– I would imagine that the beginning English speaker would just look at taxoboxes as they are and dismiss them as a bunch of complex mumbojumbo.
– He also can dismiss or withhold consent to a request for the dissolution of Parliament.
– The governor has the power to appoint and dismiss the Premier of Queensland and all other ministers in the cabinet, and issue writs for the election of the state parliament.
– The Constitution of Morocco grants executive powers to the government and allows the head of government to propose and dismiss cabinet members.
– In countries where the monarch can dismiss or appoint governments, this is usually only done to make sure that the democratic process is respected, without taking sides in politics.
In sentence use of dismiss
Example sentences of “dismiss”:
- Throughout the day, Laurie notices Michael following her, but her best friends Annie Brackett and Lynda Van der Klok dismiss her concerns.
- The primary legal role of the Head of State in these jurisdictions is to act as a check or balance against the Executive, as the Head of State has the rarely exercised power to dissolve the legislature, call elections and dismiss ministers.
- On April 12, 2012, Kawasaki dismiss coach Soma after performing 'far below expectations'.
– Throughout the day, Laurie notices Michael following her, but her best friends Annie Brackett and Lynda Van der Klok dismiss her concerns.
– The primary legal role of the Head of State in these jurisdictions is to act as a check or balance against the Executive, as the Head of State has the rarely exercised power to dissolve the legislature, call elections and dismiss ministers.
– On April 12, 2012, Kawasaki dismiss coach Soma after performing ‘far below expectations’.
– Since then, he has been elected by the parliament and been able appoint and to dismiss other Senators.
– They told Haughey an ultimatum: either hold an inquiry into the pressure placed on President Hillery, or dismiss Lenihan.
– If a complaint does not allege facts sufficient to support every element of a claim, the court, upon motion by the opposing party, may dismiss the complaint for failure to state a claim for which relief can be granted.
– It, however, does not afford him the right and authority to dismiss the prime minister.
– Many scientists dismiss the “Paleocene dinosaurs” as re-worked, that is, washed out of their original places and then re-buried in much later sediments.
– All other parties which took part in the elections agreed to work together to dismiss Ušakovs form the post of mayor.
– During “voir dire” the judge can dismiss jurors and both the prosecution and the defense have a limited number of peremptory challenges which they use to excuse any juror for any reason.
– He or she may appoint and dismiss the members of the Executive Council, ministers of state, and all officers of the executive government.
– Ralph and the other older boys are quick to dismiss this theory.
– All of them became tensed and their Principle, who was a spiritologist, believed their innocence, and called Divya’s spirit to talk with them, and dismiss the misunderstanding.
– The Governor does have power of the Crown, and has the right to dismiss the Premier.
– But if none are offered or the court finds the reasons not plausible, they may dismiss the indictment, overturn a conviction or hear other remedies the defense might seek.
– He reacted anhydrous aluminium chloride with potassium amalgam, yielding a lump of metal looking similar to tin.
– Everyone in Japan who owns a TV is asked to pay anywhere 15,720 or 27,360 円 per year to support NHK; there is a discount for lump sum payment.
– A lump of metal can be beaten into a thin sheet.
– Many people find that, at the beginning and end of the day, a small lump of fluff has appeared in the navel cavity.
– This makes the laryngeal prominence or Adam’s apple – the lump that sticks out of the front of his neck – larger too.
– Some split the western and eastern forms into the southern rockhopper penguin and keeping the northern rockhopper as distinct, while other experts lump all three, calling it simply ‘rockhopper penguin’.
lump use in-sentences
Example sentences of “lump”:
– The egg tooth is a small, hard lump that grows on the tip of baby bird beaks.
– Like it or lump it, this project needs another bureaucrat.
– The bottom of the pole has a metal “shoe”, a rounded lump of metal to protect the end.
– The southern cassowary, also known as double-wattled cassowary or two-wattled cassowary, is a large flightless black bird with hard and stiff plumage, two dangling red wattles and a big bony lump on its head called a casque.
– Disguised to look like a lump of coal it exploded when shoveled into a boiler.
– The question, then, is how it can be possible for conscious experiences to arise out of a lump of gray matter endowed with nothing but electrochemical properties.
– Structured settlements created as a way for insurance companies to payout settlements in installments as opposed to large lump sums.
– Hernias sometimes give pain and/or a lump that can be felt or seen.
– At the first stage of the disease, the person may feel a lump on the affected lymph node that does not hurt when touched.
- The egg tooth is a small, hard lump that grows on the tip of baby bird beaks.
- Like it or lump it, this project needs another bureaucrat.
– The iron lump is then hit with a hammer many times.
– This lump is formed by the angle of the thyroid cartilage.
– Pig iron is melted, making a lump of iron called a Bloomerybloom, and slag.
– In budding, the offspring forms as a lump on the parent and eventually becomes big enough to break off and live by itself.
– The term “civil law” comes from English legal scholarship and is used in English-speaking countries to lump together all legal systems of the “jus commune” tradition.
– Michelangelo could imagine the building like a lump of clay.
+ Airplanes stop by using a hook on the back of the airplane to grab wires stretched across the runway.
+ For a churning pole they used Mount Mandara placed on the back of a Great Tortoise – the Kurma Avatar of Vishnu.
+ The 11th track Three Cheers For Sweet RevengeIt’s Not a Fashion Statement it’s a Deathwish has the word ‘fucking’ in the title on the CD itself but it is not shown as having that title on the back of the album.
+ As a child, Bacchus was tutored by Thanos, who was a great lover of wine and often had to be carried on the back of a donkey.
+ Soon Dionysus was making his proud return to Mount Olympus, with drunk Hephaestus on the back of a mule.
+ Gaga is shown dressed as Mary Magdalene in the video and depicted riding on the back of a motorcycle that an actor portraying Jesus is driving.
Make sentence of on the back of
Example sentences of “on the back of”:
+ The lesser roadrunner has zygodactyl feet, meaning it has two toes on the back of its feet and two toes on the front.
+ They are on the back of the pelvic area and give padding when people sit.
+ The lesser roadrunner has zygodactyl feet, meaning it has two toes on the back of its feet and two toes on the front.
+ They are on the back of the pelvic area and give padding when people sit.
+ Baby Mario lands on the back of Yoshi, who, along with seven other Yoshis, helps Baby Mario defeat Baby Bowser and rescue Baby Luigi.
+ The only safe grip on a honey badger is on the back of the neck.
+ All members within the species complex have a large looking head with long feathers on the back of the head giving them a crested appearance.
+ They have a pair of parotoid glands on the back of their heads.
+ There is writing on the back of the Palermo Stone.
+ Along with an iSight camera and an LED flash, the fifth generation iPod Touch has a new feature called the “iPod touch loop.” There is a button on the bottom left side on the back of the iPod Touch.
+ While in the music video the band all wears white, it can also be seen on the back of the album cover.
+ In some countries, people race each other on the back of Ostriches.
+ He draws with acrylic paints, crayons and pencils, and draws on the papers and even on the back of the envelopes.
+ The Qing Dynasty required by law that all males must wear a hairstyle called the Manchu queue, in which men had to shave the front of their heads and wear a long braid on the back of their heads.
+ All sealed units had the stickers on the back of the packaging.
+ It was named for the spines on the back of the neck.
+ He became the first scientist to appear on the back of an official Topps MLB player flagship series future stars baseball card.
+ After the battle, his body was stripped of clothing and carried naked on the back of a horse to Leicester.
+ However, they had to mark a big white “X” on the back of their clothes to show that they were prisoners.
+ The triceps brachii muscle is a muscle on the back of the upper arm.
+ Distinctive spots on the back of the cat are only found on cats in West Africa.
+ To the sky studies he added notes, often on the back of the sketches, of the prevailing weather conditions, direction of light, and time of day, believing that the sky was “the key note, the standard of scale, and the chief organ of sentiment” in a landscape painting.
How to use in-sentence of “come into contact with”:
+ Brawl”, it uses Overheat causing anyone to come into contact with it to be set on fire and sent flying.
+ They had never come into contact with European society.
+ By travelling, an observer can come into contact with a greater region of space-time than an observer who remains still, so that the observable Universe for the former is larger than for the latter.
+ People come into contact with Edmond Michelet, ensuring the distribution of the underground press, in particular Combat and the communist newspapers Germain Auboiroux, Robert Delord, Henry and his brother Édouard Valéry.
+ Because Hepatitis C is spread by blood-to-blood contact, personal-care tools which come into contact with blood – like razors, toothbrushes, and manicure or pedicure equipment or any other kind of blood to blood contact – can spread the disease if they are shared.
+ When the city centre is shopping precinct, inhabitants and visitors are advised to use for example the parking of the Expo and / or to come into the centre with public transport.
+ It means “Land of Hindus” which is what it stood for until Muslims started to come into India.
+ Manna was called the “bread of heaven” because it seemed to come from Heaven, according to the Bible.
+ After East Germany collapsed in 1989, Putin was told to come back to the Soviet Union.
+ It is one of many denominations to come out of the Worldwide Church of God.
+ Charles II was asked to come back and rule Britain.
+ He emphasized the importance of Sukyung area because it is placed in the North part and kept in check Gu Ran that made an effort to come down to Goryeo.
+ He also tells Timothy to come to visit him before winter, and to bring Mark with him cf.
to come use in-sentences
Example sentences of “to come”:
+ I am trying to come back over here to edit more, but it has been hard.
+ He was about six years old when his mother Vivien Wilde made a fortuitous decision to come to the United States from Russia in hopes of a better life for herself and her two sons.
+ Booth became politically active in the 1850s, joining the Know-Nothing Party, a group that wanted fewer immigrants to come to the United States.
+ I am trying to come back over here to edit more, but it has been hard.
+ He was about six years old when his mother Vivien Wilde made a fortuitous decision to come to the United States from Russia in hopes of a better life for herself and her two sons.
+ Booth became politically active in the 1850s, joining the Know-Nothing Party, a group that wanted fewer immigrants to come to the United States.
+ When creating solutions, the therapist and patient need to come to an agreement on attainable goals.
+ The festival runners wanted more people to come to the festival, so they chose the slogan “Post Fringe Project.” They used programs to make artists’ creations seem more active and to help visitors interact with them.
+ Historically the term waiter was used to describe customs officers who waited on the tide for vessels to come in carrying goods to tax.
+ It is one of many denominations to come out of the Worldwide Church of God in 1995.
+ He is then made as a bait, as King expects the western pack to come for Runt.
+ The winner of Miss Thailand has to represent the country and invite other people to come to Thailand.
+ Tourists from other countries like to come to Peru because of the history and also to enjoy nature.
+ He had been asked to come back and taker over from Bowell.
+ Nobody has the right to come into our home, open our letters, or bother us or our family without a good reason.
+ The writer also shows the importance of the prophets as messengers from God to tell the kings and people of Israel to come back to God.
+ After a short time, he gave up power and he knew that many of the people wanted King Charles II to come back from Holland and rule the country.
More in-sentence examples of “to come”:
+ Was that intentional? The vandal is likely to come back and use it again.
+ Later German settlers started to come here.
+ More Germans were able to come to the island to help defeat the Georgians.
+ In the excitement of his discovery, Grover asks Percy to come and help him safely bring the half-bloods to camp half-blood.
+ The Aṉangu were told not to come into the park, but they did anyway.
+ I thought I’d show you all to see what you think I hope it encourages more editors to come here as on En many, many users have these on their userpages, so its quite visible.
+ Sometimes Bilal walked the streets to call Muslims to come to prayer but most of the times, he said the Adhan from the top of the mosque.
+ Therefore that information, like computer programming, has to come from an intelligent source and cannot be made randomly.
+ You are welcome to come to Wiktionary and help us build policies to make it work better, or even help us ad content to make it ‘not suck’.
+ The third part to come in will be the “subject” and the fourth part will be another answer, etc.
+ If people are going to come and look at the body before burial, the funeral director will have the body dressed, and made up with cosmetics to make it look better.
+ The station allows 30-40 people to come ashore at one time.
+ It is believed to come from the Ojibwa word “mishigami” meaning “great water”.
+ In the video Bashir also said that he thinks it is wonderful that Jackson allows children to come to Neverland.
+ I tried to find some guidelines/policies here, but I came up a little bit blank, so I decided to come to ST to ask about it.
+ The symbol is thought to come from the Latin quæstio, meaning “question”, which was shortened to Qo.
+ Friedrich Kellner expected America and England to come to the rescue.
+ She also appears briefly in the 20th Anniversary special “The Five Doctors” through the reuse of footage from the uncompleted story “Shada” because Tom Baker refused to come back.
+ Echo said back “”Here, here, here.”” Narcissus then asked Echo to come out of her hiding place.
+ In two-player games, clearing more than one line at once making combos causes “garbage” blocks to come down on the opponent’s side of the field.
+ The word “relapse” means to come back.
+ He was not ready to come out yet and he spoke anonymously and through a voice filter.
+ Because of this, the Holy Roman Emperor told Martin Luther to come to the diet.
+ One time, she sent a letter home asking one of her brothers to come to Kentucky.
+ Was that intentional? The vandal is likely to come back and use it again.
+ Later German settlers started to come here.
+ Palliative care can involve pain relief and help for the patient and family to come to terms with death.
+ Very common are treaties where a country promises to come to the aid of another country if the other country is attacked.
+ Grove got many great musicians to come and teach there, including the world-famous singer Jenny Lind who was already retired, and Hubert Parry, Charles Villiers Stanford and others.
+ In 1922 he was asked to come to the United States and to join the Phipps Psychiatric Clinic at Johns Hopkins Hospital in Baltimore, Maryland.
+ Pottinger said that he was just trying to get Ben Hall and John Dunn to come out of hiding.
+ At the end of the book, Peter and Susan are told that they will not be able to come back to Narnia.
+ Fuu convinces them both to come with her in search of a mysterious samurai that smells like sunflowers and their journey begins.
+ Johan Hegg convinced the other members to come together again, and they formed Amon Amarth in 1992.
+ It spawned five singles, “Sir Duke”, a song explaining the pleasures of music, “I Wish” wishing for childhood days to come back “As” a ballad of love which will last till The Impossible happens, “Another Star” a fast-paced Cuban style heartbreak ballad which featured on BBC’s promotional video for the 2014 World Cup and “Isn’t She Lovely” a song inspired by the birth Wonder’s daughter, Aisha Morris. The former two songs reached No.1 on the Billboard charts.
+ He became the second UK act ever to come in last place in Eurovision.
+ Woody sees a pickup truck bound for Pizza Planet and plans to rendezvous with Andy there, convincing Buzz to come with him by saying that the pickup truck can take him to his home planet.
+ Peary asked some of them to come with him to New York.
+ Jack quickly carved crosses into the trunk of the tree, making it impossible for the devil to come down.
+ It says that Diotrephes doesn’t like John’s message and John hopes to come to visit and to tell others that Diotrephes is wrong when he doesn’t accept the Christian message and people who are telling that message.
+ They were well-adapted to life as fully pelagic organisms because they never needed to come onto land.
+ Language links in the sidebar are going to come from Wikidata in addition to the ones in the wiki text.
+ I am asking for the tools so I do not have to wait for a admin to come on to have vandal action taken, and so I can better help everyone here.
+ I would really like a few people to come and comment on the final wording to make sure there is no opposition or word tweaking, though.
+ Scientists found this frog in streams in forests that were open enough for the sunlight to come through.
+ The name is thought to come from “meolc”, the Old English word for milk, and “ham”, a village.
+ This makes the image appear to come from a different direction than the original object.
+ The incident caused the safety car to come out on track, with all the drivers still in the race staying in the same place behind it while going at a slower speed.
+ He was sent back down but was called up again on August 17, 2005 where he finished the season with the Brewers and was used as a pinch-hitter.
+ He played 1 game with them but went back down to the OHL to play with the Canadiens again.
+ When William saw that many of Harold’s men were following his knights back down the hill, he used a trick he had learned years before.
+ When William saw that many of Harold’s men were following his knights back down the hill he used a trick he had learned years before.
+ He and forces the hostages to go back down into the building.
+ Leighton played 3 games and was sent back down to the River Rats.
+ When satellites reach the end of their life, it would be too expensive to bring them all the way back down to Earth to burn up in the atmosphere.
+ If a player does not play well he may be sent back down or cut from the team.
Make sentence of back down
Example sentences of “back down”:
+ Finlay pulled him off, only to slam him back down onto Burchill again.
+ Salary cap was still a concern for the Blackhawks and they had to send Morin back down to Rockford the next day.
+ If an electron gets hit by a photon, then it will jump back down to a lower energy level, releasing its contained energy.
+ The other policeman went back down the road to a small hotel, Lyell’s Shanty.
+ The crew cabin did not have any kind of parachute, and it smashed into the ocean after falling for 2 minutes and 45 seconds at roughly and then slowing back down to 0 all within a second.
+ He went back down slowly by shooting balloons with a pellet gun.
+ When the object comes back down again, the gravitational potential energy is turned back into kinetic energy.
+ A rollback happens when the train doesn’t make it to the top of the hill and rolls back down the track.
+ They came back down from the top of the mountain on May 29, 1953.
+ This frog is gray-brown or olive-brown in color with a thin stripe in the middle of its back down its spine.
+ When the electron drops back down to a lower energy state, it needs to release the energy that hit it, and it must obey the conservation of energy.
+ After that game, he went back down to the IHL to play 7 games with Saginaw and 23 games with the Muskegon Lumberjacks.
+ HE was sent back down to OVW and later called back up where he was a member of The Spirit Squad, performing under the ring name Nicky.
+ The heavier grains fall back down for recovery.
+ She is described as wild not one to back down from a fight.
+ This ranges from the Beaver Lake tailwaters in northwestern Arkansas, through its course through southwest Missouri, and back down through Arkansas.
+ Finlay pulled him off, only to slam him back down onto Burchill again.
+ Salary cap was still a concern for the Blackhawks and they had to send Morin back down to Rockford the next day.
+ The song has a long running false rumour that it was about a drowning that Collins had witnessed.
+ A rumour that the Soviets had persuaded him to lose deliberately to Botvinnik in the 1948 World Championship has no evidence to back it up.
+ This rumour was started when the Canadiens’ manager, Leo Dandurand, told newspapers that Vézina “speaks no English and has twenty-two children, including three sets of triplets, and they were all born in the space of nine years.” The Vézinas actually only had two children and Georges spoke some English.
+ He had been busy with the siege of Pelium and a rumour had reached them that he had died during the course of this siege. Demosthenes – a prominent Athenian politician – produced a man who claimed to have been present at the siege and claimed that Alexander was dead.
+ There is a rumour that Sloan was a hobo which was seen by musician W.C.
+ They were met with silence, as the citizens of Rome had locked themselves inside their houses as soon as the rumour of what had taken place had begun to spread.
– The author has demonstrated the ability to draw comprehensively on the literature for many topics and regions for his long nineteenth century, and has articulated it in accounts of many large-scale issues.
– At first, an articulated type of rolling stock was thought about.
– In tandem with the removal of Routemaster buses, Livingstone oversaw the introduction of bending articulated buses.
– The type specimen was a nearly complete, articulated skeleton.
– There are now complete and articulated specimens, including feathers, Egg eggs and embryos, and complete juveniles.
– The cars were made of aluminium and were articulated to reduce the weight of the unit.
In sentence examples of articulated
Example sentences of “articulated”:
– There are many kinds of articulated vehicles: buses, trams and trains may be articulated.
– The articulated skeleton of “Pederpes” was found there.
– A flatbed truck is a truck which can be either articulated or rigid.
– Cierva is credited with successful development of multi-bladed, fully articulated rotor systems.
– Burmese has many English and Indian words though is a very distinct and full language itself with a long history and substantial numbers of proudly articulated dialects.
– They were mainly single units but one was a three-car articulated set.
– The bus rapid transit routes have less stops than other routes, and use articulated buses as of 2007.
– An articulated vehicle is a vehicle which has a pivot joint.
– They often have articulated skeletons, soft tissues, colour patterns, stomach contents, and twigs with leaves and flowers still attached.
– They are also the only ones to have small, articulated “styli” on the hind.
– An almost complete articulated skeleton was found in 1996.
– A semi-trailer truck, also known as a semi, tractor-trailer, big rig, eighteen-wheeler, or articulated lorry or artic is a vehicle that has a towing tractor and a semi-trailer that carries the freight.
– The Dinosaur Park Formation contains dense concentrations of dinosaur skeletons, both articulated and disarticulated.
– The game allows players to drive many types of articulated trucks across a smaller version of Europe and deliver cargo.
– Steam locomotives were sometimes articulated so the driving wheels could pivot around turns.
- There are many kinds of articulated vehicles: buses, trams and trains may be articulated.
- The articulated skeleton of "Pederpes" was found there.