentence of “bunk”:

– Scotty slept in a bunk in a little room near Jumbo’s head.

– Cells have a bunk bed, a toilet, and a sink.

– A bunk bed is a stack of two or more beds.

– Summer camps and winter cabins for children often have bunk beds.

– Army barracks sometimes have bunk beds for soldiers.

bunk some example sentences
bunk some example sentences

“politically” – some sentence examples

How to use in-sentence of “politically”:

+ Hinton Rowan Helper made use of the 1850 census results in his politically notorious book “The Impending Crisis of the South”.

+ His paternal ancestors were politically active and religious free thinkers.

+ It is politically and culturally rich.

+ Unknowingly, Kengo visited the residence of :en:Satsuo_YamamotoSatsuo Yamamoto, a master of left-wing movies and politically the enemy of the Toho Dispute, to sell fire extinguishers and returned his heels in a hurry.

+ Razvi was politically powerful and a close advisor of the Nizam, whom he encouraged to defy the infidel government, and blocked the invasion of Hyderabad into Republic of India.

+ Some of the new politically correct words are often criticized for being rather ridiculous.

+ The county seat is in the city of London, even though London is politically independent of the county.

politically - some sentence examples
politically – some sentence examples

Example sentences of “politically”:

+ Rome was politically powerful because Rome had the Pope, the person in control of the Roman Catholic Church.

+ After the death of her brother, she was a prominent philanthropist, but was not politically active until 1965.

+ Rome was politically powerful because Rome had the Pope, the person in control of the Roman Catholic Church.

+ After the death of her brother, she was a prominent philanthropist, but was not politically active until 1965.

+ This clan was politically significant than other Basnet clans.

+ While many agree that lowering oil dependence is safer for the environment as well as politically wise.

+ Of these combinations, only a red-red-green coalition is politically even imaginable.

+ The term tends not to be used in the Republic of Ireland because many people feel it implies that Ireland is politically British.

+ Various combinations that could be considered politically unacceptable—mainly due to implications relating to Nazi Germany—are disallowed or otherwise avoided.

+ Frederick transformed Prussia from a European backwater into an economically strong and politically reformed state.

+ Bontoc is politically subdivided into 40 barangays.

+ Baltimore is very politically liberal.

+ In Korea, he endeavored to politically educate people.

+ He is politically Independent.

+ Cearbhall Ó Dálaigh was the most politically naïve president, but the Government he worked with was notable for its own inability to offer him the help to overcome the problem.

+ No longer deemed politically controversial, ao dai fashion design is supported by the Vietnamese government.

+ Rarely,but sometimes, metal songs were also politically and socially critical.

+ Lessig is currently considered politically liberal.

+ While there, he became politically active and would soon join Fidel Castro and Che Guevara in their fight against Batista.

+ In 2002, he was named to the PoliticsPA list of politically influential individuals.

+ Many people who are politically “progressive” or “liberal” sometimes do not like religious fundamentalists.

+ Milo Yiannopoulos supported Quinn’s attackers on Breitbart and said that anybody who did not support her attackers was being too politically correct.

More in-sentence examples of “politically”:

+ The Oklahoma and Texas bands are politically linked with each other.

+ That action could have led to a general election and would ruin Edward's status as a politically neutral monarch.

+ The Oklahoma and Texas bands are politically linked with each other.

+ That action could have led to a general election and would ruin Edward’s status as a politically neutral monarch.

+ Since 1970 Green Arrow has usually been written as being explicitly left-wing politically and fighting for social justice.

+ When players as politically and socially conscientious as Sócrates, Wladimir, Casagrande and Zenon get together then there are bound to be changes in the dressing room.

+ Although not always politically active, in 2007, Whitmore received some publicity with his endorsement of Barack Obama for U.S.

+ Chick says his views are just not politically correct.

+ In his opening statement, Kavanaugh claimed the accusations were politically motivated by Democratic Party Democrats and Bill Clinton.

+ Sun Myung Moon’s controversial religious and political Unification Movement, which includes not only the Unification Church but an enormous constellation of civic organizations, including the Washington Times Foundation, is allied politically with evangelical Christians such as Jerry Falwell and Tim LaHaye.

+ He was politically active in speaking out against the Cuban government.

+ This time, though, she wanted to steal the Dearly Farm, seeing how killing animals for fashion was deemed politically incorrect.

+ He was one of the most important civil rights pioneers of the 1960’s and one of the most politically divisive pioneers of the 1960’s and 1970’s.

+ He ruled for five days until his political party was declared politically impotent and on 29 August 1991 it was banned.

+ The same actions may be called terrorism when done by a politically motivated group.

+ The fall of the wall destroyed the SED politically as well as the career of its leader, Egon Krenz.

+ When Ethel Byrne was arrested, a group of politically active New York women wanted to meet President Woodrow Wilson.

+ Ironically, the show joking about political became politically involved in Ukraine.

+ The territories of Hong Kong and Macau have also kept using traditional characters, even though they are politically part of the rest of China, which switched to simplified characters.

+ Australasia is not a politically designated region.

+ In June 2019, Sanders called on Brazilian authorities to release former President Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva from prison and drop all charges against him after leaked documents showed his arrest was politically motivated.

+ The Durand Line cuts through the Afghan tribal areas, politically dividing ethnic Pashtun peoplePashtuns and Baloch people who live on both sides.

+ In her later years, Stanton was still politically active, although she didn’t travel as much.

+ The United States supported Pakistan politically and with supplies.

+ Most of the crude left underground is in the Middle East which is not a politically stable part of the world.

+ Mandaue is under the province of Cebu but because it is a Highly Urbanized City it is not under authority to the provincial government and Mandaue is politically subdivided into 27 barangays.

+ He was politically ambitious, and a committed general.

+ The National Democratic Revolution is achieved; a society in which people are intellectually, socially, economically and politically empowered.

+ Today, Globi is seen as politically correct.

+ This is because the various Dutch fiefs were now united politically into one single group.Chapter 3, Forming Political Unity, paragraph 3; “The Age of Habsburg “.

+ Although he was politically conservative, he carried out numerous administrative reforms until declaring war on revolutionary France in 1792.

+ The first abbey in Mecklenburg, founded in 1171, which was also used as the burial site for the regional rulers, became important both politically and historically.

+ A banana republic is a politically unstable country whose economy depends on the export of one product in limited supply, such as bananas or minerals.

+ After the Russian annexation of Crimea, he was arrested in Crimea in May 2014 and sentenced to 20 years’ imprisonment by a Russian court in August 2015 on charges of plotting terrorism acts., Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty This was controversial and many believed his arrest was politically motivated.

+ Given the politically uncertain times immediately preceding Akbar’s death, Shah Jahan was in a fair amount of physical danger of harm by political opponents of his father, and his conduct at this time can be understood as a precursor to the bravery that he would later be known for,he was also well known for his intelligent brain and creative ideas.

+ He is 65 years old, and is from one of the most politically influential families of Colombia.

+ Many of them became rich, famous, and politically powerful.

+ We’re going to come out of this stronger than before, politically stronger, economically stronger.

+ The band was politically active supporting environmentalist and indigenous causes.

+ Usually, the undergraduate students are among the most politically active students in the university.

+ That university was politically left-wing.

+ Austria remained the most politically powerful of the German states.

+ Lapu-Lapu City is politically subdivided into 30 barangays.

+ FitzGerald was born in Dublin in 1926 into a very politically active family.

+ The Cantonese languageCantonese-speaking territories of Hong Kong and Macau have also kept using traditional characters, even though they are politically part of the PRC, which uses simplified characters.

+ Home to the to the politically prominent abroKamario, Isani and Agha families, Garhi Yaseen has been one of the centres from which Shikarpur and Sindh have been ruled in recent history.

+ The nine “Malay States” have a hereditary Ruler as titular Head of state and an executive Chief Minister or “Menteri Besar” as politically responsible Head of government.

+ In October 1893, a group of them founded the Bulgarian Macedono-Adrianopolitan Revolutionary Committee in Salonica…It engaged in creating a network of secretive committees and armed guerrillas in the two regions as well as in Bulgaria, where an ever-growing and politically influential Macedonian and Thracian diaspora resided.

Use in sentence of “retook”

How to use in-sentence of “retook”:

+ After Republicans retook control of the Senate, he became the honorary President “pro tempore emeritus” In 2007, Byrd became President Pro Tempore of the Senate again.

+ In 1800 the people revolted but the British retook control.

+ The Dutch retook control of the three airfields the Germans had captured.

+ Oliver Queen was later resurrected by Hal Jordan, and retook the role of Green Arrow.

+ The last important battle was at Gwalior in June 1858 in which the Rani of Jhansi was killed; a few days later the British retook the fortress of Gwalior.

Use in sentence of retook
Use in sentence of retook

“unfriendly” use in sentences

How to use in-sentence of “unfriendly”:

– Despite his unfriendly relations with Gandhi, Tagore played a key role in resolving a Gandhi-B.

– Beginning in the 1960s, relationships between the People’s Republic of China and the Soviet Union also became increasingly unfriendly in the Sino-Soviet Split.

– Pages like these are a hostage to fortune: we could find extracts used by unfriendly persons against us.

– The treaty said that they would be friends and protect each other against unfriendly Indians.

– This was for the protection of the colony against unfriendly Indians or other enemies.

– Jimmy Carter ended the policy of Détente – ending of unfriendly relationship.

unfriendly use in sentences
unfriendly use in sentences

“mississippi” example in sentences

How to use in-sentence of “mississippi”:

+ This movie is about losing a mother and the struggles through which a Mississippi family goes.

+ There were also battles west of the Mississippi River Valley in the Trans-Mississippi Theater.

+ He later played with the Mississippi Sea Wolves of the ECHL, and then played with the Grand Rapids Griffins of the AHL.

+ He attended Mississippi State University and the University of Memphis.

+ The Northwest Ordinance of 1787 said that the land north of the Ohio River and east of the Mississippi River would eventually become part of the United States.

+ LaSalle died on January 8, 2018 in Jackson, Mississippi of heart disease and complications from a fall at the age of 78.

+ US Army officer and amateur explorer Zebulon Pike was recruited by the United States government in 1806 to find the source of the Mississippi River and to check out Spanish settlements in New Mexico.

+ Oregon was a long way from the United States of America, which was east of the Mississippi river in the 1830s and 1840s.

mississippi example in sentences
mississippi example in sentences

Example sentences of “mississippi”:

+ De Soto died in 1542 on the banks of the Mississippi River at present-day Lake Village, Arkansas.

+ An annual three-day event in August in which a rope is pulled back and forth across the Mississippi River by two teams of 20.

+ De Soto died in 1542 on the banks of the Mississippi River at present-day Lake Village, Arkansas.

+ An annual three-day event in August in which a rope is pulled back and forth across the Mississippi River by two teams of 20.

+ These included a new gang task force, and penalizing parents when their children do not comply with the Mississippi Compulsory School Attendance Law.

+ This law said that all Native Americans had to leave the United States and move to “Indian Territory” west of the Mississippi River.

+ Favre started at the quarterback position for The University of Southern Mississippi for four solid years.

+ Future president Zachary Taylor founded Fort Johnson on the eastern bank of the Mississippi River across from the mouth of the Des Moines River.

+ Spain’s short intervention resulted in the loss of Florida, though it gained French Louisiana west of the Mississippi River in exchange and Britain returned History of Cuba#Cuba under attackCuba as well as the Philippines.

+ The grains are grown in the farming states bordering the Mississippi River, the Missouri River, and Ohio Rivers.

+ In 1983, he was elected as a Democratic Party Democrat to the Mississippi House of Representatives, where he served until 1990.

+ Cobb, “The Most Southern Place on Earth: The Mississippi Delta and the Roots of Regional Identity” because of its racial, cultural, and economic history.

More in-sentence examples of “mississippi”:

+ Early on they worked to make the Mississippi RiverMississippi and Ohio Rivers navigable.

+ In early November, officials with Mississippi State University charged that Cecil Newton said that it would take "more than just a scholarship" to secure his son's services.
+ The name "Mississippi mud pie" comes from the dense cake which looks like the Bank banks of the Mississippi River.

+ Early on they worked to make the Mississippi RiverMississippi and Ohio Rivers navigable.

+ In early November, officials with Mississippi State University charged that Cecil Newton said that it would take “more than just a scholarship” to secure his son’s services.

+ The name “Mississippi mud pie” comes from the dense cake which looks like the Bank banks of the Mississippi River.

+ It became the first railway to link the Atlantic coast with the lower Mississippi River.

+ Annapolis is the only capital city in America east of the Mississippi River without any rail transportation.

+ Blenders are also used to make cold alcoholic drinks that include crushed ice or ice cream, such as margaritas and Mississippi Mudslide drinks.

+ The Mississippi River is a river in the United States.

+ On November 8, 2011, he was elected Governor of Mississippi and took office on January 10, 2012.

+ He explored the Great Lakes region of the United States and Canada, the Mississippi River, and the Gulf of Mexico.

+ States like Utah, Illinois and Mississippi were added to the United States.

+ The district’s border goes along the Mississippi River.

+ In 1763, Spain got all of the French land west of the Mississippi River.

+ It is List of the largest counties in the United States by arealargest in the United States east of the Mississippi River.

+ The Chicago Portage is a water gap, and in the past, it was sometimes a wind-gap portage, connecting the Mississippi River and the Great Lakes.

+ Orange County was created in August 1734 when the House of Burgesses of VirginiaVirginia House of Burgesses adopted “An Act for Dividing Spotsylvania County.” Unlike other counties whose boundaries had ended at the Blue Ridge Mountains, Orange was bounded on the west “by the utmost limits of Virginia” which, at that time, stretched to the Mississippi River and the Great Lakes.

+ They were for Glenwood, Mississippi and Chicago, Oklahoma.

+ The harmonica is called many different names, such as: mouth organ, mouth harp, Hobo Harp, French harp, Reckless Tram, harpoon, tin sandwich, blues harp, Mississippi saxophone, or simply harp.

+ It is a riverport on the east bank of the Mississippi River.

+ Scott was born in Goodman, MississippiGoodman, Mississippi on January 9, 1935.

+ Cranston died in Jackson, MississippiJackson, Mississippi from natural causes, aged 93.

+ France lost all of its North American lands east of the Mississippi River.

+ He died on February 2, 2020 of dementia-related problems in Brookhaven, Mississippi at the age of 78.

+ The governor Luis de Unzaga ‘le Conciliateur’, during that period, promoted expeditions and good relations with the indians tribes, among the explorers were Antoine de Marigny and others who continued trading across the Kansas River, especially at its confluence with the Missouri River, tributaries of the Mississippi River.

+ Also, additional weight at the time due to ongoing rehabilitation construction led to the major failure that caused the bridge to fall into the Mississippi River.

+ Nunnelee died in his birthplace of Tupelo, Mississippi from brain cancer, aged 56.

+ They lived in Biloxi, Mississippi and Del Rio, Texas before returning to California at age 9.

+ He commanded Confederates in Mississippi and Alabama until the end of the war in May 1865.

+ When he was studying in Saint Augustine’s Minor Seminary, his family would oftern travel from British Honduras to Mississippi in the United States where that Junior college was located so see Price and check on him and how he was going along with his education in Saint Augustine’s Minor Seminary.

+ She taught black children in a Mississippi freedom school during 1964 and chaired the Modern Language Association commission on the Status of Women in the Profession.

+ He was the Democratic nominee for Governor of Mississippi in 2019.

+ These songs came from the area near the mouth of the Mississippi River.

+ Almost a year later from his retirement, Cochran died on May 30, 2019 at a nursing home in Oxford, Mississippi at the age of 81.

+ They range from twenty-foot Inflatable boatinflatable dive boats in casino vessels on the Mississippi River.

+ The city has a large port on the Mississippi River.

+ Wild Fire is an American rock band founded in Biloxi, Mississippi on November 5, 2015.

+ In 1762, after the French and Indian War, France secretly gave all the territory west of the Mississippi River to Spain, per the Treaty of Fontainebleau.

+ First, the men sent to France were allowed to spend up to 10 million USD in order to buy New Orleans and, if possible, the west bank of the Mississippi River.

+ The Army of Mississippi was a Confederate States ArmyConfederate army during the American Civil War.

+ The city is located on both sides of the Mississippi River.

+ Cannon died at his home on December 6, 2018 in Calhoun City, Mississippi from emphysema at the age of 84.

+ A big part of the book “Huckleberry Finn” by Mark Twain is set on the Mississippi River.

+ He lead the first European expedition deep into the territory of the modern-day United States and was probably the first European to discover the Mississippi River.

+ Price next crossed the Mississippi River to reinforce Gen.

+ It joins the Mississippi just south of the cities of Saint Paul and Minneapolis.

+ It merges with the Mississippi River in Louisiana.

+ Burnett traveled around the Mississippi RiverMississippi delta for nearly twenty years singing with famous blues artists, including Robert Johnson and Sonny Boy Williamson.

+ The British moved in barges from Lake Borgne to land seven miles below New Orleans on the Mississippi river.

+ The Mississippi has many large tributaries, or rivers that flow into it.

“causeway” in sentences?

How to use in-sentence of “causeway”:

+ The Giant’s Causeway and Fingal’s Cave are part of the same volcanic eruption.

+ For example, the price of going from Tsing Yi to Causeway Bay by taxi is around HK$200.

+ He noticed that they were similar to the columns of the Giant’s Causeway in Ireland.

+ The causeway section was a perennial traffic bottleneck until it was expanded to six lanes in 2002, along with much needed improvements in its connections with Interstate 880 in Hayward.

+ The natural sites are the Jurassic CoastDorset and East Devon Coast, Giant’s Causeway and Causeway Coast, Gough and Henderson Island.

+ It is located next to the Woodlands Temporary Bus Interchange and Causeway Point.

+ Lihou is connected to Guernsey at low tide by an ancient stone causeway between the island and L’Eree headland.

causeway in sentences?
causeway in sentences?

Example sentences of “causeway”:

+ Most of the boys got safely across, but two of them were forced off the causeway by the strong tide.

+ He stripped to the waist and went back along the causeway to help him.

+ There was probably a path or causeway across the ditch to the henge.

+ The Qatar Bahrain Causeway is a planned causeway between the two Arab states of the Persian GulfArab states of Qatar and Bahrain.

+ The long causeway extending to the former bridge location is now open to the public as a pedestrian walkway.

+ The King Fahd Causeway is a causeway joining Saudi Arabia and Bahrain.

+ Meanwhile, John Howard Davies had safely reached the mainland when he saw that his friend, who was unable to swim, was being forced away from the causeway into deep water.

+ Earlier, there used to be a causeway that would connect São Jacinto to the mainland.

+ The Johor-Singapore Causeway was designed by Messrs Coode, Fizmaurice, Wilson and Mitchell of Westminster, while the construction contract was awarded to Topham, Jones Railton Ltd of London.

+ Most of the boys got safely across, but two of them were forced off the causeway by the strong tide.

+ He stripped to the waist and went back along the causeway to help him.

+ In a 2005 opinion pollpoll of “Radio Times” readers, the Giant’s Causeway was named as the fourth greatest natural wonder in the United Kingdom.

+ In 1879, the tidal causeway was changed into a raised, dry causeway.

+ The famous zeppelin “LZ 129 HindenburgHindenburg” that was destroyed by fire in 1937 had been named in his honour, as is the causeway joining the island of Sylt to mainland Schleswig-Holstein, the Hindenburgdamm, built during his time in office.

+ These changes, and the causeway linking Mont Saint-Michel to the mainland, have made mudflats.

+ Johor is connected to Singapore by two roads: the Johor-Singapore Causeway and the Malaysia-Singapore Second Link.

+ The highrise section was initially built with six lanes and the eastern causeway with four lanes.

+ The idea to make the causeway was to improve the links and bonds between Saudi Arabia and Bahrain.

In-sentence examples of “kibbutz”

How to use in-sentence of “kibbutz”:

+ During the 1948 Arab–Israeli War, members of the Israeli Kibbutz Degania managed to stop a Syrian tank assault by using Molotov cocktails.

+ He was also a member of Kibbutz Beit Alfa.

+ The four rivers join to form the Jordan in northern Israel, near kibbutz Sede Nehemya.

+ Sheriff was Artistic Director of the Kibbutz Chamber Orchestra.

+ They may want to join a kibbutz or other cooperative way of living.

+ Kinneret was the center of the Kibbutz culture of early Zionism.

+ In the 1990s, following the decline of the kibbutz movement, HaNoar HaOved VeHaLomed began to re-examine the ideal life path of its members, which had always begun with settling kibbutzim in “gar’inim” after finishing their mandatory period of army service.

In-sentence examples of kibbutz
In-sentence examples of kibbutz