Some sentences in use of “trivial”

How to use in-sentence of “trivial”:

+ However, the currently invalid options “lt;left ” and “lt;right ” could be added someday, as a trivial implementation, because to handle “center” then left/right must already be known to the computer.

+ The trivial roots are numbers called “negative even integers”.

+ Using dispute resolution can be treated as hounding if it involves constantly making petty and trivial complaints about another editor.

+ It’s a really trivial mention, so it doesn’t seem to have a place.

+ Therefore, do not use auxiliary fields for trivial information, such as blood type, hair color, eye color, body measurements, likes, dislikes, etc.

+ Categories lose their point if they are full of entries added for trivial reasons or, in some cases, for no reason at all.

+ But he quarreled with the leader for a trivial matter and walked back about 40 kilometers to his house.

Some sentences in use of trivial
Some sentences in use of trivial

Example sentences of “trivial”:

+ We know what the trivial roots are because of the equation that Bernhard Riemann gave.

+ No coverage at all aside from interviews and trivial mentions.

+ There’s unnecessary made-up trivial info and may be a prank or a attack page.

+ Sources only lead to trivial mention of the subject and her character in the shows.

+ These are better called “justifiable lies” rather than “white lies” which I agree pertains more to trivial things like, “Do you like my new hat?”.

+ Many references seem to be trivial in nature.

+ Title is trivial for an encyclopedia subject, content is unreferenced as to pov.

+ There are neat rules that say what the trivial roots are.

+ In real world systems, these long division operations are performed in hardware by bit-shifting and XORing, a feat which is trivial for digital electronics to perform at extremely high speeds.

+ Although an IUPAC name makes every single possible molecule unique, the names are often long and complicated, so in everyday life, “trivial” names–unofficial but widely understood names–are used, such as the trivial names Paracetamol, Tylenol, and Acetaminophen, which are used for a compound whose IUPAC name is “N- acetamide”.

+ Care should be taken to avoid trivial uses.

+ Freud believed all of these acts to have an important significance; the most trivial slips of the tongue or pen may reveal people’s secret feelings and fantasies.

+ It’s likely to be a MILL and trivial to no coverage and impact.

+ Some of these trivial names are trademarks.

+ We know what the trivial roots are because of the equation that Bernhard Riemann gave.

+ No coverage at all aside from interviews and trivial mentions.

Leave a Reply