How to use in sentence of “prostitution”

How to use in-sentence of “prostitution”:

– Some people say that making prostitution legal where it is not will not solve these problems.

– Most prostitution happens between adults, but many prostitutes are children.

– Isobel Shaw in ‘Pakistan handbook’ 1988 During the rule of the Sikh king Ranjit Singh, prostitution also was common.

– For example, if prostitution is illegal, they try to make it legal.

– The Government of Brazil has increased efforts to combat child prostitution and sex tourism.

– Forced prostitution is a type of slavery.

– The legal status of prostitution varies from country to country.

– This convention from 1999, provides that countries that have signed it must get rid of child prostitution s soon as possible.

How to use in sentence of prostitution
How to use in sentence of prostitution

Example sentences of “prostitution”:

– Child sex tourism also falls within the category of the prostitution of children.

– Later, under the harsh Islamic Extremismpuritanical rule of the military dictator General Muhammad Zia-ul-Haq, a big operation was started to ‘clean’ the area from prostitution and crime.

– There are some places, where prostitution is legal, but advertising for it is not.

– People working in this area are often regarded as the lowest type of prostitutes, but street prostitution also allows for people to only work occasionally, for example when they need money to buy drugs.

– The Capones were known for smuggling, bootlegging Alcoholic drinkliquor and prostitution in Chicago, Illinois from around the 1920s until 1931.

– Male prostitution workers occur in some Tunisian tourist resorts.

– At first there was temple prostitution in many Mediterranean and Middle Eastern countries.

– Off-street prostitution includes massage parlors, strip clubs, and escort services.

– By doing this, the area used for prostitution and coffee shops gets smaller and smaller.

– Some countries where prostitution is legal allow it to happen in a brothel, others allow it to happen “on the street”, still others allow both forms.

– In 1910, Ivers opened “Poker’s Palace,” a saloon in Fort Meade, South Dakota, which offered gambling and liquor downstairs, and prostitution upstairs.

– The prostitution of children is seen as part of the commercial sexual exploitation of children, and is sometimes connected to the trafficking of children for sexual purposes, and to child pornography.

– Newspapers wrote about his crimes such as prostitution and drinking alcohol.

– Goodman is known for legalizing prostitution in Las Vegas and allowing brothels to be open in Las Vegas.

– It tells the story of a woman who was put in jail for the crime she did not commit and later had to turn to theft and prostitution to support her son.

– This also means refusing them the chance to take part in society, have a job, or forcing prostitution out of them, not only hate speech or hate crime against the transgender person.

– Some countries have made prostitution illegal.

– On June 24, 2004, members of a criminal group who were intent on forcing 6 Armenian women into prostitution were arrested.

– Child prostitution is prostitution involving children.

- Child sex tourism also falls within the category of the prostitution of children.

- Later, under the harsh Islamic Extremismpuritanical rule of the military dictator General Muhammad Zia-ul-Haq, a big operation was started to 'clean' the area from prostitution and crime.
- There are some places, where prostitution is legal, but advertising for it is not.

How to use in-sentence of “prostitute”

How to use in-sentence of “prostitute”:

+ Yu Gamdong, also written as Yu Gam-don, was a dancer, poet, artist, writer, and prostitute during the Korean Joseon Dynasty.

+ Other research found that 87% of Cambodian girls and 87% of Cambodian boys don’t think that gang rape of a prostitute by a group of men is wrong or actually rape.

+ In 1912 while trying to rescue a prostitute she was severely beaten.

+ In the six scenes, the fate of a country girl who became a prostitute in town is traced out.

+ Not all prostitutes have a boss; some get business through an escort agency, which is a business or person the prostitute pays to advertise for them and get clients for them.

+ Ben’s dad falls in love with a former prostitute named Betty, but Ben does not trust her at first, because he thinks Betty is only in love with his dad for his money.

+ A woman prostitute called Rahab hid these two men and told the enemies they had already left.

How to use in-sentence of prostitute
How to use in-sentence of prostitute

Example sentences of “prostitute”:

+ She runs away from home, becomes a prostitute and is murdered.

+ The story is about a young prostitute in New York City.

+ Police officer Bhumi goes undercover as a prostitute to bust a drug cartel leader, but when the operation goes awry, she makes an unexpected discovery.

+ Bigby saves a young prostitute from a drunk Woodsman.

+ The movie is about an alcoholic police officer and a related prostitute who become caught up in ambushes by corrupt police officers.

+ Keisha is a fictional prostitute who seeks prostitution only to her demise.

+ A male prostitute is sometimes called a “gigolo”.

+ Sometimes, the child isn’t paid with anything at all and is being forced to be a prostitute by an abuser.

+ She runs away from home, becomes a prostitute and is murdered.

+ The story is about a young prostitute in New York City.

+ In order to support himself, he worked as a prostitute for drugs and money—he disclosed this information in an interview for “US” magazine in 1997.

+ He was a male prostitute for about six months.

+ She worked there as a prostitute for two years.

+ He said that the Roman Catholic Church was the prostitute from the book of Revelation.

+ There are also solutions that cover the prostitute as an independet entrepreneur.

Some example sentences of “moraine”

How to use in-sentence of “moraine”:

+ York Region includes farmlands, wetlands and small Kettle kettle lakes, the Oak Ridges Moraine and over 2,070 hectares of regional forest, as well as built-up areas of its towns.

+ Retreating glaciers dropped moraine material about 10,000 years ago.

+ The moraine was made during the last ice age.

+ It formed when the Laurentide ice sheet retreated and glacial meltwater began to accumulate at the glacier’s terminal moraine in Rocky Hill, Connecticut and back up into the Connecticut River.

+ In addition, 30 miles southwest of Milwaukee is the Kettle Moraine and lake country that provides an industrial landscape combined with inland lakes.

Some example sentences of moraine
Some example sentences of moraine

Some in-sentence examples of “purely”

How to use in-sentence of “purely”:

+ But if they believe that benefiting a group of people is more important than benefiting just one person, then purely selfish behavior is irrational.

+ Still, purely based on my personal experience and on my email communications with him, and since he’s promised me he’ll behave and is taking his medication, I believe he’s changed enough and deserves this last chance.

+ Please don’t comment on the hooks purely because of the image that has been nominated with them.

+ If the Moon’s rotation were purely synchronous, Earth would not have any noticeable movement in the Moon’s sky.

+ The matter is purely subjective depending on varying opinions and there has never been any consideration as to what the maximum number of countries in the world could be.

+ The process is purely traditional and the major producing center is the village of Ban Nam Thong.

Some in-sentence examples of purely
Some in-sentence examples of purely

Example sentences of “purely”:

+ Some philosophers and historians have argued that the rebellion was the single most important revolutionary event of the 20th century because it wasn’t participated in by a lone demographic, such as workers or racial monorities, but was rather a purely popular uprising, superseding ethnic, cultural, age and class boundaries.

+ A common purely lunar calendar is the Islamic calendar.

+ Blind experiments went on to be used outside of purely scientific settings.

+ They are purely metallic, as they lose the electrons from the outermost shell readily, they are highly reactive metals and they have low ionization energy.

+ At the time of the release of All About Eve, “The Sarah Siddons Award” was a purely fictitious award.

+ Therefore, recognition by other states is purely “declaratory”.

+ In this method of field research, the researcher is deeply involved in the research process, not just purely as an observer, but also as a participant.

+ The page is purely a definition.

+ The study of kinematics can be abstracted into purely mathematical functions.

+ Otherwise it could be purely concidencial.

+ Some philosophers and historians have argued that the rebellion was the single most important revolutionary event of the 20th century because it wasn't participated in by a lone demographic, such as workers or racial monorities, but was rather a purely popular uprising, superseding ethnic, cultural, age and class boundaries.

+ A common purely lunar calendar is the Islamic calendar.
+ Blind experiments went on to be used outside of purely scientific settings.

More in-sentence examples of “purely”:

+ Some are purely functional, that is to simply stop fraying, while others can also be decorative.

+ Psychology as the behaviorist views it is a purely objective experimental branch of natural science.

+ The term is especially often used for funerary urns, vessels used in burials, either to hold the cremated ashes or as grave goods, but is used in many other contexts; in catering large vessels for serving tea or coffee are often called “tea-urns”, even when they are metal cylinders of purely functional design.

+ If the bird feeds on insects or other animal matter, that is purely accidental.

+ In the real world, market economies are not purely market economies, as societies and governments control them in some ways instead of market forces.

+ Both Gay-Lussac and von Liebig had a purely chemical understanding of the fermentation process: in their view, the process can be optimized with Catalysischemical catalyzers; neither of them was interested in seeing it with a microscope.

+ As a part of their CSR activity, the founders aim at building the university as purely a non-profit institution.

+ They are usually purely white.

+ Hausser wrote two books, published by right-wing imprints, arguing the purely military role of the Waffen-SS and advancing the notion that its troops were “soldiers like any other”.

+ Satyr plays dealt with the mythological subject matter of the tragedies, but in a purely comedic manner.

+ This template “should” be used where the content is being rendered in monospaced text for purely stylistic/display reasons, where this display has no particular semantic significance.

+ Haskell is a purely functional programming languagefunctional programming language.

+ This is a purely informative tracking category for templates with 25–29 taxon IDs from Wikidata and/or manual input; no action is required.

+ The names of oblasts did not usually correspond to the names of the historical regions, as they were created as purely administrative units.

+ He’s being purely disruptive: edit-warring, repeatedly inserting copyright violations, removing attribution templates, making personal attacks and evidently abusing multiple accounts and IPs.

+ Note: Comment about Hian and IP is purely example to gather data about reactions to linking accounts and IPs.

+ Also, it may be awarded to military personnel in actions not in the face of the enemy or for which purely military honours would not normally be granted.

+ A block may be necessary purely to prevent further disruption, if not blocking them from editing certain pages.

+ Recently people have been approving or denying hooks purely because of the image, and/or making a big thing of the image.

+ Victoire and her sister Marie Adélaïde were close to the young king but did not like his wife “Marie Antoinette” purely because she was Austrian.

+ Most broadly, ‘culture’ includes all human phenomena which are not purely results of human genetics.

+ The committee also found that the existence of states was a question of fact, while the recognition by other states was purely declaratory and not a determinative factor of statehood.

+ When strangely ridiculed about the lack of guitar and drums on the album, based purely on their first release of “Heavy”, Brad Delson responded by saying that actually, there is a lot of guitar in the album.

+ This is purely a source code changethe actual display of the citation in the text to a reader is unaffected.

+ In Transcendental Meditation, the sounds are used purely as sounds independent of any associated meanings in any language.

+ However, the relations are not purely domestic relations either.

+ If this is accepted as part of the definition, then it includes the artificial intelligence of robots capable of “machine learning”, but excludes those purely autonomic sense-reaction responses that can be observed in many plants.

+ Otherwise, the field of biogeography would be a purely descriptive one.

+ If empty, the image does not link to anything; this is appropriate for purely decorative images.

+ Under a single-payer system, most medical care would be paid for by the Government of the United States, ending the need for private health insurance and premiums, and probably recasting private insurance companies as providing purely supplemental coverage, to be used when non-essential care is sought.

+ It is purely an honour for whatever good work he or she has already done.

+ The parotid gland produces purely serous saliva.

+ Chopin’s “Études” elevated the musical form from purely utilitarian exercises to great artistic masterpieces.

+ Prior to the draws, UEFA may form “groups” in accordance with the principles set by the Club Competitions Committee and based on geographical, logistical and political reasons, and they are purely for convenience of the draw and do not resemble any real groupings in the sense of the competition.

+ This is purely for no other reason than experience personal preference – I know that I would be able to make the ‘correct’ decision but I have had enough drama surrounding me my actions in the past here so I just want to play it safe and leave the controversial ones to someone else initially.

+ That’s purely a personal opinion, of course, though.

+ Is this purely coincidental or is MediaWiki watching what pages I go on? This always happens not only with Hong Kong, but with other subjects I may view, this is a bit strange…

+ His followers come from all religions: ZoroastrianismZoroastrians, Jews, Hindus, Muslims, Sufis, Buddhists, and Sikhs, as well as from no religion, there are atheists and agnostics who may not necessarily believe in God, but who are attracted purely to his honest and loving way of life.

+ In 1934, he completed his “Symphony No.2”, his last purely orchestral work, conducted in Amsterdam and New York by Bruno Walter.

+ There are many specialist online dating services or other internet websites, known as “adult personals” or “adult matching” sites, which cater to people looking for a purely physical relationship, without emotional attachments.

+ Focusing purely on reading difficulty, and restricting to a simple multiple-choice score would not generate any problems with vandalism and editors would not feel obliged to respond.

+ Filburn”, the Court ruled that production quotas under the Agricultural Adjustment Act of 1938 were constitutionally applied to agricultural production that was consumed purely intrastate, because its effect upon interstate commerce placed it within the power of Congress to regulate under the Commerce Clause.

+ I am also going to leave this open for now, and if in a day or two no one closes this I will close this per UNINVOLVED, since I have acted purely in an administrative capacity so far.

+ The enwp versions of most of these pages are purely collections of statistics gathered by the U.S.

+ On the other end, at value 6, he or she has a purely homosexual orientation.

+ A person is not guilty of treason if his help is purely humanitarian.

+ Adams’ trained purely technical and taught Austin the wrestling moves.

+ Equality feminists opposed protective legislature, such as maturity leave, purely on principle.

+ Pain can have many different aspects: It might be purely relying on sensory input, but it might also involve emotions and thought.

+ Perhaps, since most people think the quick deletion regulations as applied here is purely bureaucratic, why not renominate the oneline city stubs for deletion.

+ Some are purely functional, that is to simply stop fraying, while others can also be decorative.

+ Psychology as the behaviorist views it is a purely objective experimental branch of natural science.
+ The term is especially often used for funerary urns, vessels used in burials, either to hold the cremated ashes or as grave goods, but is used in many other contexts; in catering large vessels for serving tea or coffee are often called "tea-urns", even when they are metal cylinders of purely functional design.

Some sentences in use of “heliocentric”

How to use in-sentence of “heliocentric”:

+ The only other astronomer from antiquity known by name who supported Aristarchus’ heliocentric model was Seleucus of Seleucia.

+ The heliocentric theory was successfully revived nearly 1800 years later by Copernicus, after which Johannes Kepler and Isaac Newton gave the theoretical explanation based on laws of physics, namely Kepler’s laws for the motion of planets and Newton’s laws on gravitational attraction and dynamics.

+ It is usually a heliocentric model.

+ There are two versions: the geocentric ecliptic coordinates centred on the Earth, and heliocentric ecliptic coordinates centred on the centre of mass of the solar system.

+ The heliocentric ecliptic system describes the planets’ orbital movement around the Sun, and centres on the barycenter of the solar system.

+ Though the original text has been lost, a reference in Archimedes’ book “The Sand Reckoner” describes Aristarchus’ heliocentric theory.

+ It should not be used for flights which are undergoing routine operations, such as spacecraft that have reached their operational orbits, or probes in heliocentric orbit coasting to their rendezvous with a planetary body.

Some sentences in use of heliocentric
Some sentences in use of heliocentric

In-sentence examples of “anaerobic”

How to use in-sentence of “anaerobic”:

+ The green sulfur bacteria are a family family of obligately anaerobic photoautotrophic bacteria.

+ A hydrogenosome is a membrane-enclosed organelle of some Anaerobic organismanaerobic trichomonads, fungi and a few metazoa.

+ The spongy, unstable, waterlogged, anaerobic beds of peat can be up to 20 m deep with low pH and low nutrients.

+ The group is typically divided into the Clostridia, which are Anaerobic organismanaerobic, the Bacilli, which are aerobic, and the Mollicutes, a class of bacteria which do not have cell walls.

+ For example, no mitochondria in the anaerobic protist “Entamoeba histolytica” is a result of their secondary loss.

+ They can also break down these compounds without oxygen, using anaerobic respiration or fermentation.

In-sentence examples of anaerobic
In-sentence examples of anaerobic

Example sentences of “anaerobic”:

+ Weizmann developed a production of acetone from the anaerobic fermentation of maize and horse chestnuts by bacteria.

+ An anaerobic organism is any organismliving thing that does not need oxygen for growth.

+ Obligate anaerobes may use fermentation or anaerobic respiration.

+ Some anaerobic bacteria produce toxins that are highly dangerous to higher organisms, including humans.

+ It can be grown in aerobic or anaerobic conditions in a medium with essential nutrients, including carbon and nitrogen sources.

+ Food is broken down into ethyl alcohol and carbon dioxide this is called anaerobic respiration.

+ Weizmann developed a production of acetone from the anaerobic fermentation of maize and horse chestnuts by bacteria.

+ An anaerobic organism is any organismliving thing that does not need oxygen for growth.

+ Methanogenic archaea populations play an important role in anaerobic wastewater treatments.

+ Enterococci are “facultative anaerobic organisms”.

+ BIFs were formed as anaerobic algae produced waste oxygen that combined with iron, forming magnetite.

+ The primary symptoms are caused by tetanospasmin, a neurotoxin produced by the Anaerobic organismanaerobic bacterium “Clostridium tetani”.

How to use in-sentence of “exploded”

How to use in-sentence of “exploded”:

+ The discontent in the various districts of the company territories exploded in 1857 into the Sepoy war.

+ On July 21, 1905 one of the “USS Bennington”’s boilers exploded while it was in San Diego, California.

+ After the ferry left the dock, the bombs exploded and the ferry sank into deep water.

+ It exploded into four pieces, and those were scattered.

+ Most of them exploded but nobody was injured or killed by any of the bombs used during the massacre.

+ After that, it exploded and made all the matter in the expanding universe.

How to use in-sentence of exploded
How to use in-sentence of exploded

Example sentences of “exploded”:

+ A few minutes later a Confederate shell exploded mortally wounding Miles.

+ Broken Arrow was an accident where a Titan missile exploded but no one was hurt.

+ Another bomb exploded underwater which bent the flight deck and caused rudder damage.

+ In 2018, an engine exploded on a Southwest Airlines flight, killing one passenger.

+ On October 1, 1964, the University of California, Berkeley exploded into the free speech movement.

+ The scandal of a man imprisoned without reason and crazy exploded and Cafiero was released with only the choice between forced residence in Barletta, his birth town, or exile to Switzerland.

+ At 8:15 on August 6, 1945, the first atomic bomb to be used in war exploded almost directly above the dome.

+ A few minutes later a Confederate shell exploded mortally wounding Miles.

+ Broken Arrow was an accident where a Titan missile exploded but no one was hurt.
+ Another bomb exploded underwater which bent the flight deck and caused rudder damage.

+ During Chun’s visit to Rangoon, Burma in 1983, a bomb exploded at a mausoleum he was about to visit.

+ In 2003, a rocket exploded and killed 21 people.

+ A minivan exploded without casualties.

+ A bomb was hidden in an ambulance and exploded at a second police checkpoint, according to officials.

+ A truck filled with 680kg of explosives, planted by Ramzi Yousef, exploded in the underground garage of the 1 WTC.

More in-sentence examples of “exploded”:

+ The plane exploded when it was flying 31,000 feet over Atlantic Ocean South of Ireland.

+ In early 1970, a firebomb exploded throughout the Kansas Union.

+ The plane exploded when it was flying 31,000 feet over Atlantic Ocean South of Ireland.

+ In early 1970, a firebomb exploded throughout the Kansas Union.

+ Eido was a good swimmer and the bomb exploded outside his favorite Beirut beach resort, Sporting Club.

+ The heavier elements were released into the interstellar medium when the star exploded as a supernovae.

+ On 7 July 2005, at about 08:50, bombs exploded on two Circle line trains.

+ Birmingham became famous around the world when a bomb exploded in the Sixteenth Street Baptist Church on Sunday September 15, 1963.

+ The second bomb exploded in the Tavern in the Town, killing eleven people.

+ On May 26, 1991 the Boeing 767 exploded mid-flight over the Burma-Thai border.

+ Grenades in the early 20th century exploded on contact.

+ The object exploded in a height of 7 to 14 km above ground; for this reason there is no impact crater.

+ It exploded among the armed and fueled aircraft.

+ On the morning of January 27, 2019, two bombs exploded at the Roman Catholic Our Lady of Mount Carmel Cathedral, JoloCathedral of Our Lady of Mount Carmel in Jolo, Sulu, in the Philippines.

+ On 22 March 2016, two bombs exploded at the airport.

+ The most massive stars of Hodge 301 have already exploded in supernovae.

+ It has now exploded into many different processes, such as special effects.

+ Utam saving Samantha by an bombs inside the building, then Utam burns onto the fire his back onto and fell off the building and exploded Utam to rubble.

+ The bomb exploded but nobody was seriously injured.

+ The plane crashed and exploded into a huge ball of flame next to a railroad track, throwing Bayles’ body 300m from the cockpit.

+ The one that did not land, Apollo 13, had to abort its mission when an oxygen tank exploded in the spaceship.

+ At 7:10 pm a bomb exploded in crowded section of Maidan when the Ramleela procession was being taken out.

+ The tanker exploded during the looting, burning 60 people to death.

+ A thousand kilograms of TNT exploded in a van near his car.

+ On 10 August 2019, a fuel tanker exploded in Morogoro, Tanzania.

+ Lockerbie is a small town in Scotland that was devastated on 21 December 1988 when a Pan American 747-400 aeroplane crashed after a bomb exploded on board.

+ Between 1953 and 1957, the British government exploded nine atomic bombs in the Great Victoria Desert at Maralinga and Emu.

+ One package, however, exploded onboard an airplane, which could have killed all the passengers and personnel, but it only caused an emergency landing.

+ Disguised to look like a lump of coal it exploded when shoveled into a boiler.

+ Two bombs exploded at Brussels AirportBrussels Zaventem Airport and one exploded at station.

+ About 60 terajoules were released by the atomic bomb that exploded over Hiroshima.

+ A fourth exploded an hour later at 09:47 on a bus in Tavistock Square.

+ According to Arlington National cemetery records John Manning, chief of the Army’s Mortuary Affairs Branch stated that witnesses to the crash reported that the…”helicopter burst into flames and exploded when it hit the ground.”.

+ This missile exploded before it hit the target.

+ Two taxies carrying explosives were also exploded killing its drivers and inmates in WadiBunder and Vile Parle area.

+ In 1986, the Space Shuttle Challenger exploded killing everyone on board.

+ A letter bomb is a bomb concealed within a letter or package, which is then sent or left for the recipient to find, typically with his or her name and address on, to be opened and then exploded, or exploded within a certain time.

+ Lenin was killed when one of his bombs exploded while being taken to an attack on a police station in 1994.

+ Before Mount Vesuvius exploded in 84 B.C.E people who lived nearby did not even know that it was a volcano, because it had not erupted for 600 years.

+ At 2:49 PM EDT, two bombs exploded thirteen seconds apart near the finish line.

+ On 17 January 1997, Delta 241 carrying the GPS IIR-1 exploded 13seconds after taking off.

+ They fired shells which exploded when they hit.

+ The first bomb exploded in the Mulberry Bush, killing ten people.

+ On 15 April 2013, 2013 Boston Marathon bombingstwo bombs exploded at the Boston Marathon.

+ Zvonko Busic, Julienne Busic, Petar Matanic, Frane Pesut,defendants-appellants After terrorists learned that the bomb in New York had exploded and killed a policeman, they surrendered to French police.

+ The USS Maine exploded in Havana harbor, killing about 260 people on board.

+ As he was about to lie on ground due to fatal injuries, Atul exploded a bomb on Kapil, and felled on the ground fainted, but he did not die.

“profits” – sentence examples

How to use in-sentence of “profits”:

– It was claimed for Yukos that a large part of the profits were covered by investments in plant, and exploration.

– They did this so they could make bigger profits by selling more oil, buses, cars and rubber tires.

– It is a charitable organization, its profits go to the University of Oxford.

– One of their goals is to reduce the “value gap” between the profits made by internet platforms and content creators, which involves requiring financial agreement before they can use their content.

– For this campaign, 40 percent of the profits of Louis Vuitton silver bracelet and necklace Sehun and Irene used in the magazine will go to UNICEF to help children in need.

– He was accused of hiding more than $245,000 in loans and $87,000 in profits from buying and selling silver.

profits - sentence examples
profits – sentence examples

Example sentences of “profits”:

– Although many CanadaCanadian companies had enjoyed large profits following World War I, contracts, wages and working conditions were bad.

– Every year members receive a share of the profits that they helped to create, based on the amount made in profits that year and the how much they had spent with any of its businesses.

– So there were no great profits to be made or money available to buy war supplies.

– The company was founded in 1999, but it really started to make profits in 2003.

– If profits go down stock holders may sell, further damaging the company.

– William Fulbright proposed a bill to use the profits from selling surplus U.S.

– Much of the profits made from the production went to women’s anti-violence charities.

– Artificial scarcity can increase profits for a business.

– Using the profits from the sale of the family house, they bought three ships and started trading with the West Indies.

– The Nazis therefore revisited the possibility of transporting Jews to Auschwitz for liquidation, not only because extermination was easier there, but also because the profits produced from the victims could be kept in German hands, rather than being left for the Croats or Italians.

– Unscrupulous makers produced formulations that were of questionable quality for quick profits and some cases the ingredients were toxic or poisonous.

– In 2017 it was reported that the Grand Lisboa had the lowest revenue and profits during 2016.

– They sell the razor relatively cheaply, and make big profits on the razor blades.

– However, the potential profits from a successful blockade run are tremendous.

– A third of Orion’s profits is from outside Korea.

– The only profits were realized by the initial distributors and the first few levels of farmers.

– Most movies lose money but some make profits in the hundreds of millions, be they dollars, euro or pounds.

- Although many CanadaCanadian companies had enjoyed large profits following World War I, contracts, wages and working conditions were bad.

- Every year members receive a share of the profits that they helped to create, based on the amount made in profits that year and the how much they had spent with any of its businesses.
- So there were no great profits to be made or money available to buy war supplies.

More in-sentence examples of “profits”:

– It was an attempt to be simple and make profits for the Disney studio, is now generally regarded as a classic of animation.

– A monopoly is a type of firm that wants to make its profits as big as possible, and as the market does not have any other large firms, the monopoly is able to set prices on their products or services.

– The money for this independent production came from a common pool formed by a percentage of the profits from each show.

– Some Jobra women were making bamboo furniture and had to take loans for buying bamboo but all their profits were being paid towards the loans.

– This means that some of the profits from these iPods goes to the Global Fund to fight AIDS in Africa.

– The movie was not successful, though it did make over $13 million in profits over a budget of $30 million.

– At first they made profits of 50% or more.

– Indians had to buy British manufactured goods and profits went back to Britain.

– Most of its profits went to German firms.

– They built the bastide because they hoped they would get more profits from the land.

– It was built by impresario Richard D’Oyly Carte with profits from his Gilbert and Sullivan operas, and opened in 1889.

– After some of “fateful encounters” he used his profits to buy a bar.

– The trams in Southampton made good profits for Southampton Corporation.

– Depending on the total cost that the monopoly has, a monopoly may be able to earn supernormal profits in the long run.

– As the average total cost curve also meets at this point, the firm is thus earning normal profits in the long run.

– This often leads to cheaper goods for the consumer, increased profits for the artists, as well as increased artistic freedom.

– Before that the Company had their own army units, paid for by their profits and these joined with British Army units.

– In this form of mortgage, the property is given as a security to the mortgagee, who is let into possession or is permitted to repay himself out of the rents and profits of such property.

– From 1936 to 1938, Pepsi-Cola’s profits doubled.

– When Ronald Reagan became president, he signed the Economic Recovery Tax Act of 1981 which lowered taxes for corporations, supposedly so they could reinvest the surplus profits back into business.

– It also profits by selling phone-related peripheral devices, smart home products, apps, online videos and themes.

– In the 21st century, Marvel’s profits were increasingly derived from toys, video games, and other merchandise featuring their most popular characters and from the production of a string of commercially successful movies.

– This approach has been around since the early 1980s, in an attempt to stay true to the punk ideals of doing it yourself and not selling out to corporate profits and control.

– Hence, the monopoly would set a price that would maximize the profits that they gain, but cause the consumers to have to pay more for the same good.

– The law firm’s profits per equity partner were $3.52 million in 2020.

- It was an attempt to be simple and make profits for the Disney studio, is now generally regarded as a classic of animation.

- A monopoly is a type of firm that wants to make its profits as big as possible, and as the market does not have any other large firms, the monopoly is able to set prices on their products or services.

– The stores also have the Community Chest program, where they donate profits to local charities.

– However the Corporation had not put those profits back into the tram system.

– Local businesses near Camp David are expecting more people in the area and profits because of the summit.

– DRM is a way for companies to keep their profits while sharing their content online.

– The Gorman Tariff Act of 1894 called for a 2% tax on any “gains, profits and incomes” over $4,000 for a period of five years.

– The employers then sold the products for more money and kept the extra as profits so that they themselves could become rich.

– He said in “Table Talks”, “Sermons very little edify children, who learn little thereby; it is more needful they be taught and well instructed in schools, and at home, and that they be learned and examined what they have learned; this way profits much; ’tis very wearisome, but very necessary”.

– The new-found profits also extended down to the individual farmers, as the average wage increased fourfold.

– Technology has changed sawmill operations significantly in recent years, emphasizing increasing profits through waste minimization and increased energy efficiency as well as improving operator safety.

– By using the loss aversion theory as a marketing strategy, firms are able to gain higher profits by changing consumers’ behaviours.

– This hurt the profits of American businesses.

– Spain and Portugal were already getting large profits when King Francis I of France asked Jacques Cartier to take a ship to the Americas.

– In the case of benefit concerts, a portion of profits will often go towards a charitable organization.

– People and companies who don’t comply with the GDPR law may face a fine of up to 20,000,000 euros, or up to 4% of the company’s profits from the previous year, whichever number is higher.

– But the trustee must otherwise turn over all profits from the trust properties.

– A special plush Mog and book version of the story were sold at Sainsbury’s, with all profits being donated to Save the Children’s child literacy work.

– In most common law legal systems, partnership is defined by statute as “the relationship which subsists between persons carrying on a business in common with a view of profit” A special kind of partnership is a co-operative which is usually founded on one man–one vote principle and distributes its profits according to the amount of goods produced or bought by the member.

– Because of this, a court later decided that Jolson and Rose had to pay Puccini’s publishers $25,000 and all later profits from the song.

– The Wilson-Gorman tax act called for a 2% income tax on any “gains, profits and incomes” over $4,000 for a period of five years.

– The French had major profits in the fur trade until they lost Canada in the French and Indian War.

– Co-op Societies were also made to pay “excess profits tax” even though as co-operatives they made no profits.

– In bid rigging potential suppliers form an agreement as to which of them will win a supply contract at a price above the competitive price and, if one of them wins, then agree to a rule for sharing the extra profits among themselves.

In sentence use of “sprinkler”

How to use in-sentence of “sprinkler”:

+ A sprinkler irrigation system is a pressurized system, which means it needs water under pressure to work.

+ Usually the sprinkler head is on a small pipe that comes out of the ground.

+ The phoenix was transferred to a small cage with a sprinkler on the roof.

+ Whilst there was much criticism of the lack of fire sprinkler systems, Geoff Wilkinson, the building regulations columnist for the “Architects’ Journal”, wrote in a comment on 14 June, before the cause was known, that if a leaking gas riser or the cladding were at fault, sprinklers would have had little effect.

+ Center pivot irrigation is a type of sprinkler irrigation.

+ There are about 40,000 sprinkler heads in the building.

+ The building was built with a fire sprinkler system, even though it wasn’t required at the time.

+ The sprinkler was turned on every night, and Phoenix coughed.

In sentence use of sprinkler
In sentence use of sprinkler

“revolt” how to use in sentences

How to use in-sentence of “revolt”:

+ The first major slave revolt took place in Dominican Republic’s hills in 1522.

+ But the Albanians, influenced by the Parthian Empire were not slow to revolt against Rome: in 36 BC Mark Antony found himself obliged to send one of his lieutenants to bring an end to their rebellion.

+ David Franzoni’s screenplay was based on the book “Mutiny on the Amistad: The Saga of a Slave Revolt and Its Impact on American Abolition, Law, and Diplomacy”.

+ However, they also think that capitalism will give way to communism; as the exploitation of workers becomes worse it will lead workers to revolt against their capitalist rulers.

+ In 1926 he attempted a revolt against the Spanish dictatorship of Miguel Primo de Rivera.

+ He was inspired by the Russian revolutionaries who believed that armed revolt can only bring freedom.

+ John Brown’s raid on Harpers Ferry was an effort by white peoplewhite abolitionist John Brown to start an armed slave revolt in 1859.

revolt how to use in sentences
revolt how to use in sentences

Example sentences of “revolt”:

+ Despite the deal, the French people later accused L’Ouverture of planning another revolt against the plantation owners.

+ The revolt was caused by Henry VIII’s Dissolution of the Monasteries, which caused problems with around 500,000 monks and nuns.

+ The novel “Upanibesh” was the first attempt in Oriya Literature to focus the sexuality as a part of social revolt by any woman.

+ Had Brown succeeded, he intended to arm slaves in the south with weapons to revolt against their masters.

+ It again met from 1551 to 1552, when it was suspended due to a revolt against the emperor.

+ He fought the revolt of 1857 with many freedom fighters or leaders such as Rani Lakshmi bai, Tatya Tope and Mangal Pandey, etc against the East India Company and British army.

+ Despite the deal, the French people later accused L'Ouverture of planning another revolt against the plantation owners.

+ The revolt was caused by Henry VIII's Dissolution of the Monasteries, which caused problems with around 500,000 monks and nuns.
+ The novel "Upanibesh" was the first attempt in Oriya Literature to focus the sexuality as a part of social revolt by any woman.

+ The revolt took place between 1953 and 1959.

+ Afterwards, Mayapan ruled all of Yucatán until a revolt in 1450.

+ He tried to overthrow Ryan, but the revolt was violently crushed and Fontaine was said to be dead.

+ Over time, it changed from a simple revolt against the established order to a multi-sided civil war.

More in-sentence examples of “revolt”:

+ On New Year’s Eve of 1959, Atlas and his ADAM-infused followers began a new revolt against Ryan that spread throughout Rapture.

+ A citizen led revolt overthrew and killed the brutal new dictator General Vilbrun Guillaume Sam within 6 months of seizing power.

+ Flamank proposed that they should head for Kent, ‘the classic soil of protests’, the home of the Peasants’ Revolt of 1381 and Jack Cade’s rebellion, to rally the volatile men of Kent to their banner.

+ The southern kingdom, Judah, became rich inside the greater empires of the region before a revolt against Babylon led to it being destroyed early in the 6th century.

+ He also recorded the events of the Black Plague, the revolt of the Jacquerie, and other historical events that occurred in his lifetime.

+ During the revolt however, the Seljuk dynastySeljuks of Damascus were able to take back Banyas.

+ The Peasants’ Revolt was a rebellion of peasants in England, in 1381.

+ Ball was later killed after King Richard II after the Peasants Revolt was put to an end by the king.

+ He also believed that capitalism would unfairly treat many people and that those people would eventually revolt and switch to socialism.

+ Serving as a general in the Roman army along the German frontier, Trajan successfully put down the revolt of Antonius Saturninus in 89 AD.

+ The settlement and the bridge were destroyed in a revolt led by Queen Boudicca in 60 AD.

+ The Persians won the revolt and this led to the end of the war.

+ Eleanor supported a revolt by her children against their father’s rule in 1173.

+ He served as a soldier in the army of Henry IV of France against the Spaniards, fought for Dutch revolt from the Spanish King Philip II of Spain.

+ The conspirators also planned to kidnap the royal children, Alice Hogge, “God’s Secret Agents: Queen Elizabeth’s Forbidden Priests and the Hatching of the Gunpowder Plot” HarperCollins p.344 and lead a popular revolt in the Midlands.

+ After the Revolt of 1857, the British East India Company rule ceased, and India came under the direct control of the British government.

+ This stopped the only effective resistance to William, and the revolt was quickly crushed.

+ Later in the revolt he was attacked and he died.

+ However, his efforts failed and the revolt was met with a harsh Macedonian reaction.

+ Marcus was now interrupted by a revolt in the east, led by the Roman general Avidius Cassius.

+ In 70 AD it was the scene of the Great Jewish Revolt resulting in the institution of the Fiscus Judaicus.

+ The Maccabean Revolt was an insurrection by Jewish patriots against the Seleucid Empire and parties who wished to adopt Greek culture.

+ They met in “tertulias” and decided in 1810 that a revolt against the colonial government was needed because Napoleon I had replaced the King of Spain with a French foreigner.

+ The very first time these colors were used together was back in 1916 when the flag of the Arab Revolt was designed.

+ She led a famous revolt against the Roman Empire.

+ On New Year's Eve of 1959, Atlas and his ADAM-infused followers began a new revolt against Ryan that spread throughout Rapture.

+ A citizen led revolt overthrew and killed the brutal new dictator General Vilbrun Guillaume Sam within 6 months of seizing power.

+ He hoped this show of strength would create a revolt against the Roman government.

+ It was he who brought the reinforcements after the revolt of Boudicca.

+ He soon became interested in politics and supported the Decembrist revolt of 1825 when a group of noblemen and army officers tried to put another tsar in power and make him less powerful.

+ Martín Cortés led a revolt against the Spanish government.

+ The July Revolt of 1927 was an example.

+ The revolt was finally destroyed by the concentrated military effort of a single commander, Marcus Licinius Crassus.

+ Lepidus was sidelined, blamed for a revolt in Sicily, and removed from government.

+ In 135, the second Jewish revolt against the Romans, called Bar Kokhba’s revolt, was put down.

+ The “slave revolt in morals” is when the weaker people force their weaker values onto others.

+ It is home to the Punnapra-Vayalar uprising against the British and also the revolt against the Feudal raj.

+ At the time of the 1959 revolt against Chinese Communist rule in Central Tibet, there were around 300 monks at Mindroling.

+ Upon learning of the alleged death of Alexander, Theban exiles in Athens raced off to their native city in Boeotia and sought to incite a revolt from Macedonian rule there.

+ After the collapse of Hassan’s resistance movement, rebellion and revolt occurred with disputes between different tribes in Northern Somalia.

+ He was blamed for a revolt in Sicily.

+ The government of Elizabeth was more peaceful, apart from the revolt of the northern earls in 1569, and she was able to lessen the power of the old nobility and expand the power of her government.

+ European guilt over colonialism, with its use of recently invented guns on people who did not have them inspired fictional treatments such as Aphra Behn’s novel “Oroonoko, or the Royal Slave”, about a slave revolt in Surinam in the West Indies.

+ The Jewish Revolt was already ongoing.

+ With excommunication and a revolt by his dukes, Henry apologized and was forgiven, though the conflict continued.

+ Mexico wasn’t successful in representing the New Mexican people, which lead to another revolt called the Chimayo Rebellion.

+ At the time of mutiny in 1857, the Karlals tried to revolt against the rule of East India Company, however, British were able to imprison Karlal chief Sardar Hassan Ali Khan Karlal and many mutineers of this tribe were hanged along with some Dhund tribesmen.

+ His motives for taking part in the revolt are unclear, as is the depth of his involvement.

+ A brother of Caonabo and other allied Taíno caciques led the revolt against the Spanish and finally lost the battle in 1495.

+ In reaction to King Henry’s tax levy, Michael Joseph, a blacksmith from St Keverne and Thomas Flamank a lawyer from Bodmin, persuaded many of the people of Cornwall to revolt against the King.