How to use in-sentence of “clue”:
+ Harry’s egg is supposed to contain a clue to the next task, but when opened it merely shrieks loudly.
+ Yet in quantum physics, the Planck’s constant is the minimum energy unit that a field can be divided into, perhaps a clue to the smallest size a particle can be.
+ First, a Google search doesn’t show up anything, secondly, it’s uncited, so I have no clue whether it is real.
+ The east coast of South America is shaped somewhat like the west coast of Africa, and this gave a clue that continents moved over long periods of time.
+ I have no clue what a dicdec is.
+ This gives no clue of what country it’s in.
+ A clue to this might been found in Pasteur’s work.
Example sentences of “clue”:
+ In 1978, the cards were dropped in favor of flipping panels which had the dollar value on one side and the clue on the other.
+ The user’s writing style seems to be similar, with the most disturbing clue being that he/she voted in the current RfA shortly after the first edit.
+ At the moment, even though we do not know what people are thinking, brain-scan technology can identify when people are responding pleasurably to images, providing some clue as to how certain images affect some people.
+ The person exiled gets a clue to the hidden immunity idol, which may or may not be located on the island, an “instant comfort” the right to change tribes.
+ This isn’t a case where you do not have a clue as what the topic is about.
+ One clue is a small pillbox containing two pills-one harmless and one a poison.
+ An “Acherontia styx” pupa found in the soft palate of a murder victim is a vital clue in the thriller novel The Silence of the Lambs The Silence of the Lambs; in “The Silence of the Lambs” movie version, however, while the script still refers to “styx”, the species used is “Acherontia atropos”.
+ Perhaps the most notable features of the sculptures – and a clue as to their meaning – are the helmets worn by all the Olmec heads.
+ Most recently, this morning’s edits and exhibit a total lack of CLUE about sourcing.
+ At one point in the episode, they find a clue to the problem’s solution by looking through their “bobinoculars”, which show video footage from the real world.
+ In 1978, the cards were dropped in favor of flipping panels which had the dollar value on one side and the clue on the other.
+ The user's writing style seems to be similar, with the most disturbing clue being that he/she voted in the current RfA shortly after the first edit.
+ At the moment, even though we do not know what people are thinking, brain-scan technology can identify when people are responding pleasurably to images, providing some clue as to how certain images affect some people.