How to use in sentence of “girl”

How to use in-sentence of “girl”:

+ Later McCartney recorded a single called “Ebony and Ivory” with Stevie Wonder, then “The Girl is Mine” and “Say, Say, Say” with Michael Jackson.

+ While in college, she had a number of small jobs such as hat check girl and nightclub photographer.

+ We hear the famous leitmotif of the ocean and then those of the Dutchman and of Senta, the girl he falls in love with.

+ ITZY is a South Korean girl group.

+ On October 12, 2012, a Canadian girl named Amanda Todd killed herself.

How to use in sentence of girl
How to use in sentence of girl

Example sentences of “girl”:

+ Set in Rhode Island, it tells the story of a 13-year-old girl named Anna Fitzgerald, a “savior sibling”, who lawsuitsues her parents so that they can no longer legally control her medical decisions once she learns she is expected to donate a kidney to her older sister Kate, who is dying from leukemia, cancer of the blood and bone marrow.

+ Then there was this girl named Nancy, she had nightmares about Freddy, and wanted to kill him to stop him from killing anymore.

+ The movie is about a teenage girl and a vampire falling in love.

+ By the end of the year, T-ara had become the second most popular girl group in Korea.

+ In most communities the common thing to do would be: have some other guy go ask the girl if it is OK for them to date.

+ Bride of Pretorius: Stanley dates a shy, quiet girl who works at her bank—and becomes a loud, man-hungry woman when she stumbles upon The Mask.

+ A year later, at the same agency, Suzy formed a girl group, temporarily titled JYP Sisters, with Fei and Jia.

+ Kara was a South Korean pop girl group.

+ She is the ex-girlfriend of Daniel, and is also the most popular girl in Iridium High School.

+ It is narrationnarrated by and stars Lindsay Lohan as Lola Cep, a 15-year-old girl who wants to be an actress.

+ Measures of their success include, have sold 6 million records sales, becoming the most successful pop girl group in Brazil and Latin America, Under the guidance of their mentor and entrepreneur, music producer Rick Bonadio, they embarked on sold-out tours throughout Brazil and several countries in Latin America, Europe and Africa.

+ Set in Rhode Island, it tells the story of a 13-year-old girl named Anna Fitzgerald, a "savior sibling", who lawsuitsues her parents so that they can no longer legally control her medical decisions once she learns she is expected to donate a kidney to her older sister Kate, who is dying from leukemia, cancer of the blood and bone marrow.

+ Then there was this girl named Nancy, she had nightmares about Freddy, and wanted to kill him to stop him from killing anymore.
+ The movie is about a teenage girl and a vampire falling in love.

+ A baby may be given a name Wisdom because parents hope the baby will be a wise girl or boy.

+ In some countries, a girl may succeed her father on the throne, in others this is not the case.

+ Life takes a turn when introvert city-bred boy ‘Abir’ meets the vivacious village girl ‘Shaluk’.

+ The album’s sales surpassed 100,000 within only two days after release, breaking fellow Korean girl group Kara’s record, Kara having surpassed sales of 100,000 in Japan in 2010 after a week with their first original Japanese studio album Girl‘s Talk.

+ The May Queen is a girl who is selected to ride or walk at the front of a parade for May Day celebrations.

+ It is about a girl named Annabelle Tillman.

+ From that furrow a baby girl came out.

+ They were one of the defining acts during the girl group era of the 1960s.

More in-sentence examples of “girl”:

+ Athena appeared to the girl as an old woman, and warned her not to offend the gods.

+ He remembers the Dreyfus Affair, the First World War, and his relationship with a girl called Albertine.
+ Sugababes also known as "The Sugababes" were a United KingdomBritish girl group which were formed in 1998 by Ron Tom when the members were still at school.

+ Athena appeared to the girl as an old woman, and warned her not to offend the gods.

+ He remembers the Dreyfus Affair, the First World War, and his relationship with a girl called Albertine.

+ Sugababes also known as “The Sugababes” were a United KingdomBritish girl group which were formed in 1998 by Ron Tom when the members were still at school.

+ Only 3 weeks later, a thirteen-year old girl named Mananya Thumpong vanished in Sedan.

+ In 1872 he married a girl called Nadezhda.

+ She also took an active role in the Girl Scouts of the USA.

+ Her first Broadway play was “The Happiest Girl in the World” in 1961.

+ The real reason why did not want to go was probably because he was in love with a 19- year-old girl called Camille Moke.

+ Each week, one girl is asked to leave because she does not have the standard and ability to become a top model.

+ Growing up, Weber was a poor Jewish girl who loved to dance.

+ Jack fails to realize that “the girl next door”, Mary Preston, is desperately in love with him.

+ Nintendo announced that a series of Splatoon Amiibo figures would be released along with the game, Boy and Girl Inklings are sold separately and a Squid figure is sold only as a bundle with either the game or the two other Amiibos.

+ Her appareance is that of a young girl with glasses, cause despite being a robot she is shorstsighted.

+ Piret Järvis is an Estonian musician, and member of the popular girl group Vanilla Ninja.

+ In bullfighting, the Minoans did not kill the bull, but the male fighter had to grab the horns of an attacking bull, throw himself on the back of the animal, and then land on the ground; the girl helped the bullfighter keep his balance.

+ He also served as an executive producer of “The Girl on a Motorcycle”.

+ Meek married an Hawaiian girl in 1820, and lived in the Hawaiian Islands.

+ A Samoan girl or “teine” is given a malu.

+ On August 13, 2010 Julieta gave birth to a baby girl named Simona in Mexico City.

+ When a rich young girl named Esperanza’s father dies, she and her mother are forced to move from Mexico to America.

+ Scuttle finds out that the girl Eric is marrying is Ursula in disguise.

+ Santosh is in love with another girl while his parents force him to marry.

+ Bernadette Soubirous was a young girl that had religious visions at Lourdes, France.

+ An orphan girl named Thérèse Raquin is sent to live with her aunt, Madame Raquin, and her cousin Camille, who is very “sick” with hypochondriasis.

+ The show is about a teenage girl named Tori Vega, who wants to become a popstar.

+ These hormones cause a girl to grow into a woman, and make her feel like a woman.

+ Translation: The myth of Yao: the country is being invaded by barbarians, the king is looking for warriors who are able to take the head of the general of the invading army, and for this the king will award a thousand Yi of gold, many houses, and young girl as their wife/wives.The word was brought to Japan in the 7th century, when they began using a Chinese-style legal system.

+ It starred Elliot Page as Juno MacGuff, a teenage girl who becomes pregnancypregnant by her best friend.

+ His major works include the novella “Maggie: A Girl of the Streets”.

+ They soon meet Toph Bei Fong, a young girl who is one of the best earthbenders in the world.

+ She was a member of the British girl group Sugababes.

+ One famous spinster is the girl in the story of Rumpelstiltskin.

+ Pop girl group Girl Authority covered the song in 2006 for their debut album.

+ Fairy takes the tooth from the girl with the eating disorder.

+ Fourniret has been charged with the child stealingabduction of minors and sexual misconduct, and has been in detention since June 2003 for the attempted kidnapping of a 14-year-old girl in 2000.

+ Morris Lessmore, The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo, The Help, Midnight in Paris, The Muppets The Muppets, Rango, Saving Face, A Separation, The Shore and Undefeated with one.

+ The girl walks away and leaves him, and the song finishes.

+ She received awards in portraying a supporting character in film Kapoor and Sons, a drug addict from Bihar in Udta Punjab and a free spirited girl next door in Dear Zindagi.

+ The moon sets in the daylight as the young girl and her cat say goodnight.

+ Little Mix was the first girl band to win “The X Factor”.

+ Red Velvet is a South Korean girl group that debuted in 2014 with 4 members: Wendy, Irene, Joy, and Seulgi.

+ The disaster gained some major international notoriety due in part to a photograph taken by photographer Frank Fournier, of a young girl named Omayra Sánchez who was trapped beneath rubble for three days before she died.

+ At a young age Wood had dressed up as a girl because his mother wanted a girl, so he was forced to dress up as a girl and would have that habit for the rest of his life.

+ I loved being a Cheetah Girl but I don’t want to be known as ‘Galleria from The Cheetah Girls’, and as ‘Raven Baxter’ forever.

+ The series “Dora the Explorer” focuses on a seven-year-old Latino girl named “Dora” accompanied by her talking backpack and anthropomorphic monkey named “Boots”.

+ The wolf tells the girl to pick some flowers for her grandmother.

+ Moses is later given Tzipporah, a Midian girl the priests Hotep and Huy captured as a concubine, after she nearly attacks Rameses.

+ At that moment, Charlie has a flashback of his past, in which a girl is raped by a guy in his room in front of him.

In sentence use of “recognize”

How to use in-sentence of “recognize”:

– The man who had betrayed her appears in the den of a sudden, he does not recognize the mistakes for the witch and he is afraid.

– HTML5 browsers are required to recognize the UTF-8 BOM and use it to detect the encoding of the page.

– They recognize that they can make things better; there is a lesson to be learned from this, and they will move on.

– One can recognize the vector in the second line above as the normal vector to the surface.

– It allows the Nintendo 64 to recognize and understand the human voice.

– The ultimate goal in this practice is to transition past the use of icons, recognize the Absolute symbolized by the icons, on the path to realizing the nondual identity of one’s Atman and the Brahman.

In sentence use of recognize
In sentence use of recognize

Example sentences of “recognize”:

– MediaWiki does not recognize three-character codes when there is an equivalent two-character code: for Northern Sami, use code.

– Switzerland, although not a member of the European Union, adheres to the same principle, stating that “neither a political unit needs to be recognized to become a state, nor does a state have the obligation to recognize another one.

– Recent discussions between the Roman CatholicismRoman Catholic Pope John Paul II and the Coptic Orthodox Pope Shenouda III concluded that they believe many of the same things after all, even though the Coptic Church does not recognize the Pope of Rome as its leader.

– The second is to recognize when you are not doing your share of the job of maintaining a good society.

– The rebels were supported by Russian and Cossack forces but, Georgia itself refuses to recognize rebel South Ossetia as an independent state; the government calls it by the medieval name of Samachablo or, more recently, Tskhinvali region.

– Mexico refused to recognize the Republic of Texas, as an independent country.

– This template will not recognize formatted numbers, which is by design since formatted numbers will break expression parsers.

– At first, the band could not recognize him.

– Next comes the ability to recognize lip movements and speech sounds a couple of weeks after birth.

– The purpose of counseling is to help the student recognize their mistakes and find ways to avoid them.

– Do not use a comma as decimal indicator for metric units since the conversion does not recognize commas and the imperial measurement will be calculated incorrectly.

- MediaWiki does not recognize three-character codes when there is an equivalent two-character code: for Northern Sami, use code.

- Switzerland, although not a member of the European Union, adheres to the same principle, stating that "neither a political unit needs to be recognized to become a state, nor does a state have the obligation to recognize another one.

– That way, the female can recognize that it is a male of her species.

– The birds can recognize particular individuals by their calls.

– Doctors in this specialty are trained to recognize and treat a variety of different conditions involving the internal organs.

– China does not agree, and both mainland China and Taiwan do not recognize that Arunachal Pradesh belongs to India.

– The bright colors on the beak may help the toucans to recognize each other, and to scare off other birds.

– The Maldives does not recognize same-sex marriages, civil unions, or domestic partnerships.

– Usually the administration of the territory is carried out by one of the countries that claims sovereignty, while the other country does not recognize the sovereignty over the territory of the other country.

– In computer programs, pattern recognition tries to teach computers to perceive and recognize things as accurately as possible, how people do it or better.

More in-sentence examples of “recognize”:

– It is often not easy to recognize Secret Service agents, because they often dress to blend in wherever they are.

– He did not recognize his own family.

– Portugal does not recognize the Spanish rule of the Olivença/Olivenza territory.

– Joshua Davis”Face Blind” “Wired” Nov 1, 2006, accessed Feb 13, 2016, is a condition where a person cannot recognize faces, “even their own”.

– We recognize 3 cells: the Hadley cell, the Ferrel cell and the Polar cell.

– A number of awards have been set up to recognize bush balladeers.

– A Screen Actors Guild Award is an award given by the Screen Actors Guild to recognize outstanding performances by its members.

– With this theory, the need to follow international law depends on whether other sovereign governments recognize the group.

– There is no record of him in any official database, and even his closest associates do not recognize or remember him.

– He became disappointed that the town of Dundee did not recognize him as a great poet, so he went to Perth, ScotlandPerth and then to Edinburgh.

– Cladistic classifications do not recognize Radiata as a clade.

– They don’t recognize humans as prey or predator so they avoid swimmers and divers and rarely bite them.

– Many people will recognize him from Walt DisneyDisney’s film “Fantasia” in which he conducts the orchestra and is seen shaking hands with Mickey Mouse.

– An autoimmune disease occurs when the immune cells do not recognize the MHC molecules of other cells and starts attacking its own body.

– Bella does not recognize her reflection at first due to her volatile-looking red eyes.

– The Kids Next Door have refused to recognize this dastardly attempt at prohibiting children from drinking their favorite beverage, and have taken it upon themselves to run a secret operation providing soda to any kid in the world who wants it…no questions asked.

– The Scots did not recognize him without his surcoat and so did not spare him.

– Nowadays we recognize Bruckner as one of the greatest writers of symphonies as well as a great composer of choral music.

– Historian of psychology Mark Altschule concluded, “It is difficult—or perhaps impossible—to find a nineteenth-century psychologist or psychiatrist who did not recognize unconscious thought as not only real but of the highest importance”.

– They can be used during war or can be used to help the police recognize each other during undercover operations.

– Today most countries of the world recognize the People’s Republic of China as China.

– Usually, however, words of the last kind are usually written in only katakana these days, though sometimes words like “sushi” still written in ateji, like 寿司, because Chinese tourists will recognize the ateji more easily, since the word is written the same way in Chinese.

– He believed the shapes we see were pictures which flew to our eyes, where our soul would then recognize them.

– Capriles demanded a recount, refusing to recognize the outcome as valid.

– He did not recognize the tribunal calling it an American/UN puppet court and said he was being tried for standing up to NATO expansion.

– A museum built to recognize Buffalo Bill, who grew up in Le Claire.

– The adaptive immune response gives the vertebrate immune system the ability to recognize and remember specific pathogens.

– Reduction in the normal levels of surface class I MHC, a mechanism employed by some viruses and certain tumors to evade CTL responses, activates NK cell killing.These inhibitory receptors recognize MHC class I molecules, which could explain why NK cells kill cells with low levels of MHC class I molecules.

– Because of such policies, most countries refused to recognize the Taliban government.

– It’s not good to require our audience to understand that a particular article is poorly written because a machine created it: many of them don’t recognize when something is poorly written at all and will struggle to understand it.

– The Organization of American States made a decision on 10 January 2019 “to not recognize the legitimacy of Nicolas Maduro’s new term”.

– As they arrive at the waterfall, a woman and an army of guards recognize them as gods, and escort them to the city.

– The purpose for WP:GA/WP:VGA is to recognize in article excellence, and promote them as model articles.

– Also, by a overuse of communication by social networks, the teens cans be less able to recognize the gestures and the nonverbal language, that are essential in life to have good interactions with people.

– This template is used to display the current number of member states which recognize a particular state.

– More foreign tourists than Japanese people recognize him.

– In 1975, the United Nations also started to recognize this holiday for women’s rights.

– It can also scan through most eyeglasses and sunglasses, and it can still recognize you even if you change your hairstyle or grow a beard.

– Cognitive deficits caused by schizophrenia can also be difficult to recognize as part of the disorder.

– But a Canadian Ceramic maker was able to recognize the color of the gas.

– For example, if a person could recognize both faces and objects before brain damage occurred, but then after brain damage in a certain part of the brain they could only recognize faces and not objects, then psychologists can make inferences about the functions in certain modules of the brain.

– For example, a psychiatric service dog would recognize that its owner is feeling upset and do a specific job, like get medicine, get help, or distract the person, to help them.

– In 2014, the parliament passed a law to recognize rape survivors as war victims, so they could receive pensions.

– What is very important when reading text is the ability to recognize words and word groups.

– On the 50th anniversary of the death of Lojze Grozde, the Archdiocese of Ljubljana started a process to recognize his martyrdom and also his beatification and canonization.

– When the brothers, under the leadership of Judah all offer themselves in Benjamin’s place, Joseph asks why they would give up everything for “a spoiled half-brother”, Judah, who does not recognize Joseph, tells him the truth about how he and his brothers sold Joseph into slavery out of jealousy and how they want more than anything else.

– The National Hockey League presents lots of annual awards and trophies to recognize its teams and players.

- It is often not easy to recognize Secret Service agents, because they often dress to blend in wherever they are.

- He did not recognize his own family.

“precursor” – example sentences

How to use in-sentence of “precursor”:

– It had a horizontal axis and was a precursor to modern water turbines.

– In 1540–1541 he visited the famous medical university of Montpellier, took his degree of doctor of medicine at Basel, and then settled down to practise at Zürich, where he obtained the post of lecturer in physics at the Carolinum, the precursor of the University of Zürich.

– There are many different types of amyloidosis, each caused by formation of amyloid fibrils from different soluble precursor proteins in different patients.

– After “The Precursor Legacy”, the “Jak and Daxter” games started to be about other things, not just jumping and finding things.

– Safran wrote The secular and the sacred: nation, religion and politics by William Safran, Taylor Francis, 2003, page 168 But another vision of Croatian identity that was closely tied to the Catholic Church and the Vatican and was led by an ex-seminarist Ante Starcevic became the ideological precursor to the Ustase.

– Its precursor was the Deutsche Musik-Phonothek.

– He also started a precursor of the Great Wall.

precursor - example sentences
precursor – example sentences

Example sentences of “precursor”:

- Players can race in enclosed tracks, battle in domes or collect Precursor artifacts.

- The precursor to Marvel Comics was founded in 1939 by pulp magazine publisher Martin Goodman.

– Players can race in enclosed tracks, battle in domes or collect Precursor artifacts.

– The precursor to Marvel Comics was founded in 1939 by pulp magazine publisher Martin Goodman.

– A reaction that forms an arene compound from an unsaturated or partially unsaturated cyclic precursor is simply called an aromatization.

– States’ rights, meaning the sovereignty and independence of individual US states, was guaranteed in the Articles of Confederation, the precursor to the U.S.

– A typical implementation is to encrypt and use a precursor physical machine readable token such as the card identity number of a Secure Digital cardSecure Digital microSD card contained in a mobile telephone.

– Dostoevsky, whose work is often considered a philosophical precursor to existentialism, often expressed a similar concern in his novels.

– Thus multiple related proteins can be generated from a single gene and a single precursor mRNA transcript.

– Because A and B antigens are chemically modified from a precursor form that is also present in type O individuals, people with type A and B antigens can accept blood from type O individuals.

– The non-coding regions, the introns, are cut from the precursor mRNAs in a process Sharp called “splicing”.

– Together, the wind shear and low-level Helicity helicity created moderate convection across central Florida associated with the precursor low pressure system.

– From this spectrum, one can select a prominent product ion which can be the product ion for the chosen precursor ion.

– This game was a precursor to the intercollegiate football that would soon after take hold of the Ivy League.

– The game was considered a precursor to the popular arcade basketball game “NBA Jam”.

– In 1758, Roger Joseph Boscovich described a precursor of the atomic theory.

– It is thus seen as the precursor of all synapsids.

– Types of analysis include product ion scan, precursor ion scan, Selected Reaction Monitoring.

More in-sentence examples of “precursor”:

– Damages and deaths from a storm include when the storm was a precursor wave or an extratropical low.

– He authored the books “Biosemiotics: An Examination into the Signs of Life and the Life of Signs” and “Signs of Meaning in the Universe” and edited “A Legacy for Living Systems: Gregory Bateson as Precursor to Biosemiotics”.

– While in Paris, he published his work “La Croatie et la confédération italienne”, considered by some to be the precursor to his Party of Rights’ political program.

– GOAL’s first use was for the “Jak and Daxter: The Precursor Legacy” game.

– A sufficient condition for a statement is a logical precursor of the statement, in the sense that if the condition is true, then so will the statement.

– The case was a precursor to Clinton being impeached, which he eventually was.

– In the first “Jak and Daxter” game, “Jak and Daxter: The Precursor Legacy”, the character Daxter falls into a pit full of Dark Eco and turns into an “Ottsel”, a fictional, or not real, cross between an otter and a weasel.

– The anime “Serial Experiments Lain” cites Project Xanadu as a precursor to The Wired and mentions Nelson as the originator of hypertext.

– The non-coding regions, the introns, are cut from the precursor mRNAs in a process called “splicing”.

– He was the precursor to what is considered the golden age of Spanish literature.

– It is the precursor molecule for the neurotransmitter acetylcholine.

– Tryptophan is also a precursor to the neurotransmitters serotonin and melatonin.

– Jak, Daxter and Keira test out a Precursor artifact, with a giant creature being summoned.

– Many people think of “Jak and Daxter: The Precursor Legacy” as the spiritual successor to Naughty Dog’s “Crash Bandicoot” series.

– Cazorla, Frank Precursor in the birth of the United States and in liberalism.

– This category is for tracking all of the players who play or have played for any of the teams in the Ontario Hockey League, even when those teams played in the OHL’s precursor Ontario Major Junior Hockey League.

– This precursor of modern chess originated in the northern Indian subcontinent during the Gupta empire.Murray H.J.R.

– He played an influential role in the creation of the ARPANET, the precursor to the Internet, at UCLA.

– He joined the underwater demolition team, the precursor to the Navy SEALs, in 1955.

– 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.

– The Sea Emperor explains what the Precursor aliens were attempting to do to find a cure for Kharaa.

– The Far Eastern Championship Games was an Asian multi-sport event considered to be a precursor to the Asian Games.

– The precursor to Hurricane John was a tropical wave that moved off the coast of Africa on July 25th.

– He had already rejected Edward Thorndike’s “Law of Effect” a precursor to B.F.

– With the development of plate tectonics in the 1960s geologists concluded the Atlantic Ocean must have had a precursor before the time of Pangaea.

– Damage from the precursor low was reported in Eustis, Florida from one or more tornadoes that damaged or destroyed about 50 houses, but caused no serious injuries.

– Damages and deaths from a storm include when the storm was a precursor wave or extratropical low.

– Doo-wop was a precursor to many of the afro-American musical styles seen today.

– The precursor disturbance to Fausto was first noticed over Venezuela as early as August 31, and may have been related to the tropical wave that spawned Hurricane Fran.

– He developed a concept of the “unity of type” a precursor of comparative anatomy.

– L-Dopa is the precursor to the neurotransmitters dopamine, norepiphedrine and epiphedrine, which are part of a group known as Catecholamines.

– Lekima’s precursor enhanced the southwestern monsoon in the Philippines, which brought heavy rain to the country.

– B: Isoprene, also known as 2-methyl-1,3-butadiene, the precursor to natural rubber.

– In 1964, he formed the United People’s Unity of Seychelles, precursor of the current People’s Party of Seychelles.

– The first mention and discovery of the principles behind the pinhole camera, a precursor to the camera obscura, belong to w:MoziMozi, a Chinese philosopher and founder of Mohism.

– C: 1,3-Butadiene, a precursor to synthetic polymers.

– Bleeding Kansas, fought over the issue of precursor of events to come in the American Civil War.

– Potassium permanganate is listed as a Table I precursor under the United Nations Convention Against Illicit Traffic in Narcotic Drugs and Psychotropic Substances.

– It was the first true chess-playing automaton, and a precursor of sorts to Deep Blue.

– It was the direct precursor to the United States Air Force, established in 1947.

– This was the precursor of the Nazi party.

– This was a precursor to their upcoming album “Oh!”, a full album to be released on 28 January, 2010.

– It was a kind of precursor of the Atlantic.

– Using pairs of coils wound on a common iron core, his design, called an induction coil, was an early precursor of the modern transformer.

– It is also found out that Daxter is a Precursor too.

– Alchemy is considered a precursor of modern Chemistry.

– These two gene clusters are thought to have arisen from a precursor gene being duplicated, about 500 million years ago.

– He produced a precursor of atomic theory and made many contributions to astronomy.

- Damages and deaths from a storm include when the storm was a precursor wave or an extratropical low.

- He authored the books "Biosemiotics: An Examination into the Signs of Life and the Life of Signs" and "Signs of Meaning in the Universe" and edited "A Legacy for Living Systems: Gregory Bateson as Precursor to Biosemiotics".
- While in Paris, he published his work "La Croatie et la confédération italienne", considered by some to be the precursor to his Party of Rights' political program.

How to use the word “vernacular”

How to use in-sentence of “vernacular”:

– Although the European prominence of French literature was eclipsed in part by vernacular literature in Italy in the 14th century, literature in France in the 16th century underwent a major creative evolution, and through the political and artistic programs of the Ancien Régime, French literature came to dominate European letters in the 17th century.

– Modifiers normally come before the noun in Chinese, but follow the noun in vernacular Vietnamese.

– Written Vernacular Chinese is a writing style very closely related to modern spoken Mandarin Chinese.

– This helped to make vernacular Chinese an acceptable way of writing literature.

– The vernacular dialects of Pali eventually evolved into Bengali, Assamese and other related languages.

– Among Chinese speakers, Classical Chinese has been largely replaced by Standard Chinese languagewritten vernacular Chinese, or 白话/白話 “báihuà” after the overthrow of the Qing dynasty and therefore the end of Imperial China.

– For example, people who use the dialects called General American English and Received PronunciationBBC English might say, “I didn’t do anything”, while someone who speaks what is called African American Vernacular English or AAVE might say, “I didn’t do nothing”.

How to use the word vernacular
How to use the word vernacular

Example sentences of “vernacular”:

– The museum includes a zoo, a museum of vernacular architecture, a craft centre, and displays including dinosaur skeletons and the Tree of Ténéré.

– The Trecento was also famous as a time of heightened literary activity, with writers working in the vernacular instead of Latin.

– The Republic of China replaced as the written standard by written vernacular Chinese, which was based on northern dialects.

– For example, people who use what is called General American English or BBC English might say, “I didn’t do anything”, while someone who speaks what is called African American Vernacular English might say, “I didn’t do nothing”.

– Provided under this parameter should be the single most common vernacular name when one is in widespread use, or a single current scientific name otherwise.

– The two monastic complexes represent the highest flowering of Armenian religious architecture, with unique style developed from a mix of elements of Byzantine ecclesiastical architecture and the traditional vernacular architecture of the Caucasian region.

– As the commonly applied term “Palestinian Arab” ethnonym implies, the current traditional vernacular of Palestinians, irrespective of religion, is the Palestinian dialect of Arabic.

– The most common vernacular name for this order is gladiators, but it is not well known under any name.

– A Study of Vernacular Partner Terms: Possible Cultural Cues to Condom use.” Journal of Adolescent Health 50.2 : S7.

– Its botanical name Prunus armeniaca, derives from the Latin vernacular for apricot, armeniacum, which some scholars have linked to its Akkadian name ‘.

– Kabir’s poems were in vernacular Hindi, borrowing from various dialects including Awadhi, Brij, and Bhojpuri.

– Ahmed Fouad Negm was an Egyptian vernacular poet.

- The museum includes a zoo, a museum of vernacular architecture, a craft centre, and displays including dinosaur skeletons and the Tree of Ténéré.

- The Trecento was also famous as a time of heightened literary activity, with writers working in the vernacular instead of Latin.
- The Republic of China replaced as the written standard by written vernacular Chinese, which was based on northern dialects.

“operate” in-sentences

How to use in-sentence of “operate”:

+ These trains operate from the Sengkang Depot which serves maintenance and train overhaul facilities for trains along the Sengkang and Punggol LRT lines.

+ Other airlines that operate a lot of 777s include United Airlines, Air France, Cathay Pacific, and American Airlines.

+ Most countries have developed government rules that in exchange for requirements that the business operate in a certain manner and disclose their financial results in a certain manner, they are then allowed to borrow money using bonds and sell ownership using stock to the general public, and the general public is allowed to sell bonds and stock to other members of the public without being responsible for the operations and financial disclosures of the business.

+ Wilderness cruises operate in the area.

+ All these groups operate in the United States, Canada, Australia, England and other Western countries and cause many problems in those countries and the countries they are from.

operate in-sentences
operate in-sentences

Example sentences of “operate”:

+ Other services operate at times, especially at the start and towards the end of the traffic day.

+ When the CPU runs a computer program, it needs somewhere to store the data that the instructions operate on.
+ Many also operate round the Manchester area.

+ Other services operate at times, especially at the start and towards the end of the traffic day.

+ When the CPU runs a computer program, it needs somewhere to store the data that the instructions operate on.

+ Many also operate round the Manchester area.

+ Only multi-engine, fixed-wing aircraft with special crew and aircraft certification can operate at London City Airport.

+ All types of pilots must pass a number of tests and obtain a license before they can operate the vehicle.

+ Arriva London South Limited Arriva London South Limited operate four bus garages.

+ The company was the first airline to operate the Airbus A380, the world’s largest passenger jet with a nickname of “superjumbo” – as well as the Boeing 787-10 and the longer range version of the Airbus A350-900.

+ Further, the AFM does not need to operate in a vacuum.

+ Cetaceans such as dolphins, porpoises and whales, operate in organised social groups called pods.

+ Hutton recognized that rocks record the evidence of the past action of processes which still operate today.

More in-sentence examples of “operate”:

+ They may be unable to safely drive or operate machinery.

+ Other international airlines would continue to operate from T1.

+ This template is intended for any operating railway station in Greater London and those stations outside the boundary that operate Transport for London zonal pricing and/or Oyster card pay-as-you-go.

+ Most countries of the world operate fleets of merchant ships.

+ To continue GMA Manila’s digital television broadcast, DZBB-TV and its GMA News TV subchannel are reported to transfer to UHF channel 15, which the National Telecommunications Commission, through a memorandum circular in 2016, authorized to operate as part of NTC’s plans to license digital channels 14-20 for major TV broadcasts.

+ Early vacuum tube devices were incandescent bulbs made to operate at lower temperatures, with added electronic parts.

+ This isn’t the absolute highest level of security, but for most people, it will suffice and will operate significantly faster than AES 256 on TCP.

+ Part-time All-wheel drive operate as a front-wheel drive under normal conditions.

+ Although it doesn’t operate on tables, it is included here as it is useful for determining whether a value can be a valid table key.

+ Part of the TGV family, it has a smaller cross-section to fit within the constrictive British loading gauge, was originally able to operate on the UK third rail network, and has a lot of fireproofing in case of fire in the tunnel.

+ But the most important change was the “Factory System” where products were produced on a large scale and then one specific product, but they needed people to operate the machines.

+ It would operate in open woodland.

+ This means that senior surgeons always operate with the same group of people, so reducing the risk of mistakes, and allowing juniors to learn and understand the individual cases.

+ The oxygen supply has to be constant because these fibres only operate aerobically.

+ Pneumatic or “Vacuum” elevators operate without cables and can be installed more easily and quickly than their alternatives since their housing comprises prefabricated sections which are considerably narrower than conventional lift shafts.

+ Ferry services operate across the Swan River between the Perth CBD and South Perth.

+ The plant also has machines which remove heat from the reactor to operate a steam turbine and generator to make electricity.

+ For rail lines that operate in only one direction, the “oneway1” or “oneway2” parameters are used, to indicate that the Previous or Next station, respectively, does not have service going towards it.

+ The problem for military scientists is to study how to operate military actions.

+ Woodpeckers operate mainly on tree trunks, staying in place propped up by their stiff tail feathers.

+ The faculty is organised into academic departments that operate more or less independently of one another.

+ Students also operate a local cable channel known as Buckeye TV, which airs mostly in the campus housing.

+ John Wiley Sons 2003 For organic materials, such as charge transfer salts, the methods operate near room temperature and are often similar to the methods of organic synthesis.

+ In 1905, Lombardi received a business license to operate a pizza restaurant.

+ President William McKinley temporarily transferred the ships of the Revenue Cutter Service to operate under the direction of the Secretary of the Navy.

+ For railways that operate on standard gauge tracks or for former railways that operated on standard gauge tracks, uses this template but fills in the parameter automatically.

+ They may be unable to safely drive or operate machinery.

+ Other international airlines would continue to operate from T1.
+ This template is intended for any operating railway station in Greater London and those stations outside the boundary that operate Transport for London zonal pricing and/or Oyster card pay-as-you-go.

+ Xcelerator will not operate in the rain so that a shortshot does not happen when the launch track is wet.

+ BP will operate phase I of the project.

+ Several larger terminals operate outside and inside of the city.

+ Also to promote friendly relations among the member national associations and to operate in an organized manner for the good order of the sport.

+ In December 2005, Warid Telecom International got a 15-year GSM license to operate as the sixth mobile network in Bangladesh at the cost of USD 50 million.

+ The forces of natural selection have continued to operate on human populations, with evidence that certain regions of the genome show selection in the past 15,000 years.

+ It was used to fly the longest planned flight in the world, from Singapore to Newark but only to be flown by the Airbus A340-500 until they were dropped in November 2013 until they operate it back with the new Airbus A350-900ULR in October 2018 with modified fuel system.

+ Some medical and surgical groups operate as teams.

+ Many Christian Stations operate as non-commercial stations.

+ Some of our senses operate in a logarithmic fashion.

+ The London Underground tracks are south of the National Rail ones and operate from an island platform whilst the National Rail platforms are outside of their tracks.

+ Feynman described a way to move individual atoms to build smaller instruments and operate at that scale.

+ The 1912 Treaty of Fezmade Morocco a protectorate of France, and triggered the 1912 Fez riots. Spain continued to operate its coastal protectorate.

+ Stores operate in the United States, Canada, United Kingdom, Italy, France, Denmark, and Japan.

+ Due to the complicated political situation in Northern Cyprus all flights that K.T.H.Y operate to Europe must travel via an airport in Turkey.

+ Many users operate from shared IP addresses, often those belonging to proxyproxies used by large networks or home users with their Internet service providers.

+ The second versions operate the same as the first, but do not include the heading.

+ The show follows the activities of truck drivers which operate on routes that contain frozen lakes and rivers in the remote Arctic territories of Canada and Alaska.

+ It has two 615 MW reactors and began to operate between 1983 and 1985.

+ The Carnegie Institution for Science, University of Arizona, Harvard University, University of Michigan and the Massachusetts Institute of Technology worked together to build and operate the twin telescopes.

+ The court further enjoined the state of Alabama and city of Montgomery from continuing to operate segregated buses.

+ The following operate the services that comprise the National Rail network in Great Britain.

+ Within trait theory, there are many different approaches to how traits operate and to what extent.

Some example sentences of “maximize”

How to use in-sentence of “maximize”:

– This was to maximize their taxpayer funded allowances.

– The fluid then works to maximize the contact surface area.

– Numerous artists have taken deliberate steps to maximize their chart positions by such tactics as timing a single’s debut to face the weakest possible competition, or massively discounting the price of singles to the point where each individual sale represented a financial loss.

– Within a friendly and nurturing environment, which encourages learning and the pursuit of excellence, Awty celebrates linguistic, cultural and international diversity and seeks to maximize the potential in all of our students as they grow to become responsible world citizens.

– An ideal intelligent machine is a flexible agent which perceives its environment and takes actions to maximize its chance of success at some goal or objective.

– In addition to their shorter length, the trucks underwent weight reduction to maximize use of engine power.

– These heightenings still did not meet irrigation demands and in 1946 it was nearly over-topped by water in an effort to maximize pool elevation.

– In order to maximize artistic impact of their craft, animators employ traditional animation techniques to set pose manually at a specific point in time.

Some example sentences of maximize
Some example sentences of maximize

Use in sentence of “underwater”

How to use in-sentence of “underwater”:

+ Divers sometimes stay underwater for long periods of time.

+ This makes it possible to stay underwater longer.

+ He wrote five books describing his underwater experiences: “La llamada de las profundidades”, Admetlla Lázaro, Eduard.

+ Their eggs are large and scientists have seen many of them laying eggs on underwater objects in fast-flowing creeks and streams, enough that they think all “Nyctimystes” frogs do this.

+ There are many observation areas available for the guests, including underwater viewing, across from a moat, and even of the bears on land only with 3 inches of glass separating them from the visitors.

+ It was underwater about 23 million years ago, and most of it is sunken under the Pacific Ocean.

Use in sentence of underwater
Use in sentence of underwater

Example sentences of “underwater”:

+ Scuba diving is an activity where people can swim underwater for a long time, using a tank filled with compressed air.

+ Interactions between seamounts and underwater currents attract plankton, corals, fish, and cetacea alike.
+ These two things allow them to stay underwater for long periods of time.

+ Scuba diving is an activity where people can swim underwater for a long time, using a tank filled with compressed air.

+ Interactions between seamounts and underwater currents attract plankton, corals, fish, and cetacea alike.

+ These two things allow them to stay underwater for long periods of time.

+ There he saw the shark tube and various exhibits he felt that the underwater world could be done beautifully in computer animation.

+ This frogs lays eggs in groups of 500-1000 at a time on underwater plants.

+ It lays eggs 500-600 at a time on underwater plants in ponds, streams, dams, and ditches.

+ That islands were mentioned by the French marine scientist “Jacques Cousteau” in his book The Silent World, due to the nature of island which a unique scene of coral reefs and crystal clear waters, in addition to the wreckage of two sunken ships, Numidia and Aida, which made these two islands an attractive place for fans of underwater photography.

+ Percy then creates an air bubble and they share “pretty much the best underwater kiss of all time.”.

+ Sonar is a machine that uses underwater sound waves to find other objects in the sea.

+ It also has an underwater observatory in the Red Sea.

+ The Deacon has his crew burn the Mariner’s vessel and shoot at them, but they escape by diving deeper underwater than the bullets can reach.

More in-sentence examples of “underwater”:

+ The attractions include: Steve Irwin’s Australia Zoo, UnderWater World marine park, Aussie World with the Ettamogah Pub, The Buderim Ginger Factory, The Big Pineapple and the Majestic Theatre at Pomona.

+ An Autonomous underwater vehicle is a robot like a submarine that can be used for underwater searches.

+ The country has some natural gas beneath the ground and underwater in the ocean.

+ Eduard Admetlla i Lázaro was a Spanish scuba diver, underwater cameraman and photographer.

+ They usually swim on the surface of the water if undisturbed, though they go underwater when threatened.

+ Les Casquets or northwest of Alderney and are part of an underwater sandstone ridge.

+ In games or contests, swimmers will sometimes do underwater handstands on pool bottoms with legs and feet extended above the water.

+ The torpedo, is an explosive projectile weapon that moves by itself, launched above or below the water surface, that goes underwater toward a target, and made to explode when it hits a target or is near to it.

+ After this, they kiss underwater after eavesdropers dump them into the canoe lake.

+ For underwater scenes, scuba gear can be used to let Duke breathe.

+ By swimming deep within the city’s submerged ruins, and translating underwater murals, he discovers that the Heart of Atlantis provides the city with power and extends their lives through the crystals worn around their necks; he is surprised that this isn’t mentioned in the journal, but upon examination realises a page is missing.

+ Loons can dive up to 200 feet underwater for food.

+ In Lake Victoria, an earthquake forms a underwater fault line.

+ Bathymetry is the study of the underwater terrain of lakes or ocean floors.

+ They are great swimmers and divers; they can stay underwater for 8 minutes.

+ Disney stopped making both a spin-off television series and an underwater attraction at its Disneyland theme park.

+ Although he was criticized for his treasure hunting, he was known as the “true father of underwater archaeology”.

+ It formed between 50,000 and 120,000 years ago from underwater volcanic activity.

+ Because of special dangers, there are advanced classes for things like diving in or around underwater shipwrecks, cave diving, and deep diving.

+ The fly is underwater and looks like drowned or newly hatched insects.

+ Scientists consider “Ambulocetus” to be an early whale because it shares underwater adaptations with them.

+ They lay eggs in groups on underwater plants in still water or water that only moves slowly.

+ During the following night, Grendel’s Mother arrived and Beowulf had an even harder fight against her, as she stole back her son’s arm and retreated to her underwater cave.

+ A seamount is an underwater mountain in the ocean.

+ The underwater village is a popular technical dive for scuba divers.

+ The gate leads into the shrine, which is partly underwater at high tide.

+ The attractions include: Steve Irwin's Australia Zoo, UnderWater World marine park, Aussie World with the Ettamogah Pub, The Buderim Ginger Factory, The Big Pineapple and the Majestic Theatre at Pomona.

+ An Autonomous underwater vehicle is a robot like a submarine that can be used for underwater searches.
+ The country has some natural gas beneath the ground and underwater in the ocean.

+ The Channel Tunnel is a long underwater tunnel between England and France that runs under the English Channel at the Strait of Dover.

+ Most of that tiny area is usually underwater at high tide.

+ New subs were more streamlined and had no deck guns because water dragging against the guns made noise underwater and slowed the subs.

+ The Saikaidō underwater mountain chain is southeast of the Japanese island of Kyushu.

+ One of them is bitten and dragged underwater by an alligator.

+ Harry, Ron, and Hermione are unable to find a way to survive underwater for the second task, leaving Harry panic-stricken.

+ The Hawaiian–Emperor seamount chain is the Hawaiian Islands and the Emperor Seamounts: together they form a vast underwater mountain region of islands seamounts, atolls, shallows, banks and reefs.

+ Then, in 2011, the search for recorders finally ended when an underwater vehicle found the Flight Data Recorder and Cockpit Voice Recorder on 26th April and 2nd May respectively.The recorders are sent to BEA’s headquarters for analysis and arrived on 12th May.

+ When they are not active, they can hold their breath for a maximum of about two hours underwater before drowning.

+ Helium is mixed with oxygen and other gases for deep underwater diving because it does not cause nitrogen narcosis.

+ Joysticks are also used for controlling machines such as cranes, trucks, underwater unmanned vehicles and zero turning radius lawn mowers.

+ Pillow lavas are used generally to show volcanism occurred underwater in metamorphic belts.

+ Or, after underwater earthquakes, gaps caused by the earthquake can be filled in with breccia, that is, broken rocks.

+ Once, while he is in Poseidon’s underwater court making various items at the forge, he appears in an Iris message between him and Percy.

+ Kelly Tarlton, an avid diver, treasure hunter and undersea explorer, was responsible for the Underwater World concept and construction.

+ They lay eggs on underwater plants.

+ These ridges make up the longest mountain range in the world, all underwater except for short stretches like Iceland.

+ They lay eggs in cracks in underwater rocks.

+ He shows them his home, an underwater city built by Gungans to stay away from humans.

+ At the Scripps Institution of Oceanography, McArthur conducted graduate research in nearshore underwater acoustic propagation and digital signal processing.

+ Kelly Tarlton died suddenly of a heart attack on March 17, 1985, seven weeks after the Underwater World opened.

+ It is an underwater microcontinent: it is a million square kilometres in size, about three times the surface area of Japan.

+ The diameters of these flat underwater summits may be more than.

In sentence use of “large numbers of”

How to use in-sentence of “large numbers of”:

+ There are a large numbers of military cemeteries of Ghurkas’ and Commenwealth soldiers.

+ Report of Commissioners, Vol I, New Delhi, p 105 Because of the large numbers of people killed and injured, general Dyer became known as “The Butcher of Amritsar” in India.

+ The Dardic languages also contain large numbers of loanwords from Burushaski.

+ Meanwhile, large numbers of new prisoners arrived.

+ Although Sai Baba died almost 100 years ago, still today large numbers of people follow him or have great respect for him.

+ From the river, large numbers of fish arrive.

+ They hurt or even kill large numbers of people.

+ Pigs can eat acorns without a problem, whereas to ponies and cattle large numbers of acorns can be poisonous.

In sentence use of large numbers of
In sentence use of large numbers of

Example sentences of “large numbers of”:

+ Penguin species found here include large numbers of King Penguins, as well as Chinstrap Penguin, Macaroni Penguin, Gentoo penguin, Adelie Penguin, and Rockhopper Penguin “”.

+ Although Soviet sources describe this struggle as a minor chapter in the republic’s history, it is clear that opposition was important and resulted in the death of large numbers of Turkmens.Curtis.

+ These architects were interested in building housing for large numbers of people.

+ When the police moved into Lena, the strikers closed ranks and the situation rapidly worsened, resulting in troops firing on and killing or injuring a large numbers of miners.

+ It has been designated as a Site of Special Scientific Interest, because of the large numbers of birds it attracts.

+ Hitler and Stalin sent in large numbers of soldiers.

+ Penguin species found here include large numbers of King Penguins, as well as Chinstrap Penguin, Macaroni Penguin, Gentoo penguin, Adelie Penguin, and Rockhopper Penguin "".

+ Although Soviet sources describe this struggle as a minor chapter in the republic's history, it is clear that opposition was important and resulted in the death of large numbers of Turkmens.Curtis.

+ Japan thought that when Russia completed her railway in 1906 she would be able to beat Japan in a war because she could supply large numbers of troops there.

+ Many sources say large numbers of Anglo-Saxon settlers arrived.”The Oxford Handbookغ of Anglo-Saxon Archaeology”, eds.

+ In practice, large numbers of the injected mice are mated, which produces a few white mice.

+ For the first time in the history of China, large numbers of persons also moved from one area to other area for settlement.

More in-sentence examples of “large numbers of”:

+ The formation of stable Covalent bondcovalent chemical bonds between the monomers sets polymerization apart from other processes, such as crystallization, in which large numbers of molecules aggregate under the influence of weak intermolecular forces.

+ They tend to be surrounded by large numbers of globular clusters.

+ They like streams with large numbers of plants in them.

+ After the German attack on Denmark and Norway in April 1940, when the Germans used large numbers of airborne troops, the Dutch were worried about a similar attack.

+ In tropical countries, field research has shown that there are large numbers of species involved in mimicry.

+ The Romanians were overrun by large numbers of tanks.

+ They also took on the task of enforcing immigration laws, especially on the West Coast where large numbers of ChinaChinese coolies were being brought in on overcrowded ships.

+ Sparse vegetation inland supported “about six hundred sheep, many goats, a few cows horses”, and large numbers of guineafowl imported from the Cape Verde islands, as well as rats, Mousemice and land crabs.

+ Its nickname is ‘The Trembling Lady’ because of its tendency to vibrate when large numbers of people walked over it.

+ Both sides used large numbers of artillery and thousands of infantry in the offensives.

+ They broadcast the Christian message to countries and groups where there are large numbers of persons who are not Christians, or who are Christians with limited access to churches or Christian teaching.

+ In the 1990s large numbers of them began to create paintings.

+ Ethnic conflict in Sri Lanka during the 1970s and the 80s saw large numbers of Sri Lankan Tamils fleeing to Tamil Nadu.

+ He pursued an aggressive door-to-door strategy and put up large numbers of green yard signs.

+ Starting in the 1980s, large numbers of Punjabis migrated to the Middle East, United KingdomBritain, Punjabi diaspora.

+ B cells respond to pathogens by producing large numbers of antibodyantibodies which then destroy foreign objects like bacteria and viruses.

+ Since the 1970s, many countries have closed large numbers of psychiatric hospitals.

+ Dürer made large numbers of other practice drawings, especially for his paintings and engravings, and many survive, most famously the “Praying Hands”.

+ However, large numbers of immigrants from Germany only arrived in Curitiba during the 1870s, most of them was Volga Germans from Russia.

+ During his life, Herodotus probably told his stories in front of large numbers of people in Greek cities.

+ After the eight planets formed, large numbers of leftover protoplanets, asteroids, and comets pursued eccentric orbits throughout our system, bombarding the early Earth and the other planets and moons until approximately 3800 mya.

+ If this were the restriction, planar graphs would require arbitrarily large numbers of colors.

+ In recent times, due to the political upheaval in Fiji, large numbers of Fiji Indians have migrated to Australia, New Zealand, United States and Canada, taking the Fiji Hindi language with them.

+ The first mRNA vaccines were made in the 1990s, but scientists did not make large numbers of them until the 2010s.

+ It can be one of many reason that explain the large numbers of lower class people who join religious sects or partake in mainstream religious practice, e.g attend church, temple or mosque.

+ The formation of stable Covalent bondcovalent chemical bonds between the monomers sets polymerization apart from other processes, such as crystallization, in which large numbers of molecules aggregate under the influence of weak intermolecular forces.

+ They tend to be surrounded by large numbers of globular clusters.

+ New York City has had large numbers of immigrants for centuries.

+ Sheikh Abu Bakr Muhammad Sibahi, ‘ Lahore: Qurtaba Press, 1966, pp.23-28 Additionally, the Muslim conquests had brought large numbers of Christian monks and hermits, especially in Syria and Egypt, under Muslim rule.

+ For example duck hunters may want a lake to be eutrophic so that it will support large numbers of ducks.

+ The scientists said it would be easy to make large amounts of vaccine and large numbers of microneedle arrays to use on people.

+ Fortunately, this species is quite fast growing and produces large numbers of young, so the tiger shark faces no real threat.

+ The Internet has large numbers of compendia in the form of databases.

+ In the late 20th and early 21st centuries, large numbers of Muslims immigrated to Western Europe.

+ They studied large numbers of data and saw a pattern that said the organisms in Olfactores had a relationship with each other that they did not have with cephalochordates.

+ Along with the many Italian versions, different kinds of Parmigiana have been developed across the world, most often in countries where large numbers of Italians immigrated.

+ The goldrushes of New South Wales and Victoria started in 1851 leading to large numbers of people arriving to search for gold.

+ Slave breeders favored woman slaves who could have large numbers of children.

+ The milky-blue colour in the bloom suggests that it has large numbers of coccolithophores.

+ See § Large numbers of authors, below. The last required parameter is the year of publication.

+ Before the drainage and lowering of the water levels Hatfield chase was home to large numbers of aquatic birds.

+ Due to its proximity to Madras city, there were also large numbers of Europeans in the district.

+ This template will return a number in days if the date given is less than 60 days away; otherwise, it will return a number in months, so that it does not return large numbers of days that are probably not very useful, which can sometimes be in the thousands.

+ Its water surface covers The lake has large numbers of fish, including channel catfishchannel, blue, and sunfish such as bluegill, shellcracker and others.

+ Buffets are effective for serving large numbers of people at once, and are often seen in institutional settings, such as business conventions or large parties.

+ The electron spin of large numbers of electrons plays a role as a source of the magnetism in permanent magnets.

+ The Roman forces were not marching in combat formation, and there were also large numbers of camp-followers.

+ The island’s wildlife includes a colony of puffins and large numbers of rabbits.

+ Statisticians say because any test can have inaccuracies, mass testing at this scale might cause hundreds of thousands of false positives a day, resulting in very large numbers of people being told they are infected when they are not infected.

+ They are also installed where large numbers of pedestrians are attempting to cross regularly cross.

“electrochemical” use in-sentences

How to use in-sentence of “electrochemical”:

+ It is powered by a transCell membranemembrane proton electrochemical gradient.

+ Common analytical techniques used for quantitative determinations in environmental chemistry include classical wet chemistry, such as gravimetric, titrimetric and electrochemical methods.

+ Edward Weston was an English-born American chemist noted for his achievements in electroplating and his development of the electrochemical cell, named the Weston cell, for the voltage standard..

+ Line notation can also be a word and symbol description of an electrochemical cell used in chemistry.

+ In this way he discovered Volta’s Law of the electrochemical series, and the law that the electromotive force of a galvanic cell.

+ The question, then, is how it can be possible for conscious experiences to arise out of a lump of gray matter endowed with nothing but electrochemical properties.

+ In other electrochemical cells an externally supplied electric current is used to drive a chemical reaction which would not occur spontaneously.

+ Peters’ research focused on the electrochemical behavior of halogenated organic compounds.

electrochemical use in-sentences
electrochemical use in-sentences

How to use in-sentence of “pigeon”

How to use in-sentence of “pigeon”:

+ The game has three modes: one-duck mode, with only one duck on the screen; two-duck mode, with two on the screen; and a third mode called “clay pigeon shooting”.

+ The rock pigeon is a member of the bird family Columbidae, commonly referred to as simply pigeons.

+ Harry and Marv later attempt to shoot Kevin at Central Park, but a homeless pigeon lady throws bird seed at them causing pigeons to attack them.

+ The species is not the only pigeon to have increased its range due to the actions of man; several other species have become established outside of their natural range after escaping captivity.

+ They are home to unique plant and animal species, including the famous Trocaz Pigeon or Madeira Laurel Pigeon.

How to use in-sentence of pigeon
How to use in-sentence of pigeon

Example sentences of “pigeon”:

+ The feral pigeon live in large numbers in towns and cities all over the world.

+ The African green pigeon is a bird native to Sub-Saharan Africa.

+ They are found among all pigeons and doves where they are referred to as pigeon milk.

+ Lightning Rod is a wooden roller coaster located at Dollywood Dollywood near Pigeon Forge, Tennessee.

+ Mrs Beeton’s “Book of Household Management” has recipes for roast pigeon and pigeon pie, a popular, inexpensive food in Victorian industrial Britain.

+ The Passenger pigeon is a famous example.

+ The name is also used to describe other edible seeds from the Fabaceae like the pigeon pea and the seeds from several species of “Lathyrus”.

+ In modern French, the bird is known as the pigeon migrateur.

+ The passenger pigeon, or, wild pigeon was a species of bird, “Ectopistes migratorius”, that was once common in North America.

+ They include the “Rookety-coo” sound of a pigeon and the “Cockadoodledoo!” of a rooster.

+ The feral pigeon live in large numbers in towns and cities all over the world.

+ The African green pigeon is a bird native to Sub-Saharan Africa.

+ The passenger pigeon or wild pigeon was a species of pigeon that was once the most common bird in North America.

+ The term passenger pigeon in English derives from the French word “passager”, meaning to pass by.

+ The mourning dove.The bird is also called the western turtle dove or American mourning dove or rain dove, and used to be known as the Carolina pigeon or Carolina turtledove.

+ In Europe, the common wood pigeonwood pigeon is commonly shot as a game bird.

+ Since the beginning of the Open Door Policy, Tianjin has been built more than a dozen industrial zones, creating a lot Chinese famous brand like Flying Pigeon bicycles, Seagull brand watches.

+ In the 18th century, the passenger pigeon in Europe was known to the French as tourtre; but, in New France, the North American bird was called tourte.

+ Split Pigeon peas – that are actually considered pulses, which include peas and beans – are also sometimes erroneously referred to and sold as lentils.

+ The feral domestic pigeon is often called the “rock dove”: it is common in many cities.