– The luna moth has one brood each year in the northern part of its range.
– The larvae live in brood balls made with dung prepared by their parents.
– They are brood parasites, similar in life-style to the Cuckoo.
– They are all brood parasites that lay an egg in a nest of another species.
– Because of this, brood parasitism by the cowbird is rare.
Example sentences of brood
Example sentences of “brood”:
– The female daphnia carries its 50 or so eggs in the brood chamber, until they are ready to hatch.
– Many of them have a unique kind of parasitism called brood parasitism.
– This moth has one brood per year.
– This is called brood parasitism.
– Once she does, she may need to brood over them for up to 400 days before they hatch.
– In “Starcraft: Brood War” Jim’s ex-partner Sarah Kerrigan uses deceit and trickery to manipulate the Terran and Protoss into helping her take control of the entire Zerg brood, making her the strongest force in the galaxy.
– In some mollusks the mantle cavity is a brood chamber, and in cephalopods and some bivalves such as scallops, it is a locomotory organ.
– Some species eject unfertilized ovumova into the water while others keep their ova in brood chambers until they hatch, and some of these species use placenta-like organs to nourish the developing eggs.
- The female daphnia carries its 50 or so eggs in the brood chamber, until they are ready to hatch.
- Many of them have a unique kind of parasitism called brood parasitism.
– This species practices cannibalismbrood cannibalism: the adults will eat some of the brood if their own nutritional needs are not met.
– Mature females bear a “marsupium”, or brood pouch, which holds her eggs while they are fertilised, As a female ages, she produces more eggs in each brood.
– These species are obligate brood parasites, meaning that “they only reproduce in this fashion”.
– They lack a brood patch.
– A single ancient origin of brood parasitism in African finches: implications for host-parasite coevolution.
– Obviously tiny birds like European robinrobins or finches choose safe places to nest, and if they cannot, then their brood is unlikely to survive.
– Istituto nazionale di statistica – It is 90 meters above sea level.
– The central area of the park, near the old Olive Downs sheep station, has “jump-ups”, flat topped mesas rising up to above the plains.
– There are a number of ambiguities in the above definitions that require clarification and a choice of convention.
– Indeed, the user’s responses above show his lack of understanding and are skirting the issues; it’s very hard to believe what is being said from where I am standing.
– A typical Runic calendar consisted of several horizontal lines of symbols, one above the other.
– When the Italian government closed Catholic youth organizations, Pope Pius XI issued the encyclical “Non Abbiamo Bisogno”, saying that Fascist governments had hidden “pagan intentions” and expressed the irreconcilability of the Catholic position and Fascism, which placed the nation above God and fundamental human rights and dignity.
above how to use in sentences
Example sentences of “above”:
– Although the list above is still the most popular and widely accepted definition of this region, some experts divide the region further into subsections.
– These are lakes that are not connected to the groundwater, but sit above them.
– Istituto nazionale di statistica – It is 97 meters above sea level.
– Recall that, outside an image-table, the parameter “right” causes an image to align above or below an infobox, but would not float alongside the infobox.
– Editors should try to have their articles follow these guidelines, but remember, often there is an exception to every rule, so also use common sense above all.
– All birds have a large gland at the top part of their bill, above their eyes.
– Example: Find the acceleration due to gravity above Earth’s surface.
– Istituto nazionale di statistica – It is 100 meters above sea level.
– It should also carry the sound of the instrument above the heads of the band.
– For example, he suggested that there was an atmospheric conducting layer many kilometers above the earth’s surface which could be used for sending long-distance radio-waves around the curvature of the earth.
– The “Shorter Oxford English Dictionary” defines the term as given above in our first line.
– Her casket was placed above ground beside the coffin of her husband in the lower level crypt of the presidential tomb at Lake View Cemetery in Cleveland, Ohio.
– In humans it is above the medulla and below the midbrain.
– Because mountain-building lifts up huge sections of the Earth, there are large areas which are well above sea level: the highlands.
– It is 47 meters above sea level.
– It is in Western Mexico and is over above sea level.
– LM could descend vertically and hover above the surface of moon.
– His best-known form is the man with the head of a falcon and the sun disk above him.
- Although the list above is still the most popular and widely accepted definition of this region, some experts divide the region further into subsections.
- These are lakes that are not connected to the groundwater, but sit above them.
More in-sentence examples of “above”:
– Istituto nazionale di statistica – It is 180 meters above sea level.
– Laid out on a rocky outcrop 130 meters above the river, the park offers a view of the valley, castles and neighboring villages, including Beynac-et-Cazenac, Fayrac, Castelnaud, La Roque-Gageac and Domme.
– He had large feathery wings which he used to fly around in the sky and mainly shot people with his love arrows by flying above them.
– Translations are printed on a screen above the front of the stage so that the audience can understand what is being sung.
– As a result, traction elevators can be built without a dedicated room above the shaft, saving valuable space in building planning.
– It is 215 meters above sea level.
– The municipality has two villages “Segl Maria and the three “Maiensäss”e Grevasalvas, Blaunca and Buaira above “Plaun da Lej” on the left side of the valley.
– Heller played a role in the emergence of West Coast rap music when he managed Ruthless Records with Eazy-E and discovered, signed or managed the likes of N.W.A, The Black Eyed Peas, Above the Law Above the Law, The D.O.C.
– Kettles were put on a rack or a hook above the fire to become hot.
– It is in Potosí DepartmentPotosí in southwest Bolivia, near the crest of the Andes at an height of 3,656 metres above sea level.
– In the above example we use a numbered parameter to feed one of the categories, and then we tell this module to use that numbered parameter for both the help and user space.
– The elevation at the East Peak, its second highest point, is above sea level.
– It was painted red, with the cab area above bonnet-level height painted cream.
– It is about 320 metres above sea level, and surrounded by mountains.
– Hello, I have stated above that I would like to see at least 2 GAs and 2 VGAs promoted per month.
– The use of the above “designated_other1” parameter overrides these.
– The image of Lloyd clutching the hands of a large clock as he dangles from the outside of a skyscraper above moving traffic is well known.
– It is the highest station in Shropshire, 613 ft above sea level.
– All of Lesotho is at least 1,400 m above sea level.
– The section of the M6 which runs over Shap Fell in Cumbria is 1050 ft above sea level.
– People call the above series of steps Dijkstra’s algorithm.
– An alternative way of thinking about this example if a Smith-efficient Condorcet method that passes ISDA is used to determine the winner is that 58% of the voters, a mutual majority, ranked Memphis last making Memphis the majority loser and Nashville, Chattanooga, and Knoxville above Memphis, ruling Memphis out.
– On the way between Gangtok to Nathula, 35 kilometres from Gangtok is Lake Changu above Sea level.
– These large gill chambers close tightly when the fish is above water.
– The eagle is an African fish eagle, which also appears in the national coat of arms and represents the people’s ability to rise above the country’s problems.
– In the other hand, side by side with the 13th-century bronze griffin of Perugia, above the door of the “Palazzo dei Priori” stands, as a Guelphic emblem, the lion: Perugia remained loyal for the most part to the Guelph party in the struggles of Guelphs and Ghibellines.
- Istituto nazionale di statistica - It is 180 meters above sea level.
- Laid out on a rocky outcrop 130 meters above the river, the park offers a view of the valley, castles and neighboring villages, including Beynac-et-Cazenac, Fayrac, Castelnaud, La Roque-Gageac and Domme.
– The above verse explains the duties, characters and behaviours of Kshatriya warrior.
– Many parameters shown above are unnecessary in most cases, and can be omitted.
– Airplane wings are designed in such a way that, the air molecules prefer moving under the wing rather than above it, so as a result there is more air flowing underneath the wing compared to above it.
– The light came in from windows above the columns.
– The remains of Sendai Castle are on a hill above the city.
– The above numbers might indicate that this discussion, might be able to close for now.
– The rank is above Colonel and below Major-General.
– It is 473 meters above sea level.
– Edinburgh Castle stands 430 feet above sea level, which helps to explain the distance the shot travelled.
– Films like this are both above and below middle-brow taste.
– It was only about nine feet above sea level.
– In 1832, five years after Beethoven’s death, Rellstab imagined the effect of the first Movement movement like a moonlight shining above Lake Lucerne.
– Note that there is no or similar for rounding above the decimal place.
– Originally these were underground in hills, then the house was called a “smial”; but this architecture is also used for ‘normal’ houses above ground.
– The middle 50 percent of enrolled students for the class of 2012 scored 24-29 on the ACT, well above the national averages.
– The rice crop needs about 24°C or above with minor variations during sowing, growing and harvesting seasons.
– It is warm all year round, rarely getting above 34°C.
– At these coordinates, the elevation is measured to be 68.9 meters or 226.0 feet above mean sea level.
– It is 220 meters above sea level.
– There are more than 50 large lakes and sixteen mountains higher than 2000 meters above sea level.
– Those attached to the main mast are called the mainsail; above that the main topsail and above that the main topgallant sail.
– It is 2 meters above sea level.
– Muncie was chosen from the 143 cities that met the above descriptions.
– A Ladder match is a match where a prize is hung above the ring, usually a championship belt or a briefcase with a contract inside.
+ He was an electrical engineer, one of the few chess masters who achieved distinction in another career while playing top-class competitive chess.
+ Running is a part of many forms of competitive racing.
+ As a competitive sport, Weightlifting is controlled by the “International Weightlifting Federation”.
+ They also make good pleasure, trail, and working ranch horses for people who do not like competitive events.
+ Seinäjoki region is Finland’s sixth largest market area and offers very competitive and attractive trade services.
+ Midshipmen get grades on a broad academic program, military leadership performance, and mandatory participation in competitive athletics.
In-sentence examples of competitive
Example sentences of “competitive”:
+ They may also act as trainers for professional dancers in ballet, Stage stage shows and competitive ballroom dance.
+ Pak won admission to Daegu Teacher’s College through a competitive examination.
+ At lower temperatures, S1 and E1 reactions are competitive reactions.
+ It applies to dance, football, chess and many other areas where people perform tasks in well-defined competitive situations, but also in art where the situation may be much more open.
+ It has been incredibly successful and has garnered a large competitive electronic sports.
+ A test series must be competitive for it to be commercially viable.
+ He retired from competitive play in 2001.
+ From this assessment, it tries to find an Distributionallocation of productive factors as to desirability and economic efficiency within an economy, often relative to competitive general equilibrium.
+ The College of Health Related Professions is the gateway for students seeking to enter some of the most competitive and highly paid careers in healthcare today: physician assistant, physical and occupational therapy, medical informatics, diagnostic medical imaging, and midwifery.
+ He gave up hockey after breaking his ankle doing it and making him and Davis miss most of the 2004-2005 competitive season.
+ In 1993, playing for the England under-21 team, he became the first black player to captain an England team in a competitive match.
+ This feature has been added due to the popularity of using no items on a relatively empty stage in competitive tournaments of the games.
+ There are many complex techniques and tier lists created by the competitive community of the Super Smash Bros.
+ This process in individual, appears by the legal norm of Colombia that allows exemptions in taxes to make but competitive to the region.
+ He usually streams the game Fortnite and his competitive duo partner is Reverse2k, another pro player.
+ They may also act as trainers for professional dancers in ballet, Stage stage shows and competitive ballroom dance.
+ Pak won admission to Daegu Teacher's College through a competitive examination.
More in-sentence examples of “competitive”:
+ Generally, a perfectly competitive market exists when every firm in the market are price takers and no one is able to charge a different price without losing business.
+ Besides his activities as a competitive sportsman, Klingenberg always focused on his occupational career.
+ Generally, a perfectly competitive market exists when every firm in the market are price takers and no one is able to charge a different price without losing business.
+ Besides his activities as a competitive sportsman, Klingenberg always focused on his occupational career.
+ Gilmore said that it would be “impractical” to run, citing the difficulty of raising enough money to be competitive in early-voting states of Iowa, New Hampshire, and South Carolina.
+ Since trampolining became an Olympic sport in 2000, many countries have started developing programs for producing very competitive athletes.
+ The actress is also the oldest winner of a competitive Grammy Award, which she won in 2012.
+ The ideology, named from democracy where people have a say in government actions, supports a competitive economy with money while also helping people whose jobs don’t pay a lot.
+ Taxation in England is quite competitive when compared to much of the rest of Europe – as of 2014 the basic rate of personal tax is 20% on taxable income up to £31,865 above the personal tax-free allowance, and 40% on any additional earnings above that amount.
+ Since the 2010 Winter Olympics, the National post newspaper asked Rochette what she has been doing in the time spent after her win at the Olympics, Rochette stated that she has been skating in a less competitive environment where she can concentrate on her own abilities and perform in her personal way.
+ But in April 1941, when Italy started together with the Germans the coordinated “Axis” attack in the Mediterranean, the Italian Air Force had the new and competitive “Macchi C.202”, able to fight successfully the British Spitfires.
+ While the number of acting categories has grown, some competitive categories like “Best Juvenile Recording Artist”, “Best Family Motion Picture” and “Best Family TV Series” are no longer awarded.
+ In devising the marketing strategy : the total marketing operation, it is usually said that getting a competitive advantage should be considered importantly than any other factors.
+ With the South having become a one-party region after the disfranchisement of blacks, Democratic Party primaries were the only competitive contests in the states.
+ Minardi had a large fan base, but they were one of the least competitive teams in the sport.
+ In 2016, Maroney retired from competitive gymnastics.
+ The FIDE rules for competitive chess include all the above rules, plus several others.
+ Franklin is one of the most honored artists by the Grammy Awards, with 18 competitive Grammys and two honorary Grammys.
+ In the diagram shown, the cost curves of a perfectly competitive market is shown in its long run equilibrium.
+ It is played for fun and as a competitive sport.
+ In conclusion, marketing managers must pursue the most appropriate marketing mix with a bid to achieving competitive advantage using minimum effort.
+ Predation on a white shark and a possible case of competitive displacement.
+ He made 258 competitive appearances and scored 23 goals for Schalke before moving to Liverpool on a free transfer in 2016.
+ In this sense, the Rumba is the slowest of the five competitive International Latin dances.
+ There are many competitive events in motocross.
+ He was known for his competitive personality, keeping himself thirty pounds under his natural weight, and on occasion not sparing the whip on horses such as Nijinsky.
+ Totilas was thought to be one of the most outstanding competitive dressage horses in the world.
+ This would be regarded as strange today; players do not address each other in competitive chess except where necessary.
+ With his new owner, the team start again to be competitive and the 1993 season is a success, with a 5th place in the constructor rank.
+ Shooting is a competitive sport involving tests of accuracy and speed.
+ In competitive chess, it is by far the most frequently played reply to the King’s Pawn opening.
+ The water wheel remained competitive with the steam engine well into the Industrial Revolution.
+ Children from this town participate in little league baseball, ice hockey, and competitive swimming.
+ The Williams team was more competitive in, Williams produced the FW26 chassis with a radical nose section.
+ Lasker returned to competitive chess to make some money, finishing fifth in Zürich CityZürich 1934; third in Moscow 1935 behind Mikhail Botvinnik and Salo Flohr and ahead of Capablanca and other masters; sixth in Moscow 1936 and seventh equal in Nottingham 1936.
+ For a perfectly competitive firm, the marginal cost of producing an extra unit of output is shown using the MC curve “”.
+ The combination of seasonal drying along with very high light intensities can result in the competitive exclusion of “T.
+ Athletics can be played for enjoyment, but it can also be a competitive sport.
+ To date the team has not achieved competitive success.
+ He retired from competitive skating after the 2006 Nationals.
+ They are also used in the sport of competitive casting.
+ Checkmates are rare in competitive chess.
+ This is compulsory for any competitive game.
+ Botvinnik played no formal competitive games after winning the 1948 match tournament until he defended his title.
+ As a competitive sport, pool is governed internationally by the World Pool-Billiard Association, and which represents pool in the World Confederation of Billiard Sports, which in turn represents all forms of cue sports in the International Olympic Committee.
+ A combat sport is a competitive contact sport where two combatants fight against each other using certain rules of contact, with the aim of simulating parts of real hand to hand combat.
+ The final competitive match before the closure of the stadium took place on 11 May 2003.
+ Both ratios are zero when a market is perfectly competitive or a cartel is ineffective in raising prices.
+ Team Lotus was active and competitive in Formula One racing from 1958 to 1994.
+ The flowering stalk is usually longer than the leaf stalk.
+ It grows a tall stalk from the gametophyte.
+ The foxes also stalk the young as they are led by the parents to wetland feeding areas.
+ This stalk is often brown.
+ Pumas stalk their prey, which means they walk slowly and quietly, they hide and then when close, they jump or run fast to catch their prey by surprise.
+ They stalk through the grass with long strides.
+ At the bottom of the emblem is a stalk of wheat, representing the main agricultural product of the nation, which was also part of the earlier arms.
+ The hypothalamus releases factors down the pituitary stalk to the pituitary gland where they cause the release of pituitary hormones.
Example sentences of stalk
Example sentences of “stalk”:
+ A stalk holds up one or more balls of spores.
+ The stalk is also called a filament.
+ The first is the polypoid stage, when the animal takes the form of a small stalk with feeding tentacles.
+ A stalk holds up one or more balls of spores.
+ The stalk is also called a filament.
+ The first is the polypoid stage, when the animal takes the form of a small stalk with feeding tentacles.
+ The movie is about an Egyptian mummy that returns to life to stalk a woman who is the reincarnation of his lost love.
+ The flowers are terminal, meaning the grow at the tip of the flowering stalk and each stalk has one flower.
+ Wolves usually stalk old or sick animals, but they do not always catch what they stalk.
+ Other parts of plants such as the leaf stalk may get reinforcement to resist the strain of physical forces.
+ Maize is a leafy stalk whose kernels have seeds inside.
+ He began to stalk President Jimmy Carter.
+ The talipot palm bears the largest inflorescence of any plant, 6-8 m long, consisting of one to several million small flowers borne on a branched stalk at the top of the trunk.
+ Age, name, and city should not make you a target for harassment, and I do not believe that someone can stalk you with the information I give.
+ It has a stalk which attaches the growth.
+ In the adult stage they break away from the stalk and can move about.
+ When a plant flowers at the end of its life, it produces a spectacular flowering stalk 0.5-2.0 m tall, typically with hundreds of maroon sunflowerlike flower heads.
+ The camouflage is perfected by the rear wings, which have a little ‘tail’, which looks like the stalk of a leaf.
+ It may have a short narrow stalk which connects it to the skin.
+ It will wait motionless for prey, or slowly stalk its victim.
+ They stalk and eat medium-sized prey like Ibex, bharal and wild goats.
+ The series is about Sidney Prescott, and her war against a succession of murderers who adopt the guise of Ghostface to stalk and torment their victims.
+ Bobcats stalk their prey, and then pounce onto it.
+ The ability to digest lactose into adulthood was useful to humans after the development of animal husbandry.
+ Up to 75% of people worldwide begin to lose the ability to digest lactose as they grow into adults.
+ The body requires energy to digest food.
+ This happens before the squabs are fully grown, but after they digest the adult food.
+ The main antagonist of “Battle Tendency” and one of the surviving Pillar Men, a race of humanoids revered as deities and demons in the New World that petrify while in sunlight and digest other lifeforms through physical contact due to their cells containing acidic enzymes and euphoria-inducing enzymes that keep the prey from realizing they are being eaten alive.
+ Also, enzymes help to digest the food.
+ It is also the starting material for bile acids that are made by the liver and used to digest fats, and for steroid hormones.
+ Anaconda eat 4 to 5 times year because it takes 3 to 4 months to digest their food.
digest use in-sentences
Example sentences of “digest”:
+ Stahl thought that because some parts of plants, like raw cellulose and starch are hard to digest in uncooked form, they would likely not be a part of the hominidaehominid diet before fire could be controlled.
+ No animal can digest cellulose by itself.
+ Stahl thought that because some parts of plants, like raw cellulose and starch are hard to digest in uncooked form, they would likely not be a part of the hominidaehominid diet before fire could be controlled.
+ No animal can digest cellulose by itself.
+ It is also published in Braille, digital, audio, and a version in large type called “Reader’s Digest Large Print”.
+ Steatorrhea is caused by the inability to digest and absorb fat in the diet.
+ SymbiosisSymbiotic bacteria in their intestines help them digest the fibres.
+ The swarm puts out extracellular enzymes to digest food.
+ In these neurodegenerative disorders, it is thought that the microglia digest healthy brain cells, causing the degeneration of brain function.
+ Humans that contained amylase in the saliva would benefit from increased ability to digest starch more efficiently and in higher quantities.
+ These first farmers likely had another problem: When people become adults most lose the ability to digest fresh milk.
+ Billiards Digest Magazine.
+ They subsequently sit, sleepy or half torpid, to digest their food.
+ Because of this they are unable to digest lactose.
More in-sentence examples of “digest”:
+ Humans do not digest leaves, but we inherited some of the apes’ vegetarian apparatus.
+ That way a bird can eat several items, and then fly off to a quiet spot to digest them.
+ The main reason it is produced is that goats’ milk is easier to digest than that of cows or buffalos.
+ The capital of the state of Paraná Paraná was the only Brazilian city to enter the 21st century as a reference for national and international urban planning and quality of life; a search by the American magazine Reader’s Digest found that it was the Brazilian city better placed in the ranking of the best cities in the world to live in.
+ Pythons may take several days or even weeks to fully digest prey.
+ Laxatives work by helping your intestines digest undigested food, and do not make you lose weight.
+ Every 10–14 days yellow-lipped sea kraits come on land to digest their food, to shed their skin or mate and lay their eggs.
+ These snails are able to digest most vegetation including carrots and lettuce.
+ It will then release itself and sink back to the river bed in order to digest its food and wait for its next meal.
+ Bond, July 8, 1956 “1951 Was a Year of Scandals, Heroisim, Turn-Abouts, T.V, Big Moments, Heartbreaks, Name-Calling Prayer in Sports” December 30, 1951 “Honest Mentor Resigns” March 22, 1952 Reader’s Digest “They Won by a Tie”, November 1952, page 93 as an example of sportsmanship when he rejected a touchdown that would have won a game for his team.
+ The true bug pumps saliva through this mouth, to partly digest their food.
+ The amount of energy needed to digest cooked meat is less than that needed for raw meat, and cooking gelatinizes collagen and other connective tissues as well, it “opens up tightly woven carbohydrate molecules for easier absorption.” Cooking also kills parasites and food poisoning bacteria.
+ Since butterflies do not digest pollen, more nectar is offered than pollen.
+ Ungulates are typically herbivorous and many use specialised gut flora to digest cellulose.
+ Phenylketonuria is a disease in which a person cannot digest certain foods properly because they have an amino acid, or type of chemical, called phenylalanines in them.
+ Another difference between the two is that odd-toed ungulates digest plant cellulose in their intestines rather than in one or more stomach chambers as the even-toed ungulates do.
+ To digest it an enzyme called lactase cleaves the lactose into its two subunits glucose and galactose for absorption.
+ The gastrointestinal tract is not only the gut, but also other organs that help us digest food.
+ To them it was a great advantage: they could digest milk throughout life.
+ This stomach is an adaptation to help digest tough grasses.
+ From about the 6th century, there was Roman law that stated that a living foetus may not be buried with the mother, The Digest notes this to be a “lex regia”.
+ In protists, vacuoles also store and help digest food that the protist ate.
+ Lactic acid bacteria contain the enzymes needed to digest lactose.
+ Saliva, which helps animals and people digest food, is mostly water.
+ E.1 Instead of a “quick and merciful death”, “Reader’s Digest Condensed Books” chose part of the book to be printed again.
+ A carnivorous plant must attract, kill and digest prey.
+ Humans do not digest leaves, but we inherited some of the apes' vegetarian apparatus.
+ That way a bird can eat several items, and then fly off to a quiet spot to digest them.
+ The main reason it is produced is that goats' milk is easier to digest than that of cows or buffalos.
+ Taking enzymes help digest food if there is mucus in the stomach.
+ Reader’s Digest has a total sales of 17 million copies, making it the largest paid circulation magazine in the world.
+ In this was, a thin-looking snake can swallow and digest a larger animal.
+ To digest food, apple snails first break up food with the radula teeth, and then the food will be swallowed, and travel down the esophagus and to the stomach.
+ She won awards for Outstanding Actress from the 17th Soap Opera Digest Awards for her act as Nikki Newman.
+ First it traps the insect inside its leaves, and then lets out a liquid that helps digest the trapped animal.
+ Humans and other animals cannot Digestiondigest cellulose but some animals such as termites use bacteria to digest it.
+ It is impossible to digest plastic, and the undigested plastic stops other food from being digested.
+ They have a slow metabolic rate that allows them to digest one leaf in up to a month.
+ Mourning doves generally eat enough to fill their stomach and then fly away to digest while resting.
+ Animals and humans have amylase, so they can digest starch.
+ They can no longer digest milk.
+ For many years, Reader’s Digest was the best-selling consumer magazine in the United States until it lost to “Better Homes and Gardens Better Homes and Gardens” in 2009.
+ This makes it difficult for the body to digest food.
+ Of course the attacker learns at least one piece of information, the digest itself, by which the attacker can recognise if the same message occurred again.
+ It may be helped in some cases by taking enzymes, such as those usually produced by the body, which digest fat.
+ Charles DarwinDarwin suggested that the appendix was perhaps used to digest leaves as Darwin, Charles 1871.
+ A key difference between the two is that odd-toed ungulates digest plant cellulose in their intestines rather than in one or more stomach chambers as the even-toed ungulates do.
+ The lysosome contains enzymes and acids that kill and digest the particle or organism.
+ Cattle are ruminants which mean they have a stomach with several chambers which helps digest their food more efficiently.
+ Reader’s Digest has 50 editions in 21 languages.
+ Humans and many other animals do not digest cellulose.
+ If they do not have enough, they may not be able to digest lactose anymore.
+ They currently play in the Scottish First Division.
+ The first official use of the name “Antarctica” as a continental name in the 1890s is said to have been used by Scottish Cartographycartographer John George Bartholomew.
+ Weir was born in Cambridge, England to Scottish peopleScottish parents.
+ His mother is Welsh peopleWelsh and his father is of Scottish ancestry.
+ His family is of African American, Cherokee Native American, English, French-Canadian and Scottish descent.
+ While James was ruling, the Scottish and English governments were quite stable.
+ The British Rail Class 06 is a class of 0-4-0 Diesel locomotivediesel-mechanical shunters built by Andrew Barclay from 1958 to 1960 for use on the Scottish Region of British Railways.
Example sentences of scottish
Example sentences of “scottish”:
+ Craig Beattie is a Scottish football player.
+ Stuart Oliver Knussen Commander of the Order of the British EmpireCBE was a Scottish conductor.
+ In the 1979-80 season, Aberdeen won the Scottish league.
+ It broadcasts live and recorded coverage of the British House of Commons and House of Lords, the Northern Ireland Assembly, the Scottish Parliament and the Welsh Assembly, and occasionally from the General Synod of the Church of England.
+ On 16 June, Dewar set out the legislative programme for the Executive which included: an Education bill to improve standards in Scottish schools; land reform to give right of access to the countryside, a bill to abolish the feudal system of land tenure; and a bill to establish National Parks in Scotland.
+ John Lambie was a Scottish football player and manager.
+ Jane “Jean” Gray was a Scottish peopleScottish-Australian supercentenarian.
+ Ian Holland McCall is a former Scottish footballer and current manager.
+ She was a member of the Scottish National Party and Deputy Leader.
+ Before nationalisation of the railways in 1948 and the creation of British Railways, Northamptonshire was home to three of the “Big Four” railway companies; the London, Midland and Scottish Railway, London and North Eastern Railway and Great Western Railway.
+ He was the joint top scorer in the 1965–66 Scottish Division One season.
+ They compete in the Scottish Premier League and are one of the most successful teams in their country, having won four league titles and seven Scottish Cups.
+ He was featured on a remix of Colombian singer Maluma’s song “Hawái”, on Scottish DJ Calvin Harris’ track “Over Now”, and on American singer Ariana Grande’s song “Off the Table” from her album, “Positions”.
+ Martin John O’Neill, Baron O’Neill of Clackmannan was a Scottish Labour politician.
+ In 1996 the school was used for scenes in a Scottish television show called Take the High Road.
+ After the Scottish Labour Party’s defeat in the 2015 general election, Murphy resigned as party leader.
+ The three main political parties after the election are the Conservative Party Conservatives, the Labour Party and the Scottish National Party.
+ There is another airport, Sumbugh Airport, which has flights to and from the Scottish mainland.
+ For example the Scottish poet Robert Burns preferred the scheme AAABAB.
+ Dens Park is a football football Scottish city of Dundee.
+ Craig Beattie is a Scottish football player.
+ Stuart Oliver Knussen Commander of the Order of the British EmpireCBE was a Scottish conductor.
More in-sentence examples of “scottish”:
+ Formerly the dominant language of the Islands, Scottish Gaelic remains spoken even though it has now been largely supplanted by English in some parts.
+ The Scottish Terrier is one of the five breeds of terrier that originated in Scotland.
+ Jim Murphy also resigned as leader of Scottish Labour.
+ Sophie Xeon was a Scottish peopleScottish musician, record producer, singer, songwriter and DJ.
+ She is of Polish peoplePolish, Irish and Scottish ancestry.
+ Peter Dodds McCormick was a Scottish peopleScottish-born Australian schoolteacher.
+ Despite their modest height, walking and climbing in the Scottish mountains may be made dangerous by their latitude and exposure to Atlantic weather systems.
+ He was part of the St Mirren squad when they won the 1958ndash;59 Scottish Cup, but he missed the final after contracting a viral infection.
+ Renbourn died on 26 March 2015 from a heart attack at his home in Hawick in the Scottish Borders, aged 70.
+ There is a different Scottish edition of the newspaper, which is sold in Scotland only and differs mainly in the Sport pages.
+ Bell’s palsy is named after Scottish Anatomyanatomist Charles Bell.
+ They play in the Scottish Premier League along with their city rivals Hibernian.
+ John Loudon McAdam, was a Scottish engineer and road-builder.
+ Steven John Pressley born October 11, 1973 in Elgin, MorayElgin, Scottish former international footballer.
+ It was started in 1923 by the Scottish languageScottish author Compton Mackenzie.
+ Ferguson was dropped for the 1964–65 Scottish Cup final.
+ Then the climate began to warm and the pine wood retreated north into the Scottish Highlands.
+ His father’s Scottish peopleScottish-American ancestors migrated to Mexico from Virginia in the 1830s.
+ After an education at Eton CollegeEton and Oxford, Dalmeny succeeded to his grandfather’s Scottish earldom in 1868.
+ In Europe, the best-known clans system is that in Scotland, which still has some effects today, especially in the Scottish Highlands and Islands.
+ They were not as loud as modern Scottish bagpipes.
+ The British Rail Class 502 was a type of electric multiple unit originally built by the London Midland and Scottish Railway at their Derby Works workshop.
+ Orwell’s “Notes on Nationalism” have been used by people on the right-wing of Scottish politics to argue against ‘identity politics’.
+ McInnes was born Gavin Miles McInnes in Hitchin, England on July 17, 1970 to Scottish parents James and Loraine McInnes.
+ The Inverbervie name derives from “Inbhir Beirbhe”, meaning “Mouth of the Bervie WaterRiver Bervie” in Scottish Gaelic.
+ The Puritans believed some of the same things as CalvinismCalvinists and Scottish Presbyterians.
+ His legacy lives on in many tales but these can be attributed to Kenneth II, a later Scottish monarch.
+ In 1970 he took his first important job: associate conductor of the BBC Scottish Symphony Orchestra.
+ It existed from 1 January 1923 until nationalisation on 1 January 1948, when it was divided into the new British Railways’ Eastern Region, North Eastern Region and partially the Scottish Region.
+ He is the leader of the party in the Scottish Parliament.
+ It is found in many Scottish symbols and as the name of several Scottish football clubs.
+ Primal Scream are a Scottish rock musicrock band originally formed in 1982 in Jim Beattie.
+ It is named after Alexander Henry Rhind, a Scottish antiquarian.
+ He performed leading roles with The Royal Opera in London, the Welsh National Opera, the Scottish Opera, and the English National Opera.
+ Davidson was elected as a Member of the Scottish Parliament in May 2011.
+ The team who finishes last in the SPL is relegated to the Scottish First Division.
+ Johnstone 4–0 and Aberdeen F.C.Aberdeen 2–0, both higher league opposition, en-route to the Scottish Cup quarter finals.
+ Since 11 August 2020, this has been Ruth Davidson of the Scottish Conservative Party.
+ Female Scottish highland dancers performing the national dances and the IrelandIrish jig also curtsey as well.
+ Brie also studied at the Royal Scottish Academy of Music and Drama in Scotland.
+ Drew Galloway, is a Scottish professional wrestler, better know by his ring name Drew McIntyre.
+ He was held in Scottish prisons until he was compassionate releasereleased on compassionate grounds on 20 August 2009 because he had terminal prostate cancer.
+ The Fault fault separates the hard igneous and metamorphic rocks to the north from the softer sedimentary rocks of the Scottish Lowlands in the south.
+ It is currently the sponsor of the Scottish Premier League.
+ He did play in the 2007 Scottish Cup final, before being substituted because of an injury.
+ Former Scottish Football football player and Arsenal manager, George Graham was born at Bargeddie on 30 November 1944.
+ Some have been lent to Scottish museums and temporary exhibitions.
+ He is the current Leader of the Scottish Liberal Democrats.
+ Formerly the dominant language of the Islands, Scottish Gaelic remains spoken even though it has now been largely supplanted by English in some parts.
+ The Scottish Terrier is one of the five breeds of terrier that originated in Scotland.
+ Jim Murphy also resigned as leader of Scottish Labour.
+ Based on these figures, cocaine consumption was estimated to be about 4kg daily, or 27 doses per day per thousand young adults in areas that feed into the river—a number nearly three times higher than previous estimates.
+ Nevertheless, some 40—50 coded messages were sent per day by ULTRA.
+ Modern petroleum refineries process as much as 800,000 to 900,000 barrels per day of crude oil.
+ Robinson, a sociology professor at the University of Maryland, showing that the average American at that time spent only 24 minutes per day in reading.
+ The result is festivals with more than 2,500 performances and events per day in Edinburgh in August, many times bigger than the next biggest arts festivals anywhere in the world.
+ The Carnival in Rio de Janeiro is a festival held every year before Lent and thought to be the biggest carnival in the world with two million people per day on the streets.
Some example sentences of per day
Example sentences of “per day”:
+ In India, the average calorie requirement of an average man is 2400 calories per day in Rural area and 2100 calories per day in Urban area.
+ The average American produces garbage, also called trash, at the rate of four pounds per day per person, which translates to 600,000 tons per day, or about 220 million tons per year.
+ The spring pumps an average of 214 million gallons of water per day into the river.
+ Before the industrial revolution, men and women doing hard work needed more calories per day than they need today.
+ In 1999 the average consumption of coffee was 3.5 cups per day per American citizen.
+ Creates 3-4 articles per day but not created any article today since i rejected for patroller rights.
+ There is a size minimum of seven inches measured across the shell and a limit of three per day and 24 per year that can be taken.
+ For example, if there are 10 people in a room who make $10 per day and 1 who makes $1,000,000 per day.
+ A nine-year-old should sleep about 9–10 hours per day and teenagers, too, also need that much sleep.
+ If this is not possible, you can request Account Creator Access temporarily for this event which would bypass your account from the 6 per day IP based Account Create Throttle or an Admin can help, but we will need email addresses for the accounts to be created for the passwords to be sent to, so it is better if you or the student can create those.
+ The Kinect was named the “Fastest selling consumer electronics device” by the Guinness World Records, selling an average of 133,333 kinects per day with a total of 8 million units in its first 60 days.
+ I usually spend between ten and fifteen hours per day here, which can be seen by my large number of edits each day.
+ They are still typically less than 25 micrograms per day is considered safe.
+ A factory might have an “intensity” of 100 cars per day delivered to the loading dock.
+ Consuming around 5 mg of selenium per day can kill a human being after a certain amount of time.
+ The sun moves about 1° per day eastwards over a great circle known as the ecliptic.
+ He further told that he never seemed exhausted despite traveling essentially around 80 to 160 kilometers per day for election campaigning.
+ Going on TRM’s ideas, perhaps 1-2 per day is fine.
+ The men collected rain water when they could and sometimes drank only 4 imperial fluid ounces per day and had only a small amount of biscuits and bakers chocolate for food.
+ In India, the average calorie requirement of an average man is 2400 calories per day in Rural area and 2100 calories per day in Urban area.
+ The average American produces garbage, also called trash, at the rate of four pounds per day per person, which translates to 600,000 tons per day, or about 220 million tons per year.
– Marx believed that the workers were not making as much money as they deserved because the boss would make money from the work they did without helping.
– These people, too, now deserved new trials, with free lawyers to help them.
– Many kapos, especially the criminals, could be very cruel to prisoners, especially when SS guards were nearby, to show that they were doing their jobs and deserved their special treatment.
– They believed everyone deserved to be treated equally and with respect no matter their race or gender.
– He did not respect them, and thought those who committed outrages like murder, theft, and rape deserved the worst punishment possible.
– Franklin said that he thought he deserved to die for his crimes.
– The Nazi government was formed under the idea that the “Aryan race” deserved to rule over all other races.
Some sentences in use of deserved
Example sentences of “deserved”:
– Many of the records released on Apple failed to become popular, either because they did not go over well with listeners, or were not given the promotion they needed or deserved to become hit records.
– His awards are well deserved and his edits are numerous and dispersed.
– Prophet Muhammad Said IF there was anyone who deserved prophethood after Him, it was Umar.
– Many baseball fans and critics believe Guerrero’s career was overshadowed by those of other players due to playing for a small fan base in Montreal, and similarly, many believe that he deserved to win the 2000 National League Most Valuable Player Award for his remarkable season, an award which instead was won by Barry Bonds.
– Uncle Ben tells Peter ” that Flash kid probably deserved what was coming to him.
– Aston Merrygold and fellow members of JLS, Marvin Humes, Oritsé Williams, and JB Gill were absolutely fantastic singers and they deserved to become the number 1 boy band in the United Kingdom.
– He thought that the common man deserved to run the business, and that the rich were not better than the commoner.
– Later, an international agreement decided that both Le Verrier and Adams together deserved credit.
– He knew that many people would be upset with him for defending the soldiers, but he believed that everybody deserved a fair trial.
– Shane, who thought neither of the two deserved the million dollars, asked them to pick a number between one and a million.
– Somehow they deserved being in detention, but this is not that matters.
– He is very good at spotting vandalists, and is good at coming up with the deserved punishment.
– Dio’s abusive father, an alcoholic thief who Dio poisoned on the notion that he deserved to die for working his mother to death.
– French President Emmanuel Macron said that Beltrame deserved “the respect and admiration of the whole nation.”.
– Macron said that Beltrame deserved “the respect and admiration of the whole nation.”.
– It is well sourced and i believe it deserved to be a good article.
– At the time, most Americans believed that they deserved success.
- Many of the records released on Apple failed to become popular, either because they did not go over well with listeners, or were not given the promotion they needed or deserved to become hit records.
- His awards are well deserved and his edits are numerous and dispersed.
– While Young writes, composes, records, and produces all of Owl City’s music, during live performances he is accompanied by a group of supporting musicians: Verification is in the closing credits to the film.
– All of the reactors were shut down and are expected to remain closed for damage verification and repairs for at least one year.
– If AADHAR verification is not possible for the applicant, GSTIN will be released only on Physical verification of place of business.
– Replacement of the deprecated parameters with the new parameters should include verification of the data, and citation to the authoritative source.
– That’s probably not going to attract other, foreign-language editors who need a bit of help adding some verification to their stubs.
– Quick editing is not just about fast edit/response feedback, but also about avoiding or limiting either distractions, or forced verification steps, as well.