“rid of” – some sentence examples

How to use in-sentence of “rid of”:

+ He is reportedly trying to redefine the role of religious ‘math’ in modern day society, so that present day ‘math’ should try to get rid of evils of modern society.

+ With Drake looking like they were going to continue to win, Burton started a plan to purposely lose the fourth Immunity challenge to get rid of the tribe’s weaker players such as Trish and Christa.

+ The United States does not want a civil war to happen, but they do want to get rid of the Capitol Hill Autonomous Zone.

+ The only way it’ll move on is if we get rid of those that thrive on drama.

+ When this happens the nucleus has to get rid of the excess mass or particles.

+ In January of the year 1802, French soldiers landed in Saint-Domingue in order to get rid of Toussaint L’Ouverture.

+ Heidi then tries to get rid of that child but ends up drowning Angeline herself by accident.

rid of - some sentence examples
rid of – some sentence examples

Example sentences of “rid of”:

+ Grandin is motivated by a wish to improve animal welfare by getting rid of unnecessary stress on domestic animals, particularly before and during slaughter.

+ Many European orchestras were getting rid of their Jewish musicians.

+ She later went on to make multiple episodes of her own failing tv-show called “Get rid of that Wiest Infection”.

+ The Mask Is Always Greener on the Other Side : After causing him nothing but trouble, Stanley Ipkiss gets rid of his mask by burying it in quick-drying cement, but must retrieve it to save Peggy and Milo after Pretorius tricks Stanley’s friend and coworker, Charlie, into building a “house of tomorrow” and kidnaps them.

+ Particularly to get rid of the discussion on various characters and instead to focus on the concept.

+ The fire is said to have also helped to get rid of the Great Plague which had hit London in 1665, and killed about 70,000 of the 90,000 population, who may have died in the fire.

+ Blum favors getting rid of the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act.

+ Grandin is motivated by a wish to improve animal welfare by getting rid of unnecessary stress on domestic animals, particularly before and during slaughter.

+ Many European orchestras were getting rid of their Jewish musicians.

+ To be rid of Alcindoro for a bit, Musetta pretends to have a tight shoe and sends him with it to the shoemaker.

+ From the early 19th century, calls were made frequently to get rid of the office.

+ This makes the first ionization energy comparably low to the other elements in the same period, because it only has to get rid of one electron to make a stable 3s shell, the new valence electron shell.

+ He had told people that he thought he was being followed and was going to get rid of them.

More in-sentence examples of “rid of”:

+ An example of one I would get rid of is.

+ Since the storm also got rid of their fire and they could not make another one since everything was wet, they just enjoyed what they had and ate the fish raw.
+ These efforts to get rid of Alger's books were defeated.

+ An example of one I would get rid of is.

+ Since the storm also got rid of their fire and they could not make another one since everything was wet, they just enjoyed what they had and ate the fish raw.

+ These efforts to get rid of Alger’s books were defeated.

+ The first act of the National Convention was to get rid of the monarchy.

+ It was made to get rid of the EGP routing protocol to make the Internet more independent.

+ The 1992 re-issue was digitally restored by cleaning and removing scratches from the original one scene at a time, getrting rid of blurry sound, and making the color lighter.

+ Sigmund Freud said that hatred was a selfish feeling that wishes to get rid of whatever is making that person unhappy.

+ Their problem is how to get rid of heat, and that is a problem for all really large land animals.

+ He also said that killing gay people would get rid of AIDS and that he prayed for Caitlyn Jenner’s heart to explode.

+ Getting rid of unneeded fuel helps to get to a safe weight for the plane to land.

+ Maybe we should get rid of it.

+ Liquid will help get rid of constipation.

+ While Lillith is asleep, Emily sets fire to her house, hoping to get rid of her.

+ Others, like Thomas Friedman, believe that globalization can bring people together and make everyone richer without getting rid of local cultures.

+ The uterus then gets rid of the ovum and the extra tissue by releasing it from the body.

+ The league got rid of several teams.

+ The key question that democrats will tend to ask of any proposed change in electoral law or the voting mechanism is: “Will it actually increase the capacity of the electorate to get rid of unsatisfactory rulers and replace them with others?” Democrats regard that basic capacity as the best protection against bad government and the abuse of power.

+ In April 1945, as Yugoslav Partisan units neared the camp, the Ustaše guards tried to get rid of evidence of their crimes and the people who knew what they had done.

+ However, in democratic societies, the law itself has ways to change or get rid of these unjust laws.

+ I wrote the article from scratch to get rid of a redlink in Color of the day.

+ The popes are one of the 5 classical Patriarchates ; at the moment there seem to be 10 partiarchs in the Roman-Catholic Church as well – not including the pope, who got rid of the title in 2006.

+ In October 2017, FIFA planned to get rid of the Confederations Cup by 2021 in favor of an expanded FIFA Club World Cup and move the latter from December to June, holding it every four years.

+ He tried to get rid of the new religion by waging a series of battles.

+ At about the same time, public health leaders began wanting better systems to get rid of waste.

+ At the time Heisenberg could not get rid of that one little problem, but he was exhausted, so he handed his work in to his immediate supervisor, Max Born, and went on vacation.

+ He made a new Water Code in 1902, which gave an equitable amount of water based on how much water was needed, and got rid of the law that forbid foreigners to purchase land.

+ However, the tallest only sent him to his planet as a “secret mission” only to get rid of him.

+ This convention from 1999, provides that countries that have signed it must get rid of child prostitution s soon as possible.

+ He then got rid of the congress and the state legislatures.

+ In the 1930s, Hitler, the infamous nazi villain from real life, was talking about getting rid of the Jews and communists.

+ Getting rid of the addiction is very hard to do.

+ Having articles that are not simple gives those people more reasons for getting rid of it.

+ Though he tried hard, the proposition passed and got rid of most bilingual education in California.

+ In 1946, the people voted to get rid of the monarchy and become today’s Italian Republic and slowly became stable again.

+ Also, once a toxin gets into the bloodstream, the body immediately starts trying to get rid of it through excretion.

+ His body may have got rid of the bacteria without help.

+ Vitamin A is not soluble in water, and the human body can not get rid of the excess vitamin A easily by urination.

+ He is trying to get rid of the curse of the Rheingold, and has built a grand plan around Siegmund.

+ We can take care in designing the experiment to avoid various ways of jiggling the apparatus, but we cannot get rid of the fact that there was nothing completely definite to begin with.

+ Eventually the development of separate, underground water and sewage systems got rid of open sewage ditches and cesspools.

+ There were 2 people who wanted to work with the individual and 3 people who wanted to get rid of them.

+ As I already said, I would go with moving all 14 entries to the parent and getting rid of the subcats.

+ But when people make efforts to get rid of these extra factors, the results of the experiments almost always get closer to what Newton’s laws predict.

+ In 1946, People voted to get rid of the monarchy and establish the new Italian Republic.

+ Spelling alphabets such as the NATO phonetic alphabetICAO spelling alphabet, used by aircraft pilots, police and others, are made to get rid of this confusion by giving each letter a name that sounds quite different from any other.

+ One person squirts himself with a gun while other people stand outside with a water vacuum to get rid of all the water that floats out of the shower.

+ Plumbing pipes, tubing and plumbing fixtures for drinking water systems and getting rid of waste.

+ In waste water treatment, it is used to get rid of hydrogen sulfide, a stinky toxic gas.

+ Some plants need fire so their seeds can start to grow, some animals prefer to live in places that have been recently burned, and sometimes it helps to get rid of weeds.

Some sentences in use of “orgasm”

How to use in-sentence of “orgasm”:

– Some males are able to orgasm with prostate stimulation alone.

– Some believe that the orgasm helps the sperm in the man’s semen to swim up the vagina into the cervix, so that it is more likely that a sperm cell will fuse with an egg cell.

– After a man has had an orgasm and has ejaculated, his erection usually ends.

– During his orgasm the man ejaculates, and his semen flows into the woman.

– Other forms of sex, like anal and oral sex, can also cause stimulation, and therefore orgasm and ejaculation.

– A study published in 1997 found an inverse association between death from coronary heart disease and frequency of orgasm even given the risk that myocardial ischaemia and myocardial infarction can be triggered by sexual activity.

– As the sensation increases in intensity, the rate of hand movement generally quickens until orgasm occurs.

– Unlike coitus interruptus, when a woman is on the Pill or using some other form of hormonal birth control, intercourse usually ends with her man reaching orgasm while inside the vagina, which both the man and woman usually find very pleasurable.

Some sentences in use of orgasm
Some sentences in use of orgasm

Example sentences of “orgasm”:

– A woman’s orgasm begins in her clitoris, which is the counterpart of the man’s penis.

– These sensations, combined with the friction caused by the in-and-out movements, stimulates the penis, which causes the man to have an orgasm and to ejaculate.

– Clitoris is an organ in women for orgasm only.

– When a man’s penis is sexually stimulated for some time, he has an orgasm and semen shoots out from the penis.

– Many women also enjoy the feeling of fingers or a sex toy in the vagina, but this is a secondary sensation that is not necessary for orgasm, and that rarely results in orgasm on its own.

– Others think that the female orgasm causes the vagina to grip the penis more tightly, which makes sex more exciting for the man and causes him to ejaculate more quickly or to produce more semen; or that it encourages a woman to have sex more often as it feels good.

– Nocturnal emissions are called wet dreams because of the dampness caused by ejaculation and because the orgasm and ejaculation often happen during a sexually exciting dream.

– Also, nocturnal arousal, orgasm or nocturnal emission could be explained by the idea of creatures causing an otherwise guilt-producing and self-conscious behavior.

– The penis usually needs to be at least mildly erect before the man can have an orgasm and ejaculationejaculate semen.

- A woman's orgasm begins in her clitoris, which is the counterpart of the man's penis.

- These sensations, combined with the friction caused by the in-and-out movements, stimulates the penis, which causes the man to have an orgasm and to ejaculate.

– These reactions may cause the man to ejaculate more quickly or to produce more semen; when a woman reaches orgasm during intercourse, it often makes her man have an orgasm at that point as well.

– Some men are able to have an orgasm without ejaculating.

– It grows until orgasm happens.

– Others think that the woman’s orgasm is designed to help make the man reach orgasm.

– Often, a woman reaches an orgasm during cunnilingus.

– Unlike a man, who usually can have only one orgasm during intercourse, a woman may have more than one.

– A man can also stop having an erection without having an orgasm and ejaculating, if he is no longer sexually aroused.

“dow” in sentences?

How to use in-sentence of “dow”:

+ The 30 companies are picked by experts who work for Dow Jones.

+ A learner will only hear ‘dow, dow dow‘ or ‘dough, dough, dough’ or ‘dow, dough, dough’ which does not help when listening.

+ Union Carbide Corporation is a wholly owned subsidiary of Dow Chemical Company.

+ The stock prices of 30 companies are used to calculate the Dow Jones Industrial Average.

+ Wakefield, FASG, Lydia Dow Finlay, CALS.

dow in sentences?
dow in sentences?

Example sentences of “dow”:

+ It used to be a military base called Dow Air Force Base.

+ Coleman shot anti-slavery man Charles Dow in the head.

+ Finally Kodak was dropped from the Dow Jones Industrial Average.

+ Its stock price is a component of the Dow Jones Industrial Average.

+ It took two years for the Dow Jones to recover.

+ He obtained a degree from Harvard University in 1994 and subsequently worked as a business reporter for Dow Jones Newswires.

+ The series stars Jerry Mathers as “Beaver”; Tony Dow as his older brother Wally; Barbara Billingsley as his mother June Cleaver; and Hugh Beaumont as his father Ward Cleaver.

+ It is a component of the SP 500 and was a component of the Dow Jones Industrial Average from 1985 to 2008, dropping due to spin-offs of Kraft Foods Inc.

+ Aniston was married to Nancy Dow from 1965 until they divorced in 1980.

+ It was created by Charles Dow, who worked for the “The Wall Street JournalWall Street Journal” newspaper and later made a new company named Dow Jones Company.

+ Wakefield, FASG, Lydia Dow Finlay, CALS “Mayflower Families Through Five Generations: Family of Richard More” Pub.

+ Ellen Albertini Dow was an American character actress.

+ In 1965, he left Dow for Case Western Reserve University.

+ It became part of the Dow Jones Industrial Average on April 8, 2004.

+ Merrell Dow Pharmaceuticals, which had solidified a gatekeeping role for trial judges in admitting expert testimony.

+ It is very much like the Dow Jones Industrial Average in the US, in that 30 companies are in this exchange.

+ In the 1880s Lorenzo Dow Baker started the banana trade in Jamaica which made Port Antonio grow quickly, with more and more tourists arriving and departing in the banana boats.

+ The school year started with a large demonstration against the University of Wisconsin in Madison, Wisconsin on October 17 for letting Dow recruiters on campus.

+ Its NYSE listing has been one of the 30 companies in the Dow Jones Industrial Average since 2004.

+ It used to be a military base called Dow Air Force Base.

+ Coleman shot anti-slavery man Charles Dow in the head.

“church” – sentence examples

How to use in-sentence of “church”:

– Both his parents sang, and Walton sang in the local church choir.

– The only exception made is for children of members who show they understand the Church philosophy and practices who wish to join.

– Douglas Wilder was born in the segregated Church Hill neighborhood of Richmond on January 17, 1931.

– Baptised at the Church of Saint-Sulpice in Paris, in 1687.

– To commemorate this, each year on Oak Apple Day, an oak branch is mounted on the top of the church tower.

– He opened a school which trained boys to sing in the church choir and gave them a good musical education.

– Its main body consists of the various autocephalyautocephalous churches along with the autonomous and other churches canonically linked to them, for the most part form a single communion, making the Eastern Orthodox Church the second largest single denomination behind the Catholic Church.

church - sentence examples
church – sentence examples

Example sentences of “church”:

– They manage to escape as the church explodes which kills Guido and the Templars and presumably the Grand Master.

– In “The Travels” of Marco Polo, where Polo records his journey along the Silk Road, Samarkand is described as “a very large and splendid city…” He also writes about a Christian church in Samarkand, which miraculously remained standing after a portion of its central supporting column was removed.

– Christ Church is a parish of Barbados.

– These experiences led him to adopt a moderate socialist ideology, favorable to state intervention in the economy and to close ties with conservative forces such as the Roman Catholic Church – the initial goal of his career being to become a member of the clergy.

– The Basilica San Pietro in Vincoli in Rome is the family church of the della Rovere.

– The church was constructed from 1716 to 1726.

– The south aisle of the cathedral was part of the medieval parish church of St Mary.

– During John Paul’s time as pope, the church was involved in a large number of claims about child sexual abuse by priests.

– The pastor of Anderson’s church and other leaders of the black community raised money for Anderson to go to high school and have music lessons.

– The present church is from that period style of architecture.

- They manage to escape as the church explodes which kills Guido and the Templars and presumably the Grand Master.

- In "The Travels" of Marco Polo, where Polo records his journey along the Silk Road, Samarkand is described as "a very large and splendid city..." He also writes about a Christian church in Samarkand, which miraculously remained standing after a portion of its central supporting column was removed.

– Old Church Slavonic was written in Cyrillic and Glagolitic.

– He was a member of the General Synod of the Church of England from 1970-81 and 1995-97.

– The Basilica–Cathedral of Our Lady of the Pillar is a Roman Catholic church in Zaragoza, Aragon, Spain.

– The Roman Catholic Church said he could not divorce without asking the Pope.

– Records show Taccola had been a Wood carvingwood carver who made church ornaments.

– The “facade” or West Front of a large church or cathedral is designed to make a big impression on the worshippers.

– The village’s church was the property of the Order of the Knights of the Hospital of St John of Jerusalem, hence the hospital name.

– Ghazanchetsots Cathedral, also called the “Shushi Cathedral” is an Armenian church in Shusha, Nagorno-Karabakh.

More in-sentence examples of “church”:

– The Catholic church was built in 1906.

– Some Active Members are called Agents, qualified to explain the Church of Satan and the philosophy of Satanism to the media and others who are interested.

– In 1858 he became organist at a new church called Saint Clotilde Basilica.

– The school is run by the Adventist Church and has High School age boys and girls.

– He is the pastor for preaching of Bethlehem Baptist Church Bethlehem Baptist Church in Minneapolis, Minnesota, and has written many books.

– The most important monuments in the commune are the Saint-Jean-Baptiste church and the “Maison Forte de Montherot”, a fortified house from the 17th century.

– Erik’s wife Thjodhild became a believer in Christ, and she built the initial church in Greenland.

– It was introduced by Alonzo Church and Stephen Cole Kleene in the 1930s.

– Many nearby reefs are easy to access from shore by snorkellers, especially at Church Bay.

– For the first 1000 years of Christianity, all hymns in the church were sung without instrumental accompaniment.

– Since November 2002, the diocese is also responsible for the Church of Sweden Abroad.

– There is a library, many shops, a church called ‘Morden Baptist Church‘ and a large mosque.

– Gennevilliers has an old church from 17th century called Saint Marie Madeleine.

– Why was the Church so opposed? The translations challenged the Church‘s authority over the people.

– This church was also restored in the 1860s.

– He was the Church of Sweden Archbishop of Uppsala from 1819 to 1836.

– This happened because Mar Shimun XXIII, the patriarch of Assyrian Church of the East introduced reforms which were not supported.

– The church also has activities during the week.

– When the Church of England voted to allow women bishops, she became the first woman to be consecrated as a bishop in January 2015.

– Peruzzi’s plan, Banister Fletcher p.722 But there were so many arguments in the church that the building stopped completely.

– The old church was built between 1891 and 1895 according to plans by Franz Schwechten.

– The church was rebuilt in the 19th century, by architects Sir George Gilbert Scott and his son George Gilbert Scott Junior.

– For example, some songs are about religion, but they may not be church music.

– He started his musical training by singing in the choir at the church of Abbeville, then at the cathedral of Amiens.

- The Catholic church was built in 1906.

- Some Active Members are called Agents, qualified to explain the Church of Satan and the philosophy of Satanism to the media and others who are interested.

– Its official name is The Cathedral Church of Christ and the Blessed Mary the Virgin of Worcester.

– As the Western Roman Empire fell during the 5th and 6th centuries the bishops of the Church took over many of the administrative roles of the former Roman prefects.

– There is a story that, when he was a choirboy, he was abductionabducted three times by another church who wanted him to sing in their choir because he had a beautiful voice.

– She rarely attends the yearly meeting of the General Assembly of the Church of Scotland.

– This tradition, variously known as the Mass, Divine Liturgy, Eucharist or Communion, continues in the Anglican church and among some Protestants.

– His church music is strongly influenced by William Byrd.

– Praised as an attractive, cultured and kind woman, Polyxena founded a home for penniless mothers in Turin in 1732, redecorated the “Villa della Regina”, the hunting lodge of Stupingi, and the Church of Saint Giuseppe in Turin.

– Those were both commonly used by the Dutch Church at this time.

– Queen Elizabeth II visited the church in 1976 and was given a silver chalice modelled on one made by Paul Revere.

– Angelica Schuyler married a British man called John Barker Church in 1777.

– The first part of the letter praises this church for keeping their faith even though others were against them.

– According to his wish, he was buried in the Church of St Mirko in the Zagreb suburb of Šestine.

– With Congregationalism, each church or community has a lot of autonomy.

– Hammerbeam rooves, like those of Westminster Hall, and Christ Church Hall, Oxford, appeared for the first time.

– In the Russian Orthodox Church it is an honorary title given to married deacons, as a mark of which, the clergyman is entitled to wear a Burgundy burgundy-colored skufia.

– Today it houses the main church of the diocese of Cordoba in Spain.

– Martinů was born in the tower of a town church and that is where he spent the first seven years of his life, away from the rest of the world.

– Later miracles and graces have been reported by the Church and by common people.

– The Catholic ChurchRoman Catholic Church also began to discourage Irish as did Nationalist leader Daniel O’Connell, although an Irish-speaker himself, saying that most job opportunities were in the English-speaking United States and wider British Empire.

– The church was built in 1834.

– TurnerJoseph Mallord William Turner made an aquarelle depicting the chateau of Montsoreau with the setting of the confluence of the Vienne and the Loire and the collegiate church of Candes-Saint-Martin.

“unneeded” – example sentences

How to use in-sentence of “unneeded”:

+ Article is basically a dictionary definition with a little bit of unneeded info about which Asian countries have the most people.

+ I just didn’t think that creating at least 6 to 7 hundred talk pages here on simple, only saying what the edit summary says, was not very productive, possibly unneeded and a waste.

+ He argued with Nikita Khrushchev against unneeded nuclear tests.

+ This is why is so important in these cases, and although its placement is unneeded between many of the lines, it is much more preferable to use it redundantly in a table than to create a non-functional box, where it will often be difficult to locate the mistake.

+ A fuel dump system is a system which gets rid of any unneeded fuel if the aircraft needs to make an emergency landing while it still has a lot of fuel on board.

+ Rationale for deletion: unused and unneeded template.

+ Delete any unneeded fields when using the full template syntax.

+ This would help us keep unneeded pages off of the Simple English Wiktionary.

unneeded - example sentences
unneeded – example sentences

Some sentences in use of “introduce”

How to use in-sentence of “introduce”:

+ They both introduce themselves and tell each other how they arrived.

+ It was then that he brought his wife Constance to his hometown to introduce her to his father Leopold.

+ May I suggest Purplebackpack89 avoids making changes to try and introduce a more “global” feel to pages? He is at danger of coming across as wanting to add a pro-American bias to pages.

+ For the community to see exactly who and how many are willing to work with this project, please introduce yourselves below and give us a rough idea of what kind of responsibilities you’d be willing to take on.

+ They take the skeleton back home to dance with it and introduce it to the younger generation.

+ They also introduce a new type of killing game named Demon Hunting where the Lil Ultimate’s had a target hitlist and it was their objective to kill all adults and make it a kids only place.

+ Where a case may have broader implications, “amicus curiae” briefs are a way to introduce those concerns, so that the possibly broad legal effects of court decisions will not depend solely on the parties directly involved in the case.

Some sentences in use of introduce
Some sentences in use of introduce

Example sentences of “introduce”:

+ He took the name from the way the Cockney Rejects used “Oi!” during live shows to introduce their songs.

+ The album contains singles like “Candle “, “Allow Me to Introduce Myself…

+ This was the first game in the “Mario” series to introduce the Shine Sprites.

+ Charles Darwin used the example of artificial selection to introduce his idea of natural selection.

+ However, this rule will still introduce a negative bias for even numbers, and a positive bias for the odd ones.

+ It instead has Proog and Emo in an extremely bizarre construction referred to only as “the machine.” Proog tries to introduce Emo to its nature, but Emo is reluctant and argues about its purpose.

+ Under the baton of music director Sheng Hui, the 70-strong orchestra aspires to introduce Chinese orchestral music to an ever-broadening audience.

+ The intention of this tag is to “nudge” fellow editors who may unknowingly introduce material based upon original research into supporting such material through demonstrating its origins.

+ The next two examples introduce another metaphor, that of the “siren”.

+ Great care should be taken not to introduce original research into an article when captioning images.

+ Dave Kerby recommended the rank-biserial as the measure to introduce students to rank correlation, because the general logic can be explained at an introductory level.

+ An unsuccessful attempt was made in 1983 to introduce Arabic as a required language in primary and secondary levels.

+ The ancient Greeks and Romans were the ones to first introduce the concept of insanity to the law.

+ He took the name from the way the Cockney Rejects used "Oi!" during live shows to introduce their songs.

+ The album contains singles like "Candle ", "Allow Me to Introduce Myself...
+ This was the first game in the "Mario" series to introduce the Shine Sprites.

More in-sentence examples of “introduce”:

+ These attempts were resisted by the locals, and by 1867 when the British government took over direct control of the Straits Settlements from the East India Company, attempts to introduce the rupee were finally abandoned.

+ On the other hand, rounding can introduce some "round-off error" as a result.
+ In the early stages of growth the roots of the plants are irrigated with water and nutrients that are pumped through an air-stone to introduce a high level of dissolved oxygen into the water which greatly helps the young roots to grow.

+ These attempts were resisted by the locals, and by 1867 when the British government took over direct control of the Straits Settlements from the East India Company, attempts to introduce the rupee were finally abandoned.

+ On the other hand, rounding can introduce some “round-off error” as a result.

+ In the early stages of growth the roots of the plants are irrigated with water and nutrients that are pumped through an air-stone to introduce a high level of dissolved oxygen into the water which greatly helps the young roots to grow.

+ Denmark was among the first European countries to introduce lockdown measures, starting on 13 March.

+ Priestley uses dramatic devices and dramatic irony to signal characters and introduce the inspector.

+ Games with a third team will introduce Red.

+ The purpose of this tag is to “nudge” fellow editors who may accidentally introduce text that “appears” to be based upon original synthesis, into supporting such text through demonstrating its origins.

+ For this reason, it was not necessary to use experimental tests to introduce chimps to handle matter.

+ Sir John Skehel said “That might allow you to knock out a particular gene in a cell, or introduce a particular gene, or correct a particular mutated gene that you want to work better”.

+ Senator Bernie Sanders has said that he intends to introduce a parallel bill in the United States Senate in the future.

+ The program aims to introduce babies and toddlers to different cultures and to expose them to different places and countries through short stories.

+ The Society runs a free public events programme which seeks to introduce new and challenging thinking.

+ Such errors introduce unintended changes to the original data.

+ The prototypical “Renaissance man”, he was the most influential poet to introduce Italian Renaissance verse forms, poetic techniques and themes to Spain.

+ So despite having a large Nuclear weaponnuclear arsenal, the American president can not carry out policy and introduce legislation as freely as the British prime minister.

+ Her personal support is said to have been a significant factor in encouraging Britain and then other countries to support the Ottawa Treaty which sought to introduce a ban on the use of anti-personnel landmines.

+ The members of the council have the power to introduce and pass laws.

+ He tried to introduce conscription but the public did not want it.

+ Elliot begins to introduce Boog to a world of sweet temptations outside of the garage that he has never known.

+ Its main goal is to introduce Austrians to the Armenian culture and heritage as well as informing Armenians about the Austrian culture and history.

+ He helped introduce Buddhism to Tibet.

+ He was one of the first composers to introduce different styles of music to popular culture.

+ Non-voting members may vote in a House committee they are a member in, and they can introduce legislation.

+ If need be, one can introduce an extra spatial dimension, ; unfortunately, this is the limit to the number of dimensions: graphing in four dimensions is impossible.

+ The King spoke of his intentions to introduce Western civilization and bring religion to that part of Africa.

+ Brüning’s first act was to introduce a budget calling for steep spending cuts and sharp tax increases.

+ Many groups do radio introductions, over the CB radio, where a person will introduce his/her self and any passengers in the car.

+ On January 1, 1980 the Act of Succession was changed to introduce “fully cognate succession”.

+ Kart racing is usually used as a low-cost and relatively safe way to introduce drivers to motor racing.

+ The Guptas were the first to introduce a coinage across their empire.This showed both their wealth-as some coins were trying to unify the empire by using the same coins over the empire.

+ With his family he started the Chang Family Foundation in 1999 “to introduce the Good News of Jesus Christ to the world”.

+ We are excited to introduce a new Wikimedia Public Policy site.

+ Only in 1877 did Nidwalden introduce a new constitution.

+ In some instances, it is not possible to introduce paragraph breaks using newlines alone.

+ Let me introduce myself, this is Karthik from the EN:WP with 17K edits.

+ The Home Office allowed Hertfordshire to be the first force after the war to introduce a wireless system – Young adapted from his Birmingham model for rural use.

+ Since one country acting alone would find it very difficult to introduce this tax, many argue it would be best done by an international institution.

+ It has also helped to introduce those cultures to other people.

+ One can introduce a Cartesian coordinate system on a given plane in order to label every point on it with a unique ordered pair, which is composed of two numbers and is the coordinate of the point.

+ So, Priscilla gives parties to introduce Cecelia to new friends: Sir Robert Floyer, Mrs.

+ These seasons introduce a new theme, along with a new chapter in the game’s storyline.

+ A group of celebrities introduce each segment in live-action scenes.

+ The method can be used to delete a gene, remove control sections, add a gene, and introduce point mutations.

+ So not wanting to step on any toes, I’ll introduce this idea here.

+ His “Mendelism” is sometimes said to have been the first textbook on genetics; it was probably the first popular science book to introduce genetics to the public.

+ This Genus honoring ItalyItalian noble Filippo del Albizzi, who introduce it in Europe at middle XVIII century, sometimes incorrectly named “”Albizzia””.

+ He was the first person to introduce the architecture of Ancient Rome and the Italian Renaissance to Britain.

+ On the BBC coverage of the 1983 UK general election, presenter Esther Rantzen was allowed to hold Wilberforce and introduce him to viewers.

+ The other one is about a trustee candidate rubric to introduce new, more effective ways to evaluate new Board candidates.

+ She is also guided by kind, caring counselors who introduce Hannah to a horse named Betsy, a difficult horse.

“santana” in-sentences

How to use in-sentence of “santana”:

– It’s limited with Caratinga, Coronel Fabriciano, Mesquita, Minas GeraisMesquita, Santana do Paraíso and Timóteo.

– The Nino Konis Santana National Park is on the eastern tip of the island.

– Pedro Santana is a municipality in the Dominican Republic, in the Elías Piña ProvinceElías Piña Artibonite river.

– Río Limpio became a Municipalitymunicipal district of Pedro Santana by the law 36 of 15 November 1992.

– Alex Sandro Santana de Oliveira is a Brazilian football player.

– As a result, Tito Santana ran down to the ring and explained what had happened to the match’s official.

– She was known for her role as Santana Lopez on the Fox television series “Glee”.

santana in-sentences
santana in-sentences

Example sentences of “santana”:

– In 2003 “Rolling Stone” magazine listed Santana at number 20 on their list of the 100 Greatest Guitarists of All Time.

– Slaughter, Tito Santana and Jim Duggan.

– Raymond Santana and Kevin Richardson were among the first suspects to be arrested.

– Matanzas, Villa Fundación and Sabana Buey became municipal districts in 1991; Pizarrete en 1997; Santana and Paya in 1998; Villa Saombrero and El Carretón in 2001; Catalina in 2004; and El Limonal and Las Barías in 2006.

– Feira de Santana is a city in the state of Bahia, northeastern of Brazil.

– It was produced in similar conditions, about 10 million years before the Santana Formation.

– It is within Nino Konis Santana National Park.

– The song was inspired partially by the Santana High School and Columbine High School shootings.

- In 2003 "Rolling Stone" magazine listed Santana at number 20 on their list of the 100 Greatest Guitarists of All Time.

- Slaughter, Tito Santana and Jim Duggan.

– Telê Santana was a former Brazilian football player and manager.

– Sara Luna Santana is a goalball player from Spain.

– Raymond Santana also lives in Georgia.

– It was part of the old province of Santo Domingo and of the El Seibo province before being elevated to the category of province with the municipalities of Macorís, Ramón Santana and San José de Los Llanos.

– Eugenio Andres Santana Santana is a judojudo athlete from Spain.

– Javier Porras Santana is a Track and fieldathlete from Spain.

“all that” in sentences?

How to use in-sentence of “all that”:

– Euclid collected together all that was known of geometry, which is part of mathematics.

– Since my closure of this RFB was objected to on my talk page and the bit was requested to be removed and has been, I request an uninvolved bureaucrat to review the RFB and reclose it as they see fit taking into account all that has been said by all parties.

– The state that was once so well noted for its religious and ethnic toleration, ruled by a highly cultured and intellectually brilliant elite who maintained all that was best in the old Mughal order, was now no more.

– Jaypaw meets the Tribe of Endless Hunting, the tribe’s ancestors, and realizes that the tribe is not all that different.

– She comes, “with a very great caravan – with camels carrying spices, large quantities of gold, and precious stones – she came to Solomon and talked with him about all that she had on her mind”.

– Being wounded was all that saved him from a court-martial.

– After the fugue state comes to an end, the person recovers the memories they lost, but usually forgets all that happened during the fugue.

all that in sentences?
all that in sentences?

Example sentences of “all that”:

- Q: Would you be interested in any of the following options? Select all that apply.

- Now all that lies there is The Bridge of Remembrance commemorating war dead stands at the western end of the mall.

– Q: Would you be interested in any of the following options? Select all that apply.

– Now all that lies there is The Bridge of Remembrance commemorating war dead stands at the western end of the mall.

– For the other sections it shows the full new text as if all that text was added.

– He thinks about all that he will lose.

– After all that happened, God talked to another spiritual leader in Judaism to help Abraham and his followers get back to Canaan, which he eventually did.

– I can keep doing what I do with or without the mop – so there’s no big deal regardless of how this goes – and, again, I won’t be actively seeking or thinking about adminship if this request fails, as it really doesn’t mean all that much to me – it’s a few extra buttons at the end of the day.

– The 90’s are All That gets it name from the children’s comedy series All That.

– A web browser is all that is needed to access the site and the 3D information; no viewers need be installed.

– He bought all that remained in captivity in Europe and brought them to Woburn Abbey, England.

– Most people think that the author of Acts also wrote the Gospel of Luke, as Acts 1:1 refers to ‘the former treatise have I made, Theophilus, of all that Jesus began both to do and teach’.

– He stopped all that challenged him by scaring them.

– To avoid being eaten himself, RJ promises Vincent that he will completely replace all that food within the week.

– Simplicity is also important — “transportation” is less ambiguous, but I really doubt it’s used all that much outside North America.

More in-sentence examples of “all that”:

– A WikiProject one, I’ve been inviting people without a template and it’s getting annoying having to type all that “Hi, I’ve noticed that you’ve edited and I want to invite you to “.

– Many of them are not all that difficult to play.

– His pension was resumed 3 years after that, but all that money was used up for paying old debts.

– However, many scientists now believe that the cosmological constant is needed to fit in all that we now know about the universe.

– Other characters feel that money is all that matters.

– With all that work it is surprising that he had time to compose.

– There are also books that give all that information as well.

– As the main writer of these articles, I would like to say to you all that I am proud to say that we have written 25% or a quarter of all the Romanian River articles that need writing.

– Jogging is a very cheap way of keeping fit, because all that is needed is a good pair of running shoes.

– I haven’t seen the SikurMemukad.co.il website before; it doesn’t seem to be unreliable, but the article itself admits that all that this site had about this man is one interview.

– When the fires died out all that remained of Forsyth was the burned-out shell of the big brick courthouse.

– Proving that four colors are all that is needed turned out to be much more difficult.

– The design was called a “”unitary circuit”.” All that detail paid off because on April 25, 1961, the patent office awarded the first patent for an integrated circuit to Robert Noyce while Kilby’s application was still being analyzed.

– England was a very musical country at the time, but almost all that music was destroyed between 1536 and 1540 during the Dissolution of the Monasteries when Henry VIII was ruling.

– A time lapse is then shown of “Mapusaurus”, “Skorpiovenator” and Chaoyangopterid pterosaurs feeding on the carcass until the bones are all that is left.

– I slept through my watch!” Falling out of bed and through his tree house door, Donkey Kong slid down the tree house ladder without using any of the rungs, and assumed his characteristic fighting pose, with sun-blinded, squinting eyes! One swift blow was all that was needed to leave him sprawled on the floor, face down! he groggily rolled over to see the familiar wrinkled, white-bearded, grouchy face of his old granddad “Cranky Kong” peering down at him.

– IGN and Variety MagazineVariety in particular had strong praise for the pilot movie, “Spark of Rebellion”, but their only real criticism was the appearance of the Wookiees in the film, being cited as not all that impressive compared to the rest of the animation.

– An old and twisted apple tree was found growing by the side of “Plas Bach.” It is believed to be all that is left of an orchard planted by the monks who lived there a thousand years ago.

– Shortly after he died, all that was left were parts of Southern Italy, and Sicily.

– The RNA genes surviving today might be all that remain of this early condition.

– For most Condorcet methods, the pairwise counts are all that is necessary to figure out who won, who came in 2nd place, etc.

– This time we are also taking students with a good command of english and have stringent protocols to monitor and manage each and every edit they make before it reaches main space, what else can be done is all that I ask? Again I draw reference to point 4: in my statement: Sandboxes.

– In terms of spiritual development, Karma is about all that a person has done, is doing and will do.

– Euclid collected together all that was known of geometry in his time.

– According to records, they walked all that afternoon and were wet, and at night it got very cold.

– At 55 inches high, the crane does not make easy prey, for all that it stands out in its natural habitat of marshes and swamps.

– The full, detailed content of that footnote text is not at the top of the article but, instead, is coded within the section named “Notes”, thus shifting all that text into the Notes section, and deferring details away from the main text of an article.

– The “neurofibrillary tangles” are made up of “tau” protein and are all that remain of a now dead neuron.

– Some notable people who attended séances and believed in all that include the United States President Abraham Lincoln, and his wife Mary Todd Lincoln; the social reformer Robert Owen; the journalist and pacifist William Thomas Stead, and more.

– Aisha spent the next nine years of her life with Muhammad, she remembered all that she saw and heard with great clarity, and reported a great deal of Muhammad’s narrations.

– Today all that is left are stone ruins and the elevated railway water tank.

– These clumps, also known as ‘tau tangles’, are all that remain after a neuron has died.

– Definition: predestination is the divine foreordaining or foreknowledge of all that will happen.

– President Donald Trump said: “We all must be united condemn all that hate stands for.

– Maybe we just need to remember all that we have local oversights and that it’s important to inform them if there is something that should be removed.

– Thank-you, I hope you take on board all that I say, but i completely understand if you choose toignore what I have said because of my closeness to the situation.

– It is difficult to find out what Sabellianism really taught, because all that is left today are the texts of those who were against it.

– Generally, any two of the three starting laws are all that is needed in this type of derivation– all starting pairs lead to the same combined gas law.

– He thinks about all that happened.

– With all that the question remained, why farmers revolted against their own landlords but never joined to work together carefully.

– But when Kellaway unmasked The Mask and reveals once and for all that The Mask is Stanley Ipkiss, the angel counsel also has reveals a horrible secret about themselves as well.

– Now, all that the simple community will be expecting from the students are the same as from newbies and if 9 admins are unable to handle 50 students with the help of 1 CA per 5 students as well as an active OA.

– The chapel was demolished and all that remains is a basin for Holy Water, that was possibly made by Nicola.

– And, My edits are not directly from enWiki, well they are, but I do try to simplify them, i’m just not all that good at it.

– She is intelligent and her special skill is the ability to remember all that she has read.

– What I find amazing is that “your sister” not only did all of the above, but that she did all that and was editing from your house and from Ben’s, she also edited from both places at the same time and while she was playing around she made edits from your account seemingly from her computer.

- A WikiProject one, I've been inviting people without a template and it's getting annoying having to type all that "Hi, I've noticed that you've edited and I want to invite you to ".

- Many of them are not all that difficult to play.

“lit” – example sentences

How to use in-sentence of “lit”:

– This can be seen best at night, when the bridge is lit up by a series of lights that show the double helix structure.

– The explosion was caused by miners carrying open flames which lit pockets of gas.

– The Moon being round, half of it is lit up by the sun.

– Police believe someone lit the Churchill fire.

– It is believed that the houses where lit by fires.

– As the Moon orbits around the Earth, the half of the Moon that faces the Sun will be lit up.

– About 80 signed works by him have been catalogued, and nearly all of them follow the same pattern; small arrangements of fruits, vegetables, or shells on a stone slab, lit from above, with the dark background typical of still lifes earlier in the century.

lit - example sentences
lit – example sentences

Example sentences of “lit”:

– It also celebrates a miracle that happened during this time, where just a day’s supply of olive oiloil allowed the menorah in the rededicated “Temple in Jerusalem” to remain lit for eight days.

– Some things it theorized were that the Moon was lit by the Sun instead of making its own light.

– On each day, a branch of the nine-branch Hanukkah menorah is lit with the “shamash which sits on the middle branch.

– The candles in more than 300 snow lanterns and 3,000 snow lamps are lit up.

– His house was the first in the world to be lit by electric light bulbs.

– It is beautifully lit at night.

– In a moving ceremony after sunset, luminaries placed around the track are lit in honour of cancer survivors and in memory of those who have lost the battle against cancer.

– The rest of the tribe members are then told to return to camp with their torches; in some seasons, this has allowed a tribe access to a source of fire, while in other seasons, the tribe is not allowed to return to camp with their torches lit if they do not yet have their own source of fire or a way of starting one.

– When a candle was lit near the icon, it shone on the gold surface and made the figures stand out.

– The “Karthigai Deepam” festival is celebrated during the day of the full moon between November and December, and a huge beacon is lit at the top of the hill.The event is witnessed by millions of pilgrims from different parts of Tamil Nadu.

– Other elements of current Olympic opening ceremonies were started later: the Olympic flame was first lit in 1928 Summer Olympics1928, the first athletes’ oath was sworn at the 1972 Olympic Games.

– They often have gold backgrounds which glow when they are lit by candlelight.

– Sometimes, the balloons are lit up against the night sky.

– The modern Olympic Flame is lit at the Altar of Hera which stands to the east of the temple.

– After that, it was lit up for the second anniversary of the attacks, on September 11, 2003.

- It also celebrates a miracle that happened during this time, where just a day's supply of olive oiloil allowed the menorah in the rededicated "Temple in Jerusalem" to remain lit for eight days.

- Some things it theorized were that the Moon was lit by the Sun instead of making its own light.

More in-sentence examples of “lit”:

- The candles are never lit directly - instead, the higher candle, is lit first, and then used to light the rest of the candles.

- It is lit by 6,600 lights and 50 coloured projectors.

– The candles are never lit directly – instead, the higher candle, is lit first, and then used to light the rest of the candles.

– It is lit by 6,600 lights and 50 coloured projectors.

– Some parts of the collection are not lit to protect the objects from light and visitors use torches to see inside the cases.

– Pairs of coloured letters on the bridge which are lit up in red and green.

– The home contains a central dining room in the shape of a cube, measuring 20 feet on all sides and lit from a skylight above.

– The “shamash” is lit first, then used to light the others, while a prayer is recited.

– On the last night of the festival, a single light would be lit inside the Temple of Bast and from there the light would spread through the town, carried by devotees.

– The port was lit on the night of the raid to help the unloading of supplies.

– The Beijing Olympic torch was lit on Baekdu/Changbai Mountain.

– She commands that a huge fire be lit in the courtyard, and that Talia be thrown into the flames.

– They lit signal fires on signal towers to warn other outposts of possible invasion by Germans from across the border.

– They also carried pipe bombs and molotov cocktails, which they lit and threw.

– When people thought about pulling the trolley switch to kill one person instead of five, the parts of the brain that do cool, rational thinking lit up.

– The English defeated the Armada by using the wind to blow ships that were lit on fire into the anchored fleet.

– After Jason killed both Kia and Charlie, Lori and Will lit the propane tank on fire and caused the camp to explode.

– Both these places lit his interest in the natural world.

– Streets can be lit for safety or visibility reasons, so people can see where they are walking at night.

Lita then hit Foley in between the legs with a barbed wire bat, and lit the table which then allowed Edge to hit a Spear to Foley through the ring ropes through the flaming table on the outside, and pinned Foley to get the win.

– For example, the player can use a lit cigarette butt to burn up a spider that wants to eat the player.

– Then the process was the same as above, except red circles lit up.

– People only see the parts that are being lit by sunlight.

– A year later, playing opposite Daniel Craig, he portrayed the father of a series of cloned sons in Caryl Churchill’s “A Number” at the Royal Court, notable for a recumbent moment when he smoked a cigarette, the brightly lit spiral of smoke rising against a black backdrop, an effect which he dreamed up during rehearsals.

– On the west, the Cape Otway Lighthouse was first lit in 1848.

– They are lit at midnight each night during Ghost month.

– While turning on a lamp in a dark room will be very noticeable and the change in lighting will be very obvious, the change from turning a lamp on in a room that is already lit will not be very obvious.

– It was a small generator that lit four light bulbs.

– The torch can also refer to a flammable stick that is lit on fire to provide light and heat.

– Tinder is a material that is used to start fires easily when lit with a match.

– They made art and lit candles to honor her.

– Each bar that was lit would represent a rank.

– Each hole is filled with a pin that can slide back and forth and the screen is lit by the two vertical sides, allowing the pins to cast their shadow on the screen.

– As it goes around the Earth, sometimes the side that people on Earth can see is all lit brightly.

– Before each Games, the Olympic flame is lit in Olympia in a ceremony that reflects ancient Greek rituals.

– The police are investigating whether someone had lit this fire.

– The exhibition included exhibits of his inventions, and the city was lit with electric light, thanks to Swan’s invention.

– The only traces left of the later occupation during the Gravettian include a child’s footprints, the charred remains of ancient hearths and carbon smoke stains from torches that lit the caves.

– At night it is lit by 4,000bulbs, making it one of West London’s most striking landmarks.

– Because this image of the Virgin Mary was said to work miracles, many hundreds of candles were lit in front of it which soon stained the frescoes so that their bright colours could no longer be seen.

– It is lit up at dusk every September 11, lasting until dawn the next day.

– The top of the tower had a mirror that reflected sunlight during the day; a fire was lit at night.

– At night, it is lit up with different coloured lights.

– It did not have a match to keep lit and generated a spark mechanically with a wheel mechanism.

– On the second night, a second candle is added, and they are lit from left to right — but the Hanukkiah is filled from right to left.

– It will take a lit of time doing this.

– To their surprise, the menorah stayed lit for eight days, which was seven more days than they expected.

Some example sentences of “divine”

How to use in-sentence of “divine”:

– She spent much time in prayer, reciting the Chaplet of Divine Mercy and praying for the conversion of sinners.

– There was no definite history about the beginning of Arul Nool; but the followers believe that it was written by Citars and by those who get possessed by divine power.

– Although authority is usually described as human there is also frequent mention of divine authority.

– The ancient rulers were based on the divine right of kings.

– She became part of the world’s Divine Tree as she worked on her ideal of world peace.

– Vaikuntha is an abode presided over on high exclusively by him, accompanied always by his feminine partner, consort and goddess Lakshmi, According to Ramanuja, “Parama padam” or “Nitya Vibhuti” is an eternal heavenly realm and is the divine imperishable world that is the God’s abode.

– The divine grace from the great ideal.

Some example sentences of divine
Some example sentences of divine

Example sentences of “divine”:

- The best known example is The Divine Comedy by Dante Alighieri.

- She was best known for writing "The Divine Hours" series of books.

– The best known example is The Divine Comedy by Dante Alighieri.

– She was best known for writing “The Divine Hours” series of books.

– This is similar to the divine right of kings doctrine in Europe, where kings would say they were chosen by God.

– If one fulfilled these conditions on the First Saturday of five consecutive months, the Virgin Mary promised special Divine gracegraces at the hour of death.

– Apollo asks her to stand down before he goes not his Divine Form and blinds the emperor.

– Afterward the divine personality is believed to be present in the Murtis.

– Dante Alighieri wrote allegories in “The Divine Comedy”.

– It tells the story of his love for Beatrice Portinari, who also served as the ultimate symbol of salvation in “The Divine Comedy”.

– It is the abode of Atingkok and his divine subjects.

– Zeus was married to his sister, Hera, though he was infamous for his infidelity, taking on an almost innumerable amount of lovers and consorts, both mortal and divine including Karis and Hercules’ mother.

– The worship service is known as the Divine Liturgy.

– It is based on the divine account of the power of Lainingthou Sanamahi, a primordial deity of the paganism.

– Father Divine claimed to be God.

– It is named after the patron saint of the Divine Word Missionaries, Saint Augustine of Hippo.

– On the back wall, there is a niche in which Hathor, as a divine cow, seems to be coming out of the mountain.

– According to the Divine Comedy, there are punishments for those who die with unconfessed deadly sins.

More in-sentence examples of “divine”:

– Faustina’s Confessor, and her Spiritual Director, and her Bishop, and Cardinal Prince Adam Sapieha, all favoured The Divine Mercy devotion.

– The recitation of the Sanskrit mantras is commonly used to call upon the Divine Mother.

– It is used for “divinity”, a “divine presence” or a “divine will.” The Latin authors defined it as follows.For a more extensive account, refer to where “bidding” is “numen”, not, however, the divine numen, unless the mind is to be considered divine, but as simply human will.

– His later works included Samuel Taylor ColeridgeColeridge’s “Milton’s “Tennyson’s “The Idylls of the King”, “The Works of Thomas Hood”, and “The Divine Comedy”.

– Vaghan had the nicknames “Sassy” and “Jazz royaltyThe Divine One”, and she was a Grammy Award winner.

– By doing this, he became entirely One with His Divine Soul from the Father in such a way that the persons could no longer be kept apart.

– It is divine grace that goes before human decision.

– Búri was born when the Divine Cow, Audhumla, licked him out of his icy prison.

– Messiah Foundation International considers Shahi to be the author of the “Goharian Philosophy of Divine Love”, a set of principles upon which the organisation is founded.

– Kaguya became part of the Divine Tree and turned it into the Ten-Tails.

– Its central salon ceiling was decorated by Pietro da Cortona with the visual panegyric of the Allegory of Divine Providence and Barberini Power Allegory of Divine Providence and Barberini Power to glorify the papal Barberini family.

– The “Kaivalya Upanishad” similarly, states Paul Deussen – a German Indologist and professor of Philosophy, describes the self-realized man as who “feels himself only as the one divine essence that lives in all”, who feels identity of his and everyone’s consciousness with Shiva, who has found this highest Atman within, in the depths of his heart.

– In the 1800s, magician Eliphas Levi interpreted Baphomet as an occult symbol representing perfection, or the union of opposites to create divine harmony.

– The manuscript contains the tetragrammaton to represent the Divine Name of God written in palaeo-Hebrew script.

– She is the divine female personification of the death, who guards the door of the entrance to the underworld, which is the land of the death, ruled by her consort, Thongalel.

– However, non-Muslims often won cases against Muslims and even against high government officials, because people thought that sharia was a reflection of divine justice which should defend the weak against the powerful.

– There was some resistance from churches who felt that it was defying divine will to install these rods.

– Leinaotabi, the youngest consort of Thongalel, the ruler of the netherworld, is a divine form of Leimarel Sidabi.

– Excalibur is a symbol of divine kingship and great power.

– John Paul died on Saturday, on the eve of the Divine Mercy Holiday, 2 April 2005.

– The ultimate goal in life is to fully realize our own divine goodness.

– On February 22, 1931, Jesus was said to have appeared as the ‘King of Divine Mercy’, wearing a white garment.

– Ma’at as a principle was at least partially codified into a set of laws, and expressed a ubiquitous concept of right from wrong characterized by concepts of truth and a respect for and adherence to a divine order believed to be set forth at the time of the world’s creation.

– Like other Christians, Catholics believe Jesus is a divine person, the Son of God.

– He is best known for having a divine wrestling match with Khoriphaba.

– Martinism is a form of Christian mysticism following with the fall of the first man, his state of material divine source, and the process of his return, called ‘Reintegration’ or illumination.

– She said the Psalm 51, a prayer for divine mercy, in “the most devout manner”.

– Founded in 1994 by guitarist Michael Romeo, their albums “The Divine Wings of Tragedy” and “V: The New Mythology Suite” have given the band considerable attention within the progressive metal community.

– He asked her to show another mango with divine help.

– Note: With reference to ‘religious order’ ‘able to found’ and Saint Sister Faustina please visit for information regarding the apostolic movement which springs from Sr Faustinas’ charism and the message of Divine Mercy.

– Beliefs in the divine and in the afterlife were ingrained in the civilization of ancient Manipur from its inception.

– Midler released her first album, “The Divine Miss M”, in December 1972.

– The Christ poem is important because it strongly suggests that there were very early Christians who understood Jesus to be a God like being who who chose to take on human form, rather than a human who was later raised to a divine status.

– This concept could be referred to as “elevated subordinationism.” It is associated with early church figures such as Justin Martyr, Lucian of Antioch, Eusebius of Caesarea, Arius, Eusebius of Nicomedia, Asterius the Sophist, Eunomius, and Ulfilas, as well as Felix, Bishop of Urgel and others who believed that Jesus was God in his divine nature but his divinity in his human nature was through adoption.

– These practices include: visualization techniques, which include everything from basic mental imagery to role playing of animals or divine creatures.

– Everything else appeared from divine chaos.

– Rumi seems to have been permanently engaged in a search of divine inspiration and love.

– Pope Pius XI accepted The Divine Mercy devotion.

– Bhaktivedanta Swami Prabhupada, with “His Divine Grace”.

– The BUF declared support for a totalitarian state with Mosley describing it as “a nation emerges organised in the divine parallel of the human body as the name implies.

– Marcian called together the Council of Chalcedon, which agreed that Jesus had two “natures”: divine and human.

– Since she was a mortal, she was burned up by the sight of Jupiter in his divine form.

– The five Masters assisted Merwan in regaining his integration of the physical world of duality with the Divine Oneness that is the Avatar’s natural state.

– Fifer, who asserted, in pre-trial hearings, that the governorship has the divine right of kings.

– It was part of a commission by the Museum of Decorative Arts in Paris to create a huge gate based on the epic poem “The Divine Comedy” of Dante.

– It says that Christ only has one nature, namely the divine one.

– He is regarded as the divine personification of the ultimate reality, the abstract creative power inherent in deities, living and non living beings in the universe.

– According to Muslim scripture, Jesus claims to be prophet chosen by God, different from the divine status he has in Christianity.

– The reform movement believed themselves to be living in a time when Bible prophecies of a final divine judgment.

- Faustina's Confessor, and her Spiritual Director, and her Bishop, and Cardinal Prince Adam Sapieha, all favoured The Divine Mercy devotion.

- The recitation of the Sanskrit mantras is commonly used to call upon the Divine Mother.