How to use in-sentence of “dug”:
+ Corms can be dug up and used to multiply or redistribute the plant.
+ The Australian units were well dug in, using the Chinese own trench positions, and responded to the waves of Chinese troops with machine gun fire.
+ However, his debts spun out of control and, when he tried to recover by various schemes, that only dug the hole deeper.
+ The bones of 32 people were dug up in 1929 when the gaol was being redeveloped, and reburied at Pentridge Gaol in Coburg, Victoria.
+ During the Middle Ages, “mines” or “tunnels” were dug underneath castles to let soldiers into the castle or to destroy the walls.

Example sentences of “dug”:
+ At Méteren, on 13 October 1914, during an Allied counter-offensive, he was shot through the right lung by a sniper and was so badly injured that a grave was dug because he was expected to die.
+ Culture history archaeologists dug units that went very deep to find the oldest objects.
+ Bede and The “Liber Eliensis” describe how in 695, Aethelthryth’s body was dug up by her sister Seaxburth, to be transferred from a common grave to the new church at Ely.
+ There was a Skirmisherskirmish at Dug Springs, Missouri on August 2.
+ In Chongqing an ancient Yao Qian Shu was dug up.
+ They measured ancient ruined buildings, they drew things and they dug around for weeks looking for bits of broken statues and painted pottery that they could stick together.
+ As the blizzard was a surprise during the day with people already at work or school, it stopped the city for a few days as people dug out.
+ After three weeks of continued attack on the castle Colonel Lavington and his Roundhead team dug seventy meters underneath Castle Hill, where the castle is.
+ After she was buried he dug her up and would talk to himself in her voice.
+ They have dug up human corpses in India.
+ At Méteren, on 13 October 1914, during an Allied counter-offensive, he was shot through the right lung by a sniper and was so badly injured that a grave was dug because he was expected to die.
+ Culture history archaeologists dug units that went very deep to find the oldest objects.
+ Bede and The "Liber Eliensis" describe how in 695, Aethelthryth's body was dug up by her sister Seaxburth, to be transferred from a common grave to the new church at Ely.
More in-sentence examples of “dug”:
+ During the Roman Empire the Romans dug a ditch that runs north through what is now known as the Ladygrove area north of the town near Long Wittenham.
+ These fuels are called fossil fuels because they are dug up from underground.
+ After the first frost in the autumn kills the leaves, the root is dug out and divided.
+ During the Roman Empire the Romans dug a ditch that runs north through what is now known as the Ladygrove area north of the town near Long Wittenham.
+ These fuels are called fossil fuels because they are dug up from underground.
+ After the first frost in the autumn kills the leaves, the root is dug out and divided.
+ Jacques de Morgan in 1887-89 dug up 576 graves around Alaverdi and Akhatala, on the Tiflis-Alexandropol railway line.
+ Sometimes archaeological sites are found when Foundation foundations are dug for new buildings.
+ Millions of tons are dug up every year.
+ A new entrance into the cave was dug from the Bečva valley.
+ In the ‘cut and cover’ system, a tunnel is dug in the ground and, afterwards, a roof is built above the tunnel.
+ The “libratores” then began their work using ploughs and, sometimes with the help of legionaries, with spades dug down to bed rock or at least to the firmest ground they could find.
+ A shear line stalled in the northeastern Gulf of Mexico in early August as troughing aloft dug into the northeast Gulf of Mexico.
+ Even the quarries that dug up more slate due to other quarries closing often closed eventually.
+ In 1927, General officerGeneral Joseph Pilsudski ordered his body be dug up.
+ It lived in burrows it had dug among plants, or under branches and leaves on the ground.
+ Before this, people dug nitrates out of the ground or had bird feces shipped all over the world to farmers, and the bird feces was being used up faster than the birds could replace it.
+ Gold rush towns usually shrink and disappear after the gold is dug up.
+ In relating this to the existing RfDs around half would be eligible for deletion at first glance, although I haven’t dug too far.
+ Short trenches called saps were dug from the front-trench into No-Man’s Land.
+ Stone was dug up on the island to build the prison as well as other buildings in Sydney, including the seawall for Circular Quay.
+ When the builders dug up the ground to build on, they found some strange things.
+ This are also signs that there may have been holes dug for some sort of ritual purpose long before the dolmen was set up.
+ Scientists dug stuff in the Chang Tang plateau and found iron.
+ To do this, he set up hospitals for animals and humans, created shaded and rested areas along roads for weary travellers to rest, and dug wells in villages.
+ An early name for Nottingham was “Tigguo Cobauc” which means “a place of caves.” Founded by Anglo-Saxon invaders after 600AD, parts of the settlement have included man-made caves, dug into soft sandstone.
+ Some high and rugged passes may have tunnels dug underneath to let traffic move faster.
+ They have well dug burrows underground.
+ It was robbed in 1699 and archaeologically dug between 1928 and 1929.
+ There they were then shot in partially dug pits.
+ It is famous for a Plesiosauriaplesiosaur that was dug out in the village in 1851.
+ This was changed in 1861 when the mound was dug into by archaeologist James Farrer.
+ Thutmose I was buried in a tomb now called KV20 dug high into the cliffs of the Valley of the Kings.
+ This all changed when the Pennsylvania Railroad dug two tunnels under the Hudson River, and four under the East River to Queens.
+ To plant, they dug a hole in the ground, and put one seed in each hole.
+ In autumn, they are dug from their burrows.
+ In trench warfare, the two sides fighting each other dug trenches in a battlefield.
+ However, they could not pass the trench that the Muslims had dug around Medina.
+ But as the animals eat the grass, they also dug up the soil.
+ The Richmond Bridge is made from sandstone dug at Butchers Hill, and carried by convicts using hand carts.
+ Of course, if you have been adding waste all this time, the compost will all be at the bottom of the heap, and will have to be dug out.
+ Prisoners dug for coal during the day and lived in underground cells at night.
+ The French “271e Régiment d’Infanterie” was partly dug in and helped by three Dutch battalions.
+ Large numbers of eggs are deposited in holes dug into mud or sand.
+ Vermiculite is a Silicate mineralphyllosilicate mineral that is dug out of the ground in China, South Africa, Russia and Brazil.
+ Communication trenches, were dug at an angle to the frontline trench and were used to transport men, equipment and food supplies.
+ When Schlieffen retired in 1906, and the WW1 came up 9 years later, in August 1915, the German officers and tactic leaders dug up the plan that Schlieffen had made and thought that the plan would work like it would in Schlieffen’s hypothetical war.
+ Besides being made of earth dug out and piled up, some of the geoglyphs are made by placing stones next to each other.
+ Stoutenburg, Adrien, American Tall Tales, Puffin Books, New York, 1976 Paul and his friend, Babe the Blue Ox, dug the Grand Canyon when Paul was carrying his axe and dragging it behind him.
+ By 1891, 6,000 tons of coal had been dug from shafts.
+ Maeshowe had been dug up in the 12th century by the Vikings.
