How to use in-sentence of “thrived”:
+ They thrived during the Pennsylvanian sub-period of the Carboniferous 315–300 million years years ago.
+ Troy was a powerful kingdom in the Mediterranean sea, and thrived under the long rule of King Priam.
+ Webbville thrived until 1828 when Beveridge and other Marianna settlers went to Tallahassee and enticed the Florida Legislature with free land, construction of a courthouse, a public square and US$$500 to purchase a quarter section of land to be sold at public auction as a way to finance the new government, if the county seat was moved to Marianna.
+ During the late Palaeozoic, great forests of primitive plants thrived on land forming the great coal beds of Europe and eastern North America.
+ Now-extinct marine animals called graptolites thrived in the oceans.
+ Animals such as rats thrived in these conditions.
+ It is now known that it did not go extinct, but survived, and thrived where the circumstances were right.

