“withdrew” – example sentences

How to use in-sentence of “withdrew”:

+ The next day, around 7 am on the 14th, the Imperialist army are exhausted and withdrew to Inakuraishi.

+ The government collapsed within a year because the AIADMK withdrew its support.

+ After low polling numbers, Graham withdrew from the race on December 21, 2015.

+ In January 1987, the Labour Party members of the government withdrew from the government over disagreements due to budget proposals.

+ Gary Johnson withdrew on December 28, 2011 to run for the nomination of the Libertarian Party.

+ Instead of publishing their scoop, they told their findings to McGovern’s top advisor, and Eagleton withdrew as the Democratic nominee.

+ On August 2, 2017, President Trump formally withdrew her nomination and instead nominated her as United States Ambassador to France and United States Ambassador to Monaco.

+ He accepted the post at first, but withdrew his nomination during a press conference on January 18, 1994.

withdrew - example sentences
withdrew – example sentences

Example sentences of “withdrew”:

+ The Parliament of the United Kingdom withdrew the right of the British East India Company to rule India in November 1858.

+ He withdrew after the Iowa primaries.

+ Candidate withdrew self-nomination.

+ Because they withdrew from the 2017 Africa Cup of Nations qualification, Chad is banned from the tournament.

+ She later withdrew from the competition after a few episodes, as she did not feel ready.

+ Marais became the conductor of the Paris Opera in 1706, but after the failure of his 1709 opera, “Sémélé” he gradually withdrew from public life.

+ The Joint Project ran until 1980, when the British withdrew from the program.

+ Shingo Kunieda, defended his 2009 US Open – Wheelchair Men’s Singles2009 title after Nicolas Peifer withdrew from the final.

+ The Parliament of the United Kingdom withdrew the right of the British East India Company to rule India in November 1858.

+ He withdrew after the Iowa primaries.

+ However, Eagleton soon withdrew from the ticker after Robert Boyd reported that Eagleton suffered from psychiatric problems and undergone three shock treatments.

+ Four months after entering the race for Congress in the 3rd District in the 2006 election, Burlison withdrew his candidacy on November 3, 2005.

+ The Japanese 17th Army withdrew to the west coast of Guadalcanal while rear guard groups stopped the American attacks.

+ Carter threatened to boycott the 1980 Olympic Games in Russia unless the Soviet Union withdrew its forces by February 1980.

+ Miller accepted it and withdrew the manuscript from the Journal of the American Chemical Society.

More in-sentence examples of “withdrew”:

+ He ran briefly as an independent candidate, but withdrew on June 18.

+ He withdrew his Third Army Corps to the Linge.

+ He ran briefly as an independent candidate, but withdrew on June 18.

+ He withdrew his Third Army Corps to the Linge.

+ They continued to have success in the Mercedes-Benz withdrew from motor sport, including Formula One, at the end of the 1955 season.

+ On 28 December, after eight days of fighting, the Germans withdrew from the town.

+ I got the email mere seconds after I withdrew my nomination…I’d love to unwithdraw since I now have this sorted but I think that would be too much trouble to ask of the community.

+ Schreiber withdrew in favour of Reuter who took the new official title of Regierender Bürgermeister, at the head an all-party coalition with the from SPD, CDU and FDP.

+ He again withdrew from Knesset in 2016.

+ After this demotion, the one remaining potential buyer withdrew their offer to buy the club., BBC News, June 2 2008 In the belief that Gretna has ceased to exist, they resigned their place in the Scottish Football League on June 3.

+ On June 6, 2011 he withdrew his nomination to serve on the Federal Reserve’s board of governors, citing intractable Republican opposition for 14 months.

+ He was selected for the 1960 Summer Olympics, but withdrew in the last moment due to an illness..

+ Before becoming a professional wrestler, he was going to play football at the University of Oklahoma but he suffered a knee injury and Oklahoma withdrew his football scholarship.

+ These advantages persuaded the Nizam to attempt an Independent existence when the British withdrew from the sub-continent in 1947.

+ The Soviets were unable to fight off the insurgency and withdrew from Afghanistan in 1989.

+ Miles played in the 2001 British Championship, but withdrew before the final round, apparently because of ill-health.

+ The doctors and parents initially agreed to attempt an experimental treatment, but after the child had seizures that caused more brain damage in January, the doctors withdrew their support for trying the treatment because it was futile and would only prolong whatever pain the infant was suffering.

+ Before the Iowa caucuses on February 1, candidates Perry, Walker, Jindal, Graham, and Pataki withdrew due to low polling numbers.

+ Following a poor season, BMW withdrew from Formula One and sold the team back to founder Peter Sauber.

+ At 11:00 AM, 2,500 union members crossed their arms, sang “The Internationale” songs, left the studio, and withdrew to the Theater Institute.

+ His government fell because the two ministers withdrew their support.

+ Polish forces then withdrew to the southeast to wait for French and British support.

+ He withdrew from the election.

+ Their leaders declared that they withdrew from the Axis forces and helped the German army leave the Balkans through Bulgaria.

+ In the later years of her life, she suffered from dementia and withdrew from public engagements in 2002.

+ EWS withdrew them in 2002 after 20 years in service, though 30 were subsequently hired abroad—four to the Netherlands, eight to Spain, and twenty to France.

+ General Hube withdrew his XIV Panzer Corps toward Messina.

+ After the election of Gregory XIII, Peretti withdrew from public activities.

+ The Americans withdrew in July of 1945 to the agreed occupation zone boundaries.

+ After about two months of holding certain areas meant to be in the Soviet zone, the American forces withdrew during July 1945.

+ James Wilson and Roger Sherman both objected and Butler withdrew the clause.

+ After a show of force by American tanks, the Axis forces withdrew from Sperlinga and Nicosia during the night of 27 July 1943.

+ He was well known for his quotes, including “It ain’t over ’til it’s over.” Berra sued Hanna-Barbera for defamation over the character Yogi Bear, but later withdrew the lawsuit.

+ But it was a strategic victory for Jackson because the Union forces withdrew back across the Allegheny Mountains ending the threat.

+ She will be the first American ambassador to that country since 2008, when the United States withdrew its ambassador as part of political tensions between the two countries.

+ In 2000, Israel withdrew its troops from the “security zone” in Southern Lebanon, but not from a sliver of land called Shebba Farms.

+ However, the club was withdrew Nadeshiko League end of 1998 season.

+ People who withdrew from society during school refusal is often referred to as “futōkō”.

+ Even after the Americans withdrew the “Carolina” kept up the bombardment until it was blown up by Heated shot and sunk on December 27th.

+ The council asked for permission to plan the new airport, but they withdrew the request later.

+ Ritz himself withdrew progressively from the affairs of his various companies, selling out his interests in hotels at Frankfurt and Salsomaggiore in 1905 and retiring from the Ritz Hotel Development Company in 1907, from the Carlton Hotel Company in 1908, and from the Paris Ritz Company in 1911.

+ He withdrew from the Japanese Grand Prix fearing for his safety.

+ Because of this, many countries like France and United Kingdom withdrew from it.

+ These advantages persuaded the Nizam to attempt an Independent existence, when the British withdrew from the sub-continent in 1947.

+ At the end of the day, the Confederate army was destroyed as a fighting force and withdrew into Arkansas.

+ Intended to be a best-of-three series, Ottawa Capitals withdrew their challenge after the first game.

+ He withdrew from the race.

+ He was nominated by President Jair Bolsonaro as Brazilian Ambassador to the United States, after Eduardo Bolsonaro withdrew from his nomination.

+ There were at first 84 contenders, but Jewel Silver withdrew due to dehydration.

+ In exchange, Louis withdrew his support for English rebels.

“vulnerable” – example sentences

How to use in-sentence of “vulnerable”:

– After the Muslim conquest of Egypt in 641 AD, they did not want to have their capital at Alexandria, because it was too vulnerable to naval raids.

– During the development of a plant species the seed / acorn stage in development is considered to be the most important yet most vulnerable stage.

– NK cells may have evolved as an evolutionary response: the loss of MHC would deprive these cells of the inhibitory effect of MHC and make them vulnerable to NK cell attack.

– New research says that some people may be more vulnerable to goitre.

– Iraq is thought to be especially vulnerable to the epidemic due to being weakened by the Iraq war and United Nations sanctions, by sectarian conflict and the rise of Islamic State over the past three decades.

vulnerable - example sentences
vulnerable – example sentences

Example sentences of “vulnerable”:

- It is vulnerable to decay, insect damage, and fire.

- Army was vulnerable in not having a unit comparable to the SAS.

– It is vulnerable to decay, insect damage, and fire.

– Army was vulnerable in not having a unit comparable to the SAS.

– Sheep are vulnerable to predation and injury, and do not usually survive as feral animals.

– Mouse-deer are particularly vulnerable to being hunted by humans at night because of their tendency to freeze when illuminated by having a spotlight shone on them.

– Janner died on 19 December 2015 in London from Alzheimer’s disease, aged 87 and months earlier he had been demoed unfit to stand trial over allegations of 33 years of sexually abusing vulnerable children.

– In the United States in the 1970s, the media reported on the high-pressure recruitment methods of Unificationists and said that the church separated vulnerable college students from their families through the use of brainwashing or mind control.

– However, Condorcet methods are only vulnerable to compromising when there is a majority rule cycle, or when one can be created.

– According to the European Federation for Street Children, they are an extremely vulnerable group living in very difficult conditions.

– He replaced Labour MP Reg Freeson who was a committed left-winger, but his relatively moderate views made him vulnerable to the hard left in the early 1980s.

– This includes many Vulnerable speciesvulnerable or endangered species.

– During the Spanish Civil War, in February 1937, he worked for the rescue of vulnerable children and founded the Swiss Working Group for Spanish Children with Fritz Wartenweiler and Regina Kägi-Fuchsmann.

– The section in the middle of the bridge, where the rail ran inside high girders, was likely to be top-heavy and very vulnerable to high winds.

– The cubs are very vulnerable when the lioness goes out to hunt and needs to leave the cubs behind.

– Although the most common type of condom, those made of latex, have great ability to stretch, they are vulnerable to dry friction as well as other mistakes of usage.

– According to the IUCN and BirdLife International, seven species of cockatoo are considered to be vulnerable or worse and one is considered to be near threatened.

– Some animals in the Park are rare, endangered, vulnerable or endemic.

– Tanning helps make the animal skin become more flexible and less vulnerable to bacteria damage.

– It is also free for orphaned and vulnerable children.

– The species is listed as vulnerable speciesvulnerable on the IUCN Red List since 1986.

– Clements was deployed to Albania in 1999, and then led PRM’s Office of Policy and Resource Planning, where she oversaw the Bureau’s strategic planning, policy development and financial resources to protect and assist refugees, conflict victims and vulnerable migrants worldwide.

More in-sentence examples of “vulnerable”:

– This species is vulnerable to overfishing due to its slow reproductive rate.

– Due to the long amount of time it takes to mature, and the slow reproductive rate, the basking shark is vulnerable to over-fishing, and targeted populations are very slow to recover from targeted fisheries.

– Coal trains and gas pipelines are also vulnerable to disruption.

– The organization played a significant role in the saving of Democratic Republic of the CongoCongo’s mountain gorillas in Virunga National Park in January 2007 after a rebel uprising threatened to eliminate the highly vulnerable population.

– Dawson was also a diabetic, which made him much more vulnerable in the extreme heat.

– One species is endangered, five are Vulnerable speciesvulnerable, and 11 are near threatened.

– Even parasitoid wasps are vulnerable to hyperparasitoid wasps.

– The koala is not an endangered species, but it is a near vulnerable species.

– As medical social workers often have large case-loads and have to meet tight deadlines for arranging necessary services, medical social work is a demanding job that is vulnerable to detrimental impact.

– In a Cross-site Scripting attack, the attacker uses your vulnerable web page to deliver malicious JavaScript to your user.

– While I am not demanding it, I would like to note that this is somewhat important as these templates are very vulnerable right now.

– A scenario of an eruption of Mount Cayley shows how western Canada is vulnerable to an eruption.

– Eggs of this type are more vulnerable to the elements and are typically buried in soil.

– Mages wear cloth armor and are very vulnerable to melee damage.

– The whale shark is listed as Vulnerable by the IUCN.

– Pavlova’s feet had particularly high archs, which left her vulnerable to injury when dancing en pointe.

– Moth larvae are eaten by many birds, and are also vulnerable to parasitism by ichneumon wasps.

– Like other perching birds, it is affected by external and internal parasites and is vulnerable to predation by cats and birds of prey.

– Researchers suggest the lockdown could be lifted by shielding only the most vulnerable and using contact tracing..

– This slow birth rate makes their populations vulnerable in present-day circumstances.

– Research shows that older people are more vulnerable and how the brain can get addicted to gambling.

– They help computer engineers to find vulnerable places and correct problems.

– Like all voting methods, Condorcet methods are vulnerable to compromising.

– The cheer pheasant is a vulnerable species of the pheasant family, Phasianidae.

– Proceeds went to Kids Company, a charity which helps vulnerable children and young people in London.

- This species is vulnerable to overfishing due to its slow reproductive rate.

- Due to the long amount of time it takes to mature, and the slow reproductive rate, the basking shark is vulnerable to over-fishing, and targeted populations are very slow to recover from targeted fisheries.

– It was first listed as a Vulnerable species by the IUCN.

– All Condorcet methods are at least somewhat vulnerable to burying.

– The older brother took great offense to this, leaving his mind vulnerable to The Devil’s poisonous reasonings.

– With only a single, vulnerable Mole mole available for embarking on deep-draft ships, the Royal Navy requisitions civilian vessels in Great Britain that can get to the beach.

– A vulnerable species is a species of animals or plants which are likely to become endangered unless something changes.

– The young are vulnerable to larger predators: lions especially try to kill cheetahs.

– Some biological characteristics, such as the slow growth, and long time to mature, makes the whale shark vulnerable to overfishing.

– This slow rate of growth, also makes them a vulnerable species.

– It was Nimzovich who pointed out that such pawns are usually the most vulnerable to attack.

– Tiny creatures are most vulnerable to changes in external temperature.

– Small groups are vulnerable to chance events in any case, but with no heritable variability they are even more vulnerable.

– Social networks are vulnerable to them, since the circumstances where help is required, like disasters, occur by surprise.

– All have a Rampart rampart on their vulnerable landward side, and excavations at Cronk ny Merriu have shown that access to the fort was via a strongly built gate.

– The IUCN Red List says they are a vulnerable species.

– When moulting, the Nēnē cannot fly, as do other geese, a factor which made it vulnerable to hunting.

– This species is extremely vulnerable to overfishing and is currently on the brink of collapse.

– A small population which carries less variation is always vulnerable to extinction, because none of the animals may be resistant to the infection.

– The spiny dogfish is currently listed as Vulnerable by the IUCN.

– The Tawny is capable of catching smaller owls, but is itself vulnerable to the Eagle owl or Northern Goshawk.

– In October 2020, Farage and Tice said they had went to the Electoral Commission, which handles Electionelections, to re-name the Brexit Party to ‘Reform UK’, Electoral Commission and said that the party would campaign against more lockdowns and that would seek to immune and unable to infect the elderly and vulnerable or cause them to die.

– The endemic mammals are the Endangered speciesendangered vulnerable carnivorous Komodo dragon, which is the world’s largest lizard, is found on Komodo, Rincah, Gili Motang, and the coast of northwestern Flores.

– This is a much lower death toll than originally feared; tropical systems which affect Haiti such as Hurricane Jeanne from 2004 were usually among the deadliest as the badly-deforestationdeforested Haiti, which is extremely vulnerable to landslides and lacks basically any form of tropical alert system.

– The scenario impact is largely a result of the concentration of vulnerable infrastructure in valleys.

“bound” some ways to use

How to use in-sentence of “bound”:

– The United States is only bound by a treaty if the Senate agrees.

– Co-evolution is where the existence of one species is tightly bound up with the life of one or more other species.

– The Birkenhead steamed out of Simon’s Bay near Cape Town, South Africa on February 25, 1852 bound for Port Elizabeth, South Africa.

– These are printed and bound like a magazine, with the pages folded and stapled together through the centerfold.

– On July 2, Mary Trump made an affidavit saying that she was not bound by the NDA because the agreement was fraudulent.

bound some ways to use
bound some ways to use

Example sentences of “bound”:

- Wodehouse's "Quick Service", bound with his "The Code of the Woosters".

- Organisms that live together may not reproduce together, but their life processes bound up together.

– Wodehouse’s “Quick Service”, bound with his “The Code of the Woosters”.

– Organisms that live together may not reproduce together, but their life processes bound up together.

– In October 2016, Bound for Glory planned to play a concert in Falkirk, Scotland.

– Was it really a registred NGO of EX serviceman? Was the person claiming to be a serving Major should consider serving because he did not mention Retd? Wrote this letter? If He has written the letter as a serving major, in that case, He is bound under Army Act 1950,1954, and he is not supposed to get into any civil matters? In case He is an Ex-Army officer than why did not he mentioned so with his name? Is not it a crime under section 419 of the IPC to be read with other CrPC? Another shocking and unnoticed thing was the Logo of the same NGO which is exactly same Emblem of the National Defence Academy, Khadakwasla, Pune.

– It is bound together by the fit of the stones and the regular placement of stones which extend through the thickness of the wall.

– According to Martin Luther, “I shall never be a heretic; I may err in dispute, but I do not wish to decide anything finally; on the other hand, I am not bound by the opinions of men.” So if we consider ourselves to be wise individuals, our concern should be to find the truth not to submit to opinions.

– But after a fight with Fabu, Tad is strapped to the missile bound for Earth.

– When an electric field is applied, the positive and negative bound charges can separate over atomic distances in polarizable materials, and when the bound charges move, the polarization changes, creating another contribution to the “bound current”, the polarization current “J”.

– The differences between these types of lines can also be looked at in the following way: the distance between asymptotic lines run to zero in one direction and grows without bound in the other; the distance between ultraparallel lines increases in both directions.

– On the chief is depicted an open book bound in red placed between two black hammers.

– They consist of hundreds of galaxies and galaxy groups, bound together by gravity.

– The idea is also that family and friends are bound together and everyone must work together and not forget each other.

– The quarks are bound together by the gluons.

More in-sentence examples of “bound”:

- The Italian fleet also took advantage of the situation and moved onto the offensive, blocking or decimating at least three large Allied convoys bound for Malta.

- Because of this, women who had their feet bound would usually be impaired, or damaged, for the rest of their lives.
- A notebook is a collection of sheets of paper, bound as a book or leaflet.

– The Italian fleet also took advantage of the situation and moved onto the offensive, blocking or decimating at least three large Allied convoys bound for Malta.

– Because of this, women who had their feet bound would usually be impaired, or damaged, for the rest of their lives.

– A notebook is a collection of sheets of paper, bound as a book or leaflet.

– Bots are not bound to observe the nobots tag; it will depend on their functionality, their owners and their terms of approval.

– It was the tenth Bound for Glory event that TNA held and was also the fourth and last event in TNA’s 2014 pay-per-view schedule.

– Putrefaction is important, because elements such as nitrogen, phosphorus and sulfur which are bound in the dead matter are converted into a form that is usable by plants.

– As of March 2012, thirteen bound volumes have been released by the publisher.

– The rivers Euphrates and Tigris bound what is called the Fertile Crescent.

– This is due to the way bound electrons distort the spacing of the atomic structure they find themselves in.

– In other words, the king is bound to rule within the law.

– Since 1953, it has been bound in four volumes.

– The clouds are bound to part.

– A righteous proselyte was a Gentile who had converted to Judaism, was bound to all the doctrines and precepts of the Jewish economy, and was considered a full member of the Jewish people.

– They gave fines to women who still had their feet bound after 1915.

– This new electron orbital is bound to both atomic nuclei and has a lower energy level than the original electron orbital.

– Authigenic V isotope compositions in marine sediments are likely controlled by isotope fractionation between V species bound to particulates and dissolved in seawater, which likely varies the speciation and adsorption properties of V that are strongly controlled by local redox reactions.

– All flights bound to Andaman and Nicobar Islands land at the Veer Savarkar International Airport.

– Unmanned rockets however are not bound by the limits of humans.

– Also, “mulberry” and “raspberry”, where also the first syllable is a bound morpheme.

– Woody sees a pickup truck bound for Pizza Planet and plans to rendezvous with Andy there, convincing Buzz to come with him by saying that the pickup truck can take him to his home planet.

– No Preference shall be given by any Regulation of Commerce or Revenue to the Ports of one State over those of another: nor shall Vessels bound to, or from, one State, be obliged to enter, clear, or pay Duties in another.

– They are bound by their oath to try and capture Eragon and Saphira.

– In March 1617, the Rolfes boarded a ship bound for Virginia.

– More broadly, it involves abandoning a person, cause, or doctrine to which one is bound by some tie.

– A finished book can be downloaded or ordered as a bound book.

– CountryLink buses carry passengers daily to and from Wagga, to meet Sydney and Melbourne bound train services.

– Three ships, the “Susan Constant”, the “Godspeed Godspeed” and the “Discovery” set sail from London on December 20, 1606 bound for Virginia.

– As input numbers get arbitrarily small, the output will simply get arbitrarily large, and if we draw this on a graph, the line will stretch upwards without bound before it touches 0 on either axis.

– On chromosomes, the DNA is bound up with proteins called histones to form chromatin.

– It can also be used in biology to signal that a molecule or chemical is to be bound to another molecule.

– The other source of bound current is bound charge.

– However, he is bound to exercise this power on the advice of the Cabinet or a minister acting under Cabinet authority.

– This weaker upper bound for the problem, attributed to an unpublished work of Graham, was eventually published and named by Martin Gardner in Scientific American in November 1977.

– In some industries, particularly video games, artists find themselves bound to publishers, and in many cases unable to make the content they want; the publisher might not think it will profit well.

– Coevolution is where the existence of one species is tightly bound up with the life of one or more other species.

– Fenrir will remain bound until Ragnarök.

– Photographs were circulated that showed that prisoners had to pose naked, were sometimes bound by ropes, and intimidated that way.

– Reminiscences of an Old West Country Clergyman volumes 1 and 2 were leather bound hardback books.

– Alcohols are carbohydrates which are made of an alkyl function groupsgroup with one or more OH” groups bound to its carbon atoms.

– Unlike the hemoglobin in red blood cells found in vertebrates, hemocyanins are not bound to blood cells.

– The cable network Nickelodeon, which had been airing programs for six- to twelve-year-olds, was not legally bound by this legislation but complied with it anyway many years before the laws and regulations were passed.

– The movie was xxxxxxxxxx the 1996 movie, “Homeward Bound II: Lost in San Francisco”.

– After the shield, an armillary sphere between two golden olive branches embowed, bound together in base by a ribbon green and red.

– Others said that the CDU/CSU thought that Helmut Schmidt and the SPD was bound to win the 1980 election, and felt that they had nothing to lose in running Strauß: but it might stop Strauß criticising anyone whon disagreed with him.

– Harvard University Press All organisms are bound together in the struggle for existence by complex relationships between each other.

– In conducting materials, some electrons are very loosely bound to the atoms of the material.

– The closure environment keeps the bound variables returns.

– It was the ninth Bound for Glory event that TNA held and was also the fourth event in TNA’s 2013 pay-per-view schedule.

“strict” example in sentences

How to use in-sentence of “strict”:

+ I think we should just adopt a strict policy on stubs, to avoid SEWP becoming even more of a “stub depository”.

+ Oliver Cromwell was a Puritan and during the Interregnum, he imposed a very strict form of Christianity upon the country.

+ His father was a strict Lutheran and lost his job more than once because of his beliefs.

+ Although Burger had conservative leanings and was considered a strict constructionist, the U.S.

+ So these are partial implementations of a strict service economy ideal.

+ Time will give a strict weak ordering too; Events that are equivalent in the timeframe happen at the same time.

strict example in sentences
strict example in sentences

Example sentences of “strict”:

+ Schoenberg came from a strict Jewish family who had moved to Austria from Hungary.

+ The church is not a cathedral in the strict sense of the word because it has never been the seat of a bishop.

+ This means that the cheese must be made to a strict code in one of the three counties of Derbyshire, Leicestershire or Nottinghamshire.

+ Frederick tried to escape from his strict father, Frederick William I of PrussiaFrederick William I, with childhood friend, Hans Hermann von Katte.

+ The government’s future policies will likely keep in place strict controls: “According to China’s draft rare-earth development plan, annual rare-earth production may be limited to between 130,000 and 140,000 during the period from 2009 to 2015.

+ The meetings generally took place in the morning, after mass; the monks would sit along the length of the walls in strict age-order.

+ This is called strict liability or absolute liability.

+ Be less strict on Islamic observances and say ‘Okay, I’ll eat with you.” “Channel News Asia”, 28 January 2011.

+ He was a strict conductor who thought it was very important that the players should do exactly what the composer asks for in the score.

+ When some colonists decided they did not like these strict rules, they ran away from the colony to live with nearby Native Americans.

+ Schoenberg came from a strict Jewish family who had moved to Austria from Hungary.

+ The church is not a cathedral in the strict sense of the word because it has never been the seat of a bishop.

More in-sentence examples of “strict”:

+ Kotelawala was known as a strict man who loved sports, horseback riding, cricket and particularly as a young man, got into fights when he was made fun of.

+ When Jane became queen, she ran the royal court in a strict and formal way, and her only close friends were Anne Stanhope and Elizabeth Seymour.

+ Conservative rabbis are almost always less strict about what is a prevention “” than Orthodox rabbis.

+ WP has strict criteria for determining notability of a subject for a BLP, not whether an editor thinks the subject is notable.

+ They found that if these children got treated and followed a strict diet, they could get enough of the chemical they needed.

+ Murtis are made according to strict prescriptions and then installed by highly trained priests through a ceremony.

+ Though the 1970s and 1980s saw the UK’s integration to the “European Economic Community” which became the European Union in 1992 and a strict modernization of its economy.

+ He was regarded as a conservative.Bolton 1999, 176 He supported maintaining strict party control over local policies.

+ In the strict meaning and medical meaning of the word “profylaxe”, it only means prevention of DISEASE, not of birth.

+ They are usually less strict about appearing on a photograph, where the person is not the subject of the picture.

+ More than one player may be in motion before the snap of the ball and the rules are less strict about players position relative to the line of scrimmage.

+ This is useful when there are strict firewalls in place, because data can be sent through the World Wide Webweb instead of through a different port.

+ The Strict Avalanche Criterion is a property of boolean functions.

+ In addition to all these, one of the major contributions of medical anthropology has come from it’s ability to help explain health phenomenon and create and test hypothesis relating to such explanations, in a way that epidemiologists have been unable to due to their strict focus on quantitative data.

+ The Swahili follow a very strict and orthodox form of Islam.

+ Wang became a successful general and was known for the strict discipline he forced on his troops.

+ Although many societies still exist under a gender binary, more and more around the world are becoming more accepting of ideas of gender outside of strict male and female categories.

+ There is a strict division between Mandaean laity and the priests.

+ Passage is comparable to the strict movements that occurred at Checkpoint Charlie in Berlin at the height of the Cold War.

+ Jehovah’s Witnesses are quite strict about who can be a member.

+ A strict function associates each input with “exactly one” output.

+ They were very strict in observing the Ten Commandments.

+ Rather, it was a system in which strict regulations were applied to commerce and foreign relations by the shogunate.

+ One third of area is national parkland: Urho Kekkonen National Park, Värriö Strict Nature Reserve and Maltio Strict Nature Reserve.

+ Giant tortoises are now under strict conservation laws and are categorised as threatened species.

+ Not all people who are caught while fighting wars are “prisoners of war.” The Third Geneva Convention has a strict definition of what a prisoner of war is.

+ Although these do not have the tight time limits needed for a strict real-time system, they are becoming more common, especially for more powerful devices such as Wireless Routers and GPSs.

+ A definition that is harder to understand, but which is often used by mathematicians, is to say that a set is finite if there is no strict subset that can be put in 1-to-1 correspondence with the set itself.

+ His parents were from a very strict Christian sect called the Plymouth Brethren – and they believed that what ever they did in life, they would go to heaven anyway.

+ There are no strict rules for what land is considered a continent, but in general it is agreed there are six or seven continents in the world, including Africa, Antarctica, Asia and Europe, North America, Australasia or Oceania, Either are accepted terms and South America.

+ In most countries locksmiths must follow a strict set of rules.

+ The strict court etiquette was made worse by her mother-in-law, Elisabeth Farnese, who disliked Louise Élisabeth.

+ This will mean strict limits on motor car speeds to protect cassowaries that might try to cross some roads.

+ Cannabis and sometimes hashish is legal for strict medicinal use such as cancer patients, terminally ill, epileptics and insomniacs.

+ He did not agree with the strict rules that were used by most teachers for teaching composition.

+ Does apply here? If it does, then some people have been too strict on what citations are needed in a GA or VGA…essentially applying an IHAVENTHEARDOFIT standard i.e.

+ Quora has some strict policies to fight with spam and people posting copied content.

+ I am asking for changing the policy from simple English, which is fuzzy, to more strict way of building sentences.

+ She received a strict education but was allowed to take ballet lessons hoping to become a professional classical dancer.

+ Fruitarianism is a strict of dietary veganism.

+ The strict understanding of these rules would not allow religious statues of any kind.

+ Even if it is not a strict fugue it might be “fugal” i.e.

+ She disliked the strict etiquette of the court.

+ Soldiers, engineers and workers who must work with TNT should therefore observe strict safety measures when handling this explosive.

+ In many countries there are strict rules that limit the sales of air guns so not everyone can have one.

+ So the government of Bali made a strict law on killing tigers, but by then it was too late, because the Bali tiger had already become extinct.

+ In evolutionary theory he opposed strict selectionism, sociobiology as applied to humans, and evolutionary psychology.

+ Kotelawala was known as a strict man who loved sports, horseback riding, cricket and particularly as a young man, got into fights when he was made fun of.

+ When Jane became queen, she ran the royal court in a strict and formal way, and her only close friends were Anne Stanhope and Elizabeth Seymour.

“wellington” some ways to use

How to use in-sentence of “wellington”:

+ He played four first-class cricket matches for Wellington between 1952 and 1954.

+ The village of Wellington was officially listed in 1846 and was made a town in 1879.

+ The station would be underneath Wellington Street.

+ She was the widow of Wellington Mara, and the matriarch of the Mara family, which includes New York Giants CEO John Mara, and her granddaughters, actresses Rooney Mara and Kate Mara.

+ On October 1, 1890, Robert Harris and his sons, Robert and Charles, printed the first issue of “The Wellington Times”.

wellington some ways to use
wellington some ways to use

Example sentences of “wellington”:

+ He also played for the Wellington Saints of the New Zealand National Basketball League in 2011.

+ From 2006 to 2018, she played for Wellington Pride.

+ The allies were caught completely by surprise and their only chance to stop him lay with two small armies in Belgium: a British and Dutch army commanded by the Duke of Wellington and a Prussian army commanded by Marshall Blücher.

+ This had given Wellington enough time to prepare a full defensive position across the road leading to Brussels, near the village of Waterloo.

+ Napoleon was defeated at the Battle of Waterloo by the British under Duke of Wellington and Prussians on June 18 1815, which was his last battle.

+ Copeland died in a Wellington hospice on 24 November 2018 from cancer, aged 75.

+ There is a memorial plaque on the wall of Wymeswold Pharmacy that pays tribute to when a Wellington Bomber crashed into a nearby hill while on a night training course.

+ The then-new Wellington Monument, DublinWellington Monument in Phoenix Park is seen on the left of the picture.

+ Dhe Wellington Monument is an obelisk in the Phoenix Park, Dublin, Ireland.

+ His plan was successful at first and he crossed the Belgian border before Wellington and Blucher could join forces.

+ The 1994 Guelph municipal election was held on November 14, 1994, in Guelph, Ontario, Canada, to elect the Mayor of Guelph, Guelph City Council and the Guelph members of the Upper Grand District School Board and Wellington Catholic District School Board.

+ Spencer died on 29 March 1992 at Wellington Hospital in London of a heart attack at the age of 68.

+ South of Wellington is Cook Strait, the sea between the North Island and the South Island.

+ It gives money to The Wellington Academy, a state school that started in 2009.

+ Britten died on 13 February 2020 in Wellington of cancer at the age of 80.

+ Alexander Robertson “Duke” Wellington was a CanadiansCanadian professional ice hockey player.

+ He also played for the Wellington Saints of the New Zealand National Basketball League in 2011.

+ From 2006 to 2018, she played for Wellington Pride.

More in-sentence examples of “wellington”:

+ The railway from Sydney reached Wellington in 1880.

+ In 1892, “The Wellington Times” was printed three times a week, on Tuesday, Thursday and Saturday.

+ It is also called “Wellington Testimonial” because it was built while Wellington was still alive.

+ The first post office in Wellington was created in July 1871.

+ The former Coalition members formed the Seventh Coalition and the Duke of Wellington of Great Britain defeated Napoleon again at the Battle of Waterloo with the help of the Prussians in 1815.

+ Important features are Mount Wellington which is 96m in height and the Pinnacles at 66m.

+ In October, Wellington crossed into France.

+ Richard Wellington Burkhardt was an AmericansAmerican academic.

+ In 2011 Wellington College International Tianjin was opened in China.

+ The Wellington Boot, a country racing festival is held in every year in March and April.

+ It takes its name from Stratfield Saye House, which was awarded to the Duke of Wellington after his defeat of Napoleon at the Battle of Waterloo.

+ Shrapnell died in Wellington on 2 September 2020 at the age of 85.

+ Sir John Francis Jeffries He was the 14th Deputy Mayor of Wellington City from 1971 to 1974.

+ It was set up in 1949 and is named for David Bowman, an early leader of the Capalaba, Cleveland, Redland Bay, Birkdale, Thorneside, Alexandra Hills, Thornlands, Mount Cotton, Cornubia, Ormiston, Wellington Point and Victoria Point.

+ O’Brien died in Wellington on 13 December 2017 at the age of 93.

+ There were 9,200 people living in the Wellington Shire.

+ These included the Auckland Blues, Waikato ChiefsChiefs and Hurricanes, and Counties Manukau, Wellington and later North Harbour and Cardiff Blues.

+ The Köppen Climate Classification system says that Wellington has a humid subtropical climate, abbreviated “Cfa” on climate maps.

+ He moved on to Wellington Town, where he played out his career.

+ George’s Colts and Hamilton Parish football clubs play their games at the Wellington Oval, which also serves as a cricket ground.

+ Gardner went to school at Eagle House and Wellington College, BerkshireWellington College and studied at Exeter College, Oxford.

+ Vi Kyuin Wellington Koo Chinese languageChinese: 顾维钧;Chinese diplomat.

+ He presented two cooking shows on New Zealand television in the 1970s — “Thyme for Cookery” and “Bon Appetit” — and ran “The Coachman”‘ restaurant in Wellington for 28 years.

+ The town is the centre of the Wellington Shire Local Government Area.

+ Puslinch is a township in south-central Ontario, Canada, in the County of Wellington south of Guelph.

+ Dufferin County was formed in 1881 from parts of Grey County, Simcoe County, and Wellington County, Ontario.

+ There had already been a small battle at Quatre Bras, as Wellington tried to delay the French advance.

+ Clement was born in Masterton, Wellington Region.

+ Gotlieb was a member of the Wellington City Council from 1983 to 2001.

+ It was first seen in Wellington Harbour in 1987.

+ The Wellington Caves are millions of years old.

+ An opera singer, he performed at Wellington City Opera and The NBR New Zealand Opera.

+ It is upriver of Wellington in the central west region.

+ The local newspaper “The Wellington Times”, owned by Rural Press, is printed three times a week..

+ The town has a Wellington railway station railway station on the Wolverhampton–Shrewsbury line.

+ Locksley Wellington “Slide” Hampton is an American jazz trombonist, composer and arranger.

+ She was a supercentenarian and after emigrating to the United States, she became the third wife of diplomat and politician Wellington Koo.

+ The University of Otago has ten libraries — seven based in Dunedin on the main university campus, the Education library in Southland, plus two medical libraries in Wellington and Christchurch.

+ In 2008 Wellington became the first school to win the Daily Mail Cup in rugby.

+ He was a member of the conservative Wellington Citizens’ Association.

+ He studied at Summer Fields School, a Preparatory school preparatory school near Wellington College in Crowthorne and Trinity College, Oxford.

+ Suggate died in Wellington on 16 June 2016, aged 94.

+ He studied at both Wellington College and Cherwell College in Oxford.

+ Ferner died in Wellington on 10 June 2020, aged 87.

+ Holland finished his first class career with a season with Wellington in New Zealand’s domestic league.

+ The group was formed in Wellington during 1998.

+ Murphy died on 3 December 2018 in Wellington at the age of 80.

+ Tonks died at his home in Wellington on 18 October 2020, aged 85.

+ The Wellington Dukes of the Ontario Junior Hockey League play in Wellington.

+ The Wellington Monument, DublinWellington Monument is a tall obelisk.

+ The railway from Sydney reached Wellington in 1880.

+ In 1892, "The Wellington Times" was printed three times a week, on Tuesday, Thursday and Saturday.

“carving” in-sentences

How to use in-sentence of “carving”:

– The oldest known picture of a guitar-like instrument is a 3300 year old stone carving of a Hittite bard.

– Dishes were made from carving soapstone, bones, or musk ox horns.

– Fuzon encompasses hybrid styles of exquisite melodies and everlasting pop/rock instrumentation, hence carving out a special niche for themselves.

– Michelangelo had already done a lot of work for the popes, carving figures for the tomb of Pope Julius II, painting the Sistine Chapel ceiling, which took five years, and the enormous fresco the “Last Judgement” on the wall of the Sistine Chapel.

– Some of the finest examples of early European wood carving are from the Middle Ages in Germany, Russia, Italy and France, where the typical themes of that era were used in Christian icons.

– Aztec artists made their pyramid and other stone buildings into art too, by carving into them.

carving in-sentences
carving in-sentences

Example sentences of “carving”:

– Over the years numerous visitors have added graffiti by carving names in the soft sandstone at the base of the pillar.

– Esterly’s own carving began as decorative foliage work.

– Warnings were quickly issued as the storm began carving a path through suburban north Raleigh.

– The Egyptians put a statue in their room or a carving over their bed to protect them from bad dreams.

– The purpose of the carving is subject to much speculation.

– After persuading her that she wants to find the truth and help, Imelda allows Nico to access Carchon’s room, which contains an elephant carving exactly the same as that of Nico’s father and a stone cylinder, which contains a hidden code of letters.

– When they landed, they made the large carving called “Te Uenuku” out of a tōtara tree with a round opening at the top, in which the stone was placed so that the god could live in the carving.

– There are old merchants’ mansions richly decorated with wood and stone carving in the historical center of Ulan-Ude, along the river banks.

– There is a broken queen piece in a similar style from an excavation of the archbishop’s palace, similar carving in Nidaros Cathedral in Trondheim, the excavation in Trondheim of a kite-shaped shield similar to shields on some of the pieces and a king piece of similar design found on Hitra Island, near the mouth of Trondheim Fjord.

– In some parts of the world, like India, the architecture is famous for carving the stone on temples and palaces.

– She also learned to make artistic objects from wood carving and Pyrographypoker work.

– The 11.60 metre high carving is made of oak and is the oldest tabernacle of its kind in Germany.

– Wakasa agate work is made by applying heat to the rough stone to make it red, and deciding the shape of carving taking into consideration the scratches on the natural stone and long-lasting polishing work.

– The carving of an eagle with oaks and fig leaf depicts a scene in which the devil wants to tempt a lay brother.

- Over the years numerous visitors have added graffiti by carving names in the soft sandstone at the base of the pillar.

- Esterly’s own carving began as decorative foliage work.
- Warnings were quickly issued as the storm began carving a path through suburban north Raleigh.

“lens” use in-sentences

How to use in-sentence of “lens”:

– That way, an 18mm lens mounted on a digital camera of this type gives an angle of view of the 28mm wide-angle lens, namely 75 degrees, for a multiplier of 1.5.

– The fourth is a 5-megapixel telephoto lens with an F/2.0 aperture.

– A bandage contact lens is then placed over the eye, and the epithelium grows back behind the contact lens.

– Shutters immediately behind the lens were used in some cameras with limited lens interchangeability.

– And it usually uses wide-angle lens to film as many details around as possible.

– Each lens unit of a compound eye has a UV receptor, and a UV filter oriented differently in each of these units, so a bee is able to detect this polarization pattern.

– Max Weber contrasted collectivism and individualism through the lens of religion, believing that Protestants were more individualistic and self-reliant compared to Catholics, who endorsed hierarchical, interdependent relationships among people.

– The aperture of a photographic lens is a hole that can be adjusted to different sizes, using the aperture ring.

lens use in-sentences
lens use in-sentences

Example sentences of “lens”:

- The design allows the construction of lenses of large aperture and short focal length without the weight and volume of material that would be required in conventional lens design.

- The crystalline lens is a transparent, Lens #Types of simple lensesbiconvex structure in the eye.
- A Lens lens can make an image of an object appear somewhere else.

– The design allows the construction of lenses of large aperture and short focal length without the weight and volume of material that would be required in conventional lens design.

– The crystalline lens is a transparent, Lens #Types of simple lensesbiconvex structure in the eye.

– A Lens lens can make an image of an object appear somewhere else.

– Goggles also have clear plastic lens covers that can be torn off or rolled off during a race so the goggle remains clean and clear while riding.

– A variable focus lens is a camera lens that can vary its focal length.

– Silt rock is very small and you must use a lens to see silt.

– The lens changes its shape depending on how far away the eye focuses.

– If the focal length of the lens is negative, the focal length is the distance at which the light has spread to twice its original size.

– The majority of cameras only have one lens that users cannot change or take out.

– Some camera lenses have a bokeh that looks like it “swirls” around the subject, often called swirly bokeh, it is used in portrait photography, and is caused by lens defects, though some special camera lenses are designed to have it.

More in-sentence examples of “lens”:

– The problem was that the edges tore when the lens was getting removed.

– These eyes have a lens of one refractive index.

– The lamp had been handcrafted in Paris, containing a big oil lamp with mirrors and a Fresnel lens to enhance the light.

– The picture the lens makes is recorded by a light-sensitive Electronicselectronic sensor.

– One type of camera called the Pinhole camera has no lens but uses a very small hole to focus light.

– A Prime lens is a camera lenslens which has a fixed “zoom” or focal length.

– He made his debut in the first team as substitute in an UEFA Championsleague match versus RC Lens in November 2002.

– A flat piece of heat absorbing glass is often placed between the condensing lens and the slide, to avoid damaging the slide.

– But the term “power” is also used to express the ability of a lens or other optical device to focus light.

– A wide-angle lens is the opposite.

– The device features a combination of a 16MP main lens located on the device’s rear, both of which have an aperture of f/1.7.

– A common sign of swelling of the lens is blurring of distance vision while near vision remains adequate.

– A Fresnel lens is an Lens optical lens, which was originally developed for Lighthouses.

– The other meaning of telephoto lens applies to lenses that are constructed in a special way so they can be shorter than their focal length.

– One kind of wide-angle lens is a fish eye lens.

– The lens at the other end is called the “objective”.

– The iPhone 12 Pro and 12 Pro Max contain many of the same features as the 12 and 12 mini, with the addition of one camera lens and a LiDAR scanner to allow for better photos and augmented reality experiences.

– Computers now let engineers make better lenses, though, because they can calculate the way that light goes through the lens and find the best design for each task.

– A photographic filter is a Lens lens that is used in photography to filter the light.

– When a camera focuses on an object to take a picture, the lens moves back and forth until the image that the camera sees is in the right focus.

– They have a simple “pinhole” lens through which water can pass.

– To take a photograph of something, the lens makes a small picture of the object inside the camera.

– The patient must sleep with a protective shield over the eyes until the contact lens is removed.

– Berger wrote the monthly “Race Stories” column for the Lens Section of the “New York Times”.

– The second camera is a 12-megapixel portrait lens with an F/2.0 aperture.

– If rays of light go straight into a lens and the focal length is positive, the focal length is the distance to the point behind the lens where the rays will be brought to a focus.

– The lens makes an image by focusing the light.

– Telephoto lens is the opposite.

– A zoom lens is more versatile; it can do both.

– Usually the lower half of each lens is made to help the wearer read, while the upper one is to help the wearer see at a distance.

– In a simple operation, the old lens can be replaced by a new plastic one.

– The cornea and the lens bend light so the image strikes the retina.

– The lens is also called the “aquula” Latin, “a little stream”, dim.

– Many of these things are based on Lens lenses, which focus light and can make images of things that are bigger or smaller than the original.

– The drive has a very small camera lens beside the laser which can read the codes.

– Ayers was asked in a 2004 interview, “How do you feel about what you did? Would you do it again under similar circumstances?” He said: Web page titled, Independent Lens website, accessed June 5, 2008 “I’ve thought about this a lot.

– The lens in octopod are movable.

– Meanwhile, George uses the lens on the statue in the church and looks through it to discover a hidden image of a burning man.

– Here, the gravitational lens produces four images from the same object, although it is only one object.

– Compared to earlier lenses, the Fresnel lens is much thinner.

– On Christmas afternoon he finally made a contact lens in his apparatus.

– He used a compound microscope with two Lens lenses to look at the structure of cork, and to look at leaves and some insects.

– For example, a telephoto lens can take a picture of something far away.

– The picture the lens makes is recorded on photographic film.

– Focal length tells how strongly a Lens lens, a curved optical device brings light together or spreads it out.

– The mirrors can be moved so they reflect light through the lens or reflect light somewhere else.

– Their impact-resistant Lens lenses protect against bullet fragments, stray bits of gunpowder, and other debris.

– A video projector takes a video signal and projects the corresponding image on a screen using a lens system.

- The problem was that the edges tore when the lens was getting removed.

- These eyes have a lens of one refractive index.
- The lamp had been handcrafted in Paris, containing a big oil lamp with mirrors and a Fresnel lens to enhance the light.

How to use in-sentence of “laser”

How to use in-sentence of “laser”:

– Pavlos Kontides earned a silver medal in the men’s laser sailing event.

– The early Laserdisc players used a Helium-Neon laser to read the disc, but the later models used infrared lasers.

– Like in Afghanistan French pilots fired laser guided bombs, but also laser guided missiles.

– For example, laser measurement, 2150m horizontal drilling, pouring water glass and cement into soft bedrock.

– A laser is the most exact and powerful sort of light but the laser in the drive is very, very small.

– Ophthalmologists are allowed to medically treat eye disease, implement laser therapy, and perform incisional surgery when needed.

How to use in-sentence of laser
How to use in-sentence of laser

Example sentences of “laser”:

– To reduce the possibility of errors, a laser scanning may perform up to 500 scans per second.

– Rubinsztein-Dunlop was awarded with an Order of Australia in the 2018 Queen’s Birthday Honours List for “distinguished service to laser physics and nano-optics as a researcher, mentor and academic, to the promotion of educational programs, and to women in science”.

– The starfighter has four laser cannons and two proton torpedo launchers.

– The back of the missile has the systems that guide the missile by laser beams from the launcher.

– Their shows included lots of stage lighting, and laser effects.

– Inside each pipe is a laser which measures any change in length.

– Up to several hundred small laser burns are placed in the areas of retinal leakage surrounding the macula.

- To reduce the possibility of errors, a laser scanning may perform up to 500 scans per second.

- Rubinsztein-Dunlop was awarded with an Order of Australia in the 2018 Queen’s Birthday Honours List for "distinguished service to laser physics and nano-optics as a researcher, mentor and academic, to the promotion of educational programs, and to women in science".
- The starfighter has four laser cannons and two proton torpedo launchers.

– PRK uses an ultraviolet laser to reshape the cornea.

– When all of the optical gain medium is producing light, this is called saturation and creates a very strong beam of light at a very narrow wavelength, which we would call a laser beam.

– The nuclear physics facility of the European Union’s proposed Extreme Light Infrastructure laser will be built in Romania.

– Focal laser treatment stabilizes vision and reduces the risk of vision loss by 50 percent.

More in-sentence examples of “laser”:

- He was known as an important scientist of laser spectroscopy.

- If the doctor uses a laser there is almost no bleeding.
- In the past, the cashier had to press some keys on a keyboard keyboard to do this, but in recent days he or she simply scans a barcode on the product itself using a laser scanner.

– He was known as an important scientist of laser spectroscopy.

– If the doctor uses a laser there is almost no bleeding.

– In the past, the cashier had to press some keys on a keyboard keyboard to do this, but in recent days he or she simply scans a barcode on the product itself using a laser scanner.

– Lidar is a method for measuring distances by using a laser on a target and measuring its reflection with a sensor.

– Gases can be used for laser by using helium, nitrogen, carbon dioxide, neon or others.

– Raves also have Laser lighting displaylaser light shows, projected images and other visual effects used to create a fantasy-like scene.

– Toner is a powder commonly used in photocopiers and Laser printers to draw images and text onto paper.

– The won the prize for his works in laser spectroscopy.

– Jean Robieux is responsible for the discovery of the principle of control of laser Nuclear fusionfusion in 1961 and the discovery of the principle of laser isotope separation.

– A free-electron laser, or FEL, is a laser that produces a very bright beam of light.

– It requires only a double slit device like the one in the picture, something to hold the double slit device still, and a good laser such as the kind that is used by workmen to “draw” straight lines when they are building.

– A laser “burns” pits into a dye layer on the disc, making them transparent.

– By reusing the electrons and most of their energy, the free-electron laser requires less electricity to operate.

– Classes of dinghies sailed in the Olympics now are the Finn, the 470, the 49er, the Laser and the Nacra which is a catamaran.

– The United States Navy funds this research to develop an laser that could shoot down missiles.

– There is also a beam splitter that separates the laser or light beam and a screen that shows the interference pattern.

– Estimating weight is most easily done with the laser scan skeleton technique that puts a “virtual” skin over it, but even this is only an estimate.

– During the surgery 1,000 to 2,000 laser burns are placed in the areas of the retina away from the macula, causing the abnormal blood vessels to shrink.

– He took control of Laser Tag centres across the world and the winning children were beamed up to a space station far above Earth to be prepared to fight in a war.

– He was a creator of the brightest repeatedly pulsed laser in the visible region of the spectrum.

– Mavalvala is best known for her work on the detection of gravitational waves in the Laser Interferometer Gravitational-Wave Observatory project.

– A free-electron laser uses a beam of electrons and can be tuned to emit different colors.

– The first working laser was put together and operated by Theodore Maiman at the Hughes Research Laboratories in 1960.

– She initiated experimental programs in laser micromanipulation and atom optics at the University of Queensland.

– It contains a laser diode that emits a very narrow laser beam of visible light.

– It took three years for modern laser measuring and the mold to be made in France for the reproduction sculpture, and another three years to carve the marble in Italy.

– The bases hide exaggerated super weapons such as laser cannons, nuclear warheads, and missile launch facilities, taking the role of objectives.

– These methods are used in the design of heterojunction bipolar transistors, laser diodes and solar cells.

– A CD player has a laser and an optical sensor.

– They are best known for making computers and computer hardware such as inkjet computer printerprinters, laser printers, all-in-one printers, scanners and digital cameras.

– It fires a laser beam and splits it into two laser beams.

– If we shoot single photons from a laser at a sheet of photographic film, we will see a single spot of light on the developed film.

– The laser scanners are also called barcode readers.

– The fast-moving electrons then pass through a wiggler which produces a bright laser light beam.

– It uses laser or LED-technology to get small particles of toner from a Ink cartridgecartridge onto paper.

– Side effects are more likely if an old or obsolete laser is used, which many clinics still use.

– He researched nuclear physics, quantum optics, and laser physics.

– A laser line can be used to scan the changes.

– Holograms need laser beams.

– The CD player passes a laser beam along the track of the CD.

– The CD or DVD disk is similar to a mirror and the laser light reflects off it.

– In 2006, good measurements of the orbit from the Keck telescopesKeck Laser guide star adaptive optics system were reported.

– If photons were particles then we would expect them to appear at two points on the screen connected to the laser through the two slits in the middle.

– Older optical disc technologies such as DVD, DVD±R, DVD±RW, and DVD-RAM used a red laser to read and write data.

– A laser creates light by special actions involving a material called an “optical gain medium”.

“goat” use in sentences

How to use in-sentence of “goat”:

+ However, it has enough grassland to support goat herds.

+ The park has Cedar woodcedar trees and endangered wild goat species Markhor.

+ The national park is home to the rare East Caucasian Tur, a mountain dwelling goat antelope found only in the eastern half of the Caucasus Mountains.

+ Breck Parkman, “Mammoth Rocks: Part 1, Where Pleistocene Giants got Good Rub”, Center for the Study of the First Americans, Mammoths Series, Volume 18, Number 1, December 2002 Mammoth fossils have been found at Bodega Head, which is a few miles south of Goat Rock Beach.

+ The Russian River, which has its mouth at the north end of Goat Rock Beach, is Sonoma County’s biggest watercourse and river.

+ The fragments are written in ink on sheep or goat skin.

+ Capricorn the sea goat was a goat that decided to take over the world.

+ The oldest natural history of the area is related to marks made by mammals in an area of rock about one third of a mile south of Goat Rock Beach.

goat use in sentences
goat use in sentences

Example sentences of “goat”:

+ The diet of the goat includes eating grass, leaves, shrubs, root vegetables, and other kinds of plants.

+ It extends for about along the Pacific OceanPacific Coast, from Bodega Head in Bodega to just north of Goat Rock Beach.

+ She is the voice of Pema in Nickelodeon cartoon “The Legend of Korra” notable various cartoon companies like Cartoon Network includes, her role related to Princess Morbucks in Season 3 from Craig McCracken’s “The Powerpuff Girls”, “Adventure Time”, “Dexter’s Laboratory”, Nickelodeon includes “CatDog”, “Hey, Arnold”, “The Legend of Korra”, “Pig Goat Banana Cricket”, “SpongeBob SquarePants”, “Barnyard”, as well the It’s Pony, others like, “Nutri Ventures”, “Shorty McShorts Short”, “Coconut Fred”.

+ Somalis are mostly camel or goat herders, and depend on their livestock to live.

+ She created a goat farming system using the indigenous breed Pezzata Mòchena to create dairy and beauty products.

+ The mountain goat wanders the mountains alone, and meets only to mate.

+ The diet of the goat includes eating grass, leaves, shrubs, root vegetables, and other kinds of plants.

+ It extends for about along the Pacific OceanPacific Coast, from Bodega Head in Bodega to just north of Goat Rock Beach.

+ Urdă is a Romanian fresh white cheese made from whey of sheep, goat or cow.

+ It has consistently been represented as a mythological hybridcross of a goat and a fish since the Middle Bronze Age.

+ The coastline consists of a number of named beaches, including Arched Rock Beach, Jenner Beach, Blind Beach, Goat Beach and Goat Rock Beach.

+ The rules of the problem are that the host has to open a door with a goat behind it and the player has the opportunity to switch.

In-sentence examples of “advisor”

How to use in-sentence of “advisor”:

+ He later served as Operations Advisor to the Venezuelan Air Force from 1959 to 1962.

+ She helped as an advisor on how the foundation worked and how it was governed., June 27, 2007.

+ He was promoted to chief advisor of hydraulics, mathematics, and astronomy.

+ He is a senior advisor to Monitor Deloitte.

+ In the late 1970s, Petrov served as a military advisor to the Ethiopian Army.

In-sentence examples of advisor
In-sentence examples of advisor

Example sentences of “advisor”:

+ William Laud was a close advisor of Charles I of England.

+ After he retired, Zmolek became an advisor and member of the board to the Rochester Youth Hockey Association.

+ He is the chief economic advisor to President Donald Trump and Director of the National Economic Council.

+ He worked with the Argentine government as a Technical Advisor on the Tierra del Fuego Malvinas Question Provincial Observatory Advisory Council.

+ In 2011, she was an advisor for the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau, a government agency that protects consumers from unfair practices of banks, payday lenders, student loan providers, credit card companies, collection agencies, for-profit colleges and universities, and the collection departments of health maintenance organizations.

+ Wilfred Thesiger was born in Addis Ababa where his father was an advisor to the Ethiopian emperor.

+ He had been Assistant to the President and Deputy National Security Advisor from January 22, 2001.

+ He was in the Iranian Ministry of Intelligence and National Security as deputy to Ali Fallahian and in April 2007 was appointed by President of IranPresident Mahmoud Ahmadinejad as the security advisor to the president.

+ For his unique creativity and selflessness, he has always been attended by Louis XIV And eventually he became a trusted advisor to the king.

+ Social Security policy and his work as an advisor to the Advisory Council on Social Security in the late 1980s and 1990s.

+ He was also the Principal Creative Advisor for Walt Disney Imagineering.

+ He served as the United States National Security Advisor to President of the United StatesPresident Jimmy Carter from 1977 to 1981.

+ He was the National Security Advisor in the Obama Administration.

+ He is now an instructor or advisor for many organizations, including: Tōkai University, the International Judo Federation, and the All Japan Judo Federation.

+ During 1937, Claire Lee Chennault retired from the American military and became the military advisor to China.

+ He was appointed via by President Barack Obama in early 2009 for the Special Advisor of the Green Jobs.

+ He was a senior policy advisor there.

+ He was the senior policy advisor to Hillary Clinton’s 2016 presidential election campaign and Deputy Chief of Staff at the Department of State.

+ She was Lord Mayor of Manchester from 1975 to 1976 and an advisor on educational matters to Margaret Thatcher’s government in the 1980s.

+ He was an advisor to Gamal Abdel Nasser.

+ William Laud was a close advisor of Charles I of England.

+ After he retired, Zmolek became an advisor and member of the board to the Rochester Youth Hockey Association.

More in-sentence examples of “advisor”:

+ One medical advisor was given a cameo appearance in the series as an orthopaedic surgeon.

+ From 2016 until his death, he was kaumātua and advisor to the governor-general and government of New Zealand.

+ Since 2012, he served as Senior Policy Advisor at the Institute of Modern Russia.

+ During the Barack ObamaObama Administration, McKean was the first-ever Senior Advisor for Human Rights in the United States Department of State’s global AIDS program and the Office of Global Affairs at the U.S.

+ Augustin Pascal Pierre Louis Marie de Romanet, Comte de Beaune is a French political advisor and business executive, chief executive officer of Groupe ADP since November 2012.

+ He was a political advisor to Mayor of ChicagoChicago Mayor Harold Washington.

+ He was an advisor to four U.S.

+ Before that, he served as the Deputy National Security Advisor for the Clinton Administration from January 20, 1993 until March 14, 1997.

+ In the spring of 1949, Robinson turned to Hall of Famer George Sisler, working as an advisor to the Dodgers, for batting help.

+ He was a close advisor to Count Berengar Raymond I of Barcelona and he rebuilt the cathedral of Vic with help from Countess Ermesinda.

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

+ Flohic also was a closer advisor and aide-de-camp to General Charles de Gaulle.

+ Horner also served as the technical advisor for all of the “Jurassic Park Jurassic Park” films.

+ He served as an advisor to Trump during his successful presidential campaign.

+ He held many important jobs including Speaker of the House of Commons, Lord Chancellor and advisor to the King Henry VIII.

+ He served as National Security Advisor between 1953 and 1955, and again from 1957 to 1958.

+ Lewis “Scooter” Libby first name generally given as Irv, Irve or Irving; and former advisor to Vice President of the United StatesVice President Dick Cheney.

+ During World War II, Woodward was an advisor to the War Production Board on the penicillin project.

+ Conway was an American tax advisor and actor who appeared frequently in Japanese films and television between the 1950s and 1970s.

+ He serves as a Senior Advisor to the President of the United Statessenior advisor for policy for President Donald Trump.

+ Vince Cable studied economics at university and became an economic advisor to the Kenyan government in 1966.

+ The current Executive Director of UNICEF is former United States National Security Advisor Anthony Lake since 2010.

+ He is an advisor to many companies.

+ She was the White House Deputy National Security Advisor in Barack Obama’s administration.

+ The mother of Maria I of Portugal she also acted as regent of Portugal during the last months of her husbands life and acted as advisor to her daughter in her reign.

+ Upon arriving in Argentina via the ratlines, he became a security advisor to Juan Perón.

+ He was easily led by a small number of friends, such as his French queen Margaret of Anjou and his advisor Edmund Beaufort, Duke of Somerset.

+ During the 1980s, he served as an advisor on indigenous affairs to the governments of Malcolm Fraser and Bob Hawke.

+ Charles Bila Kaboré was appointed technical advisor to the Minister of the Interior and Security in 1961, before becoming Treasurer General of Upper Volta and member of the Economic and Social Council.

+ He became Mexico’s special advisor at UNESCO in Paris.

+ He was the United States National Security Advisor under U.S.

+ He is the senior advisor to player development for the Baltimore Ravens.

+ On December 4, 2020, newly elected President of the United StatesPresident Chief Medical Advisor to the President in the Biden administration.

+ In the 1970s, he became a member of the Likud party and from time to time he was brought in by Israeli leaders as an advisor of Naval issues.

+ Since 2014, Dimitry Dikman is the Senior Advisor to the Chairman of the Board of Directors of Genesis Philanthropy Group and Chairman of the Grant Review Committee of the foundation.

+ John Holdren, Director, nominated in December 2008, served as Science Advisor to President Barack Obama.

+ He was a presidential Office of Science and Technology PolicyScience Advisor for President Ronald Reagan.

+ He was advisor to Sergey Brin, the co-founder of Google, from 1993 to 1997 when Brin was a computer science student at Stanford.

+ Secretary of State Rex Tillerson, economic advisor Gary Cohn, U.S.

+ He served as National Security Advisor under U.S.

+ Richard Vincent Allen was the United States National Security Advisor to President Ronald Reagan from 1981 to 1982, having been Reagan’s chief foreign policy advisor from 1977.

+ Abū Bakr ‘Abdallāh bin Abī Quḥāfah aṣ-Ṣiddīq Abu Bakr served as a trusted advisor to Muhammad.

+ After resigning as CEO of HP, Fiorina served on the boards of several organizations and as an advisor to Republican Party Republican John McCain’s 2008 presidential campaign.

+ Lauren Ashley Underwood born October 4, 1986_ is an American politician, political advisor and former registered nurse.

+ They included: Ahmed Ullah, an advisor of the ex-King of Oudh; Nana Saheb, his nephew Rao Saheb, and his retainers, Tantia Tope and Rani Lakshmibai; the Rani LakshmibaiRani of Jhansi; Kunwar Singh; the Rajput chief of Jagadishpur in Bihar; and Firuz Saha, a relative of the Mughal Emperor, Bahadur Shah.

+ She was Programme Director of ‘The Girl Generation: Together To End FGM’ and Senior FGM Advisor for Equality Now, an international human rights organisation.

+ One medical advisor was given a cameo appearance in the series as an orthopaedic surgeon.

+ From 2016 until his death, he was kaumātua and advisor to the governor-general and government of New Zealand.
+ Since 2012, he served as Senior Policy Advisor at the Institute of Modern Russia.