Use in sentence of “blown”

How to use in-sentence of “blown”:

+ He thinks he sees the Headless Horseman, a dead soldier of the Revolution whose head was blown off by a cannon ball.

+ Power was knocked out to most of the Houston area and windows were blown out of skyscrapers in downtown Houston.

+ Travelling between the lines of fighting armies the despatch rider could easily be blown up by a land minemine, shot by gunfire, or captured by the enemy.

+ Well-made houses leveled; buildings and other things with weak foundations blown away very far; skyscrapers and highrises destroyed.

+ Dave warns Alvin to not have too much fun but Alvin does not listen and him and the other chipmunks get blown away while holding onto a kite and they end up stranded on a deserted island.

+ Six weeks into the voyage, Denham reveals to Englehorn and Jack that their destination is, in fact, an uncharted island with a Skull Islandmountain that looks like a skull, of which he has come to knowledge from a Norwegian skipper who discovered a canoe blown off course with only one native left alive.

Use in sentence of blown
Use in sentence of blown

Example sentences of “blown”:

+ In 2017, he made a statement about Scotland having a "full blown mental health emergency" citing the hiring of mental health staff by a charity.

+ Harold Godwinson of England was blown ashore at Ponthieu in 1064.

+ In 2017, he made a statement about Scotland having a “full blown mental health emergency” citing the hiring of mental health staff by a charity.

+ Harold Godwinson of England was blown ashore at Ponthieu in 1064.

+ The outer edges of the Sun’s corona are constantly being blown away by the open magnetic flux generating the solar wind.

+ These “soridia” can be blown by wind.

+ On 12 June 1972, the flight went into explosive decompression after a cargo door was blown out from the airplane.

+ It is usually made of wood and it has to be blown like a flute to play it.

+ At dusk they become active, gliding from trunk to trunk like sheets of paper blown on the wind.

+ There is speculation that this spike was attached to a flap of skin that covered the nostrils and could be blown up for displays and noise-making.

+ Three trains on the Circle and Piccadilly lines were blown up.

+ In November 2012 a bus driver had to be rescued after his double decker bus blown over into a ditch trapping him in the bus in Cliffe, there were no one on board except the driver.

+ In the novel, a conch shell is blown to call the other boys together.

+ On the south side, the buildings of the Maranatha Christian Reformed Church and the were destroyed, and the only fatality occurred when a vehicle on Highway 401 was blown off the road and the lone occupant killed.

+ The weakness of their flight means they are easily blown off course, so they are common vagrants.

+ A very hot blast of air is blown in, where it causes the coke to burn.

+ Weenie, but their cover is blown and are kidnapped by Fifi and the other pets.

+ To further confuse predators, when the leaf insect walks, it rocks back and forth, to mimic a real leaf being blown by the wind.

+ A blown cloud of spores burned rapidly and brightly, but with little heat.

+ In an interview with ABC7 reporter Alan Wang, Ayers said that “Now that’s being blown into dishonest narratives about hurting people, killing people, planning to kill people.

More in-sentence examples of “blown”:

+ If they are successful, the defending team’s base is blown up.

+ The plot was to have blown up the King at such time as he should have been sat in his royal throne, Nobility and Commons and with all Bishops, Judges and Doctors at one instant, and the blast to have ruined the whole estate and kingdom of England.

+ The Royal Naval Bomb Disposal Squad removed the bomb and it was safely blown up.

+ The outer layers of these stars are blown away at speeds of many thousands of kilometers an hour.

+ Small golden and silver tickets are blown around the dome and they must try and catch as many as they can.

+ Bušić reminded Captain Carey that the aircraft could be blown up at any time if the demands were not met and that the passengers released at Newfoundland, if failed to distribute leaflets as ordered, the remaining passengers’ fate would be on their consciences.

+ For the American market, figures were blown depicting comic book characters as well as patriotic subjects such as Uncle Sams, eagles, and flags.

+ The blown off cloudiness split into 2 separate systems, but Danas re-absorbed the other one, while the one in the South China Sea intensified into Tropical Depression Goring, where it affected Taiwan and Batanes.

+ This side was also plastered over with paintings in the Baroque times, but when a bridge nearby was blown up in World War II the plaster fell off, so it is now kept with the original medieval walls showing.

+ Several bridges have blown down because that was not properly taken into consideration.

+ Some examples include catastrophising where small problems are blown out of proportion and all-or-nothing thinking which involves thinking in extremes.

+ Notice that the sound “hu” is unknown in Japanese, so ふ is pronounced “fu” with an “f” which is blown lightly, like someone blowing out a candle.

+ NEAR scientists have found that most of the bigger rocks scattered across Eros were blown from a single crater in a meteorite collision approximately 1 billion years ago.

+ But, again, it was blown off course and he ended up landing at Mount Lao in what is now Shandong in northern China, east of the city of Qingdao.

+ The little drop is blown by a strong wind inside the cloud to where it meets with some extremely cold water drops.

+ I admit that the recent debacle regarding flood flag was blown out of proportion – and that I am partly to blame – and I think now that the guidelines around this tool have been made clearer such an incident won’t happen again.

+ Another example of an unconditioned response is when wind is blown in a person’s eyes and they blink automatically to prevent dust or something from getting into them.

+ Many of the workers at Parkland Hospital reported that a large portion of the back of the President’s head appeared to have been blown out.

+ The light, fluffy seeds are then blown to the ground by the wind, where they all begin to grow again.

+ Any attempt to get the children out will result in the bomb being blown up.

+ These souls are blown around in a giant storm which will last forever.

+ Fallout from a nuclear explosion can be blown by the wind over large distances from where the explosion occurred, and can remain dangerous for long periods of time.

+ Charon was found by astronomer James Christy on June 22, 1978, when he was looking at highly blown up picture of Pluto on a photographic plate that taken a couple of months before.

+ Also referred to as a Blown Spot.

+ When the piston is at bottom dead centre, fuel-air mixture is blown in under slight pressure.

+ If they are successful, the defending team's base is blown up.

+ The plot was to have blown up the King at such time as he should have been sat in his royal throne, Nobility and Commons and with all Bishops, Judges and Doctors at one instant, and the blast to have ruined the whole estate and kingdom of England.
+ The Royal Naval Bomb Disposal Squad removed the bomb and it was safely blown up.

+ Of the two bridges now remaining between Kampfgruppe Peiper and the Meuse, the bridge over the Lienne was blown by the Americans as the Germans approached.

+ The Engineer himself is weak, and poorly placed Sentries can be blown up by smart Soldiers and Demomen.

+ Even after the Americans withdrew the “Carolina” kept up the bombardment until it was blown up by Heated shot and sunk on December 27th.

+ When hot air is blown in the blast furnace, the coke will burn and reduce the oxygen off the ore, producing bare iron and carbon dioxide.

+ Harrison added the sound of bubbles being blown into a glass of milk using a straw.

+ Oxygen is then blown into the iron.

+ In the 2010 World Cup, vuvuzelas were in the news all over the world because it was normal in South Africa for them to be blown at football matches.

+ The planet’s first atmosphere must have been completely blown away by the enormous amount of energy released.

+ He curses them until he is blown off as the plane takes off.

+ Thirty million cubic meters of lava in the form of pumice and ash were blown to a height of up to 36 kilometers above the island.

+ Two airplanes circling overhead were blown apart by the heavy shrapnel.

+ The impostor’s group was blown by storm to the island of Kythnos, one of the lesser islands of the Cyclades, which had only one community worthy of the appellation “polis” in antiquity—the city of Cythnus.

+ You can see the flames on several ghee lamps flicker as if blown by moving air.

+ For instance spear grass has spiky tips that can get stuck in passing animals or blown by a strong wind to a new place.

+ Air is blown over the water to evaporate the iodine.

+ The fuel to give it a large surface area, and is then blown into a large boiler with lots of air.

+ The momentum of a heavy ship, such as “Ever Given”, is difficult to counteract if blown off course.

+ Harryhausen’s was originally going to be blown up but due to the September 11 attacks, the explosion was replaced with a plasma containment orb.

+ Some researchers believe that Dactyl formed from debris blown off from Ida because of cratering, while others suggest that Ida and Dactyl formed as a pair a billion or more years ago when Ida’s parent body was disrupted.

+ She then watches happily in the sky as the rocket gets blown up in the sun.

+ A comet’s tail does not trail behind it, but points directly away from the Sun, because it is blown by the solar wind.

+ The Pevensie children are called to Narnia by Susan’s horn, which is blown by Prince Caspian.

+ People died everywhere, blown up by the blast, decapitated by flying metal, sliced by falling glass, burned by flaming metal and chemicals, crushed by falling buildings.

“interracial” use in-sentences

How to use in-sentence of “interracial”:

– This movie is about interracial romance and drug addiction.

– It dealt with a forbidden and interracial love affair.

– Afterwards, it banned interracial dating.

– This ending, in which an interracial couple ends up together, is a rare occurrence for this period of film production.

– It is often the name given to describe interracial marriage, interracial dating and interracial sex.

– It was the first hospital with an interracial staff.

– In 1977, an interracial summer romance took place between Cockney garage mechanic Dennis Harper, played by Guy Ward, and motel receptionist Meena Chaudri, played by Karen David.

– Rachel is the daughter of an Interracial marriageinterracial same-sex couple.

interracial use in-sentences
interracial use in-sentences

Some example sentences of “expectations”

How to use in-sentence of “expectations”:

– It is the ability to form these expectations that give humans the capacity to predict the outcomes of their behavior, before the behavior is performed.

– It needs expanding to meet our current expectations of a comprehensive article, as recently witnessed during the demotion of Avril Lavigne.

– They worked on rational expectations and showed problems in it.

– Bayley did not fulfill all expectations and leaving Maiden after recording two albums.

– The show exceeded expectations by having a higher viewership rating than several drama shows at the time.

Some example sentences of expectations
Some example sentences of expectations

Example sentences of “expectations”:

- Cognitive dissonance theory says that people have a bias to seek consonance between their expectations and reality.

- While I love being active in creating articles/content building, reverting vandalism, and tagging pages with QD, I realized, after reading the opposing comments, that the expectations and requirements of admin would be too much for me at this time, as I am only 14.

– Cognitive dissonance theory says that people have a bias to seek consonance between their expectations and reality.

– While I love being active in creating articles/content building, reverting vandalism, and tagging pages with QD, I realized, after reading the opposing comments, that the expectations and requirements of admin would be too much for me at this time, as I am only 14.

– Additionally, not conforming to these expectations can make someone feel scared or guilty.

– Early patterns of attachment, in turn, shape – but do not determine – the individual’s expectations in later relationships.

– Researchers observed 152 Kenyan children in rural settings and found that this change didn’t occur until parental expectations and customary duties increased.

– Clapton, Winwood, and many other people had high expectations for the new band, but many people did not like the new stuff they were doing.

– Pet names often reflect the owner’s view of the animal, and their expectations they have for their companion.

– She calls this acting “gender performativity.” What society regards as a person’s gender is just a performance made to please social expectations and not a true expression of the person’s ‘gender identity’.

– Fashion designers in particular have expectations of what a human body is supposed to look like.

– In April 2010, at the Royal College of Nursing conference in Bournemouth, “Holby City” was accused of fostering unrealistic expectations of the NHS, encouraging patients to believe in miracles and fuelling a compensation culture.

– The Act defines “transgender person” as someone with a “mixture of male and female genital features or congenital ambiguities” a male who “undergoes genital excision or castration” or, more broadly, “any person whose gender identity and/or gender expression differs from the social norms and cultural expectations based on the sex they were assigned at the time of their birth” which allows people to self-identify as such.

– Haunted by her long suppressed past and pressured by family to seek treatment from mystical healers for her infertility, a Kosovar woman struggles to reconcile the expectations of motherhood with a legacy of wartime brutality.

– Personally, people conform because they have expectations for themselves.

– The Golf GTI has evolved a long way since the 80’s but the fifth generation GTI is criticised by some as it does not live up to the expectations and standards set by the legendary Mk1 GTI, which was fitted with an 1600, 8 valve motor.

– The term “malware” only refers to software that is made for malicious purposes and works against users’ expectations — and so does not include applications that may do unintended harm due to some deficiency.

– If the trajectory were made more clear and then we were to try to locate that electron along an extension of the trajectory we just staked out, then we would find that the more precise we made our knowledge of the trajectory, the less likely we would be to find the electron where ordinary expectations would lead us to believe it to be.

– She thoroughly battles the expectations of respectable young ladies during the turn of the century.

– The expectations Ozai had for Azula caused her to become stressed and paranoid, eventually leading to her mental breakdown at the end of the series.

– The song looks at the dark expectations that are garnered from media images.

– Abbasid dynastic colour over time developed in white as the colour of Shia Islam and black as the colour of Sunni Islam: “The proselytes of the ʿAbbasid revolution took full advantage of the eschatological expectations raised by black banners in their campaign to undermine the Umayyad dynasty from within.

“relic” example in sentences

How to use in-sentence of “relic”:

+ This is a relic of the legs which do not appear in modern snakes.

+ Sometimes the relic is known to be real.

+ The most important monuments in the commune are the Ars basilicaArs basilica, built in 1862, and the “Presbytère du curé d’Ars”, located at the side of the basilica, and which contains a relic of Jean-Marie Vianney, “curé” of Ars in the 19th century.

+ The swamp was formed over the past 6,500 years by the build-up of peat in a shallow basin basin on the edge of an ancient Atlantic coastal terrace, the geological relic of a Pleistocene estuary.

+ A relic is an object, especially a piece of the body or a personal item of someone of Religionreligious importance, that was carefully preserved with an air of veneration as a memorial that you can touch.

relic example in sentences
relic example in sentences

Example sentences of “relic”:

+ Its cultivation decreased in the Bronze Age, and today it is a relic crop that is rarely planted.

+ The possession of this relic put France in the forefront of Latin Christendom.
+ It contains a relic believed by many Muslims of India to be a hair of the Islamic prophet Muhammad.

+ Its cultivation decreased in the Bronze Age, and today it is a relic crop that is rarely planted.

+ The possession of this relic put France in the forefront of Latin Christendom.

+ It contains a relic believed by many Muslims of India to be a hair of the Islamic prophet Muhammad.

+ Unlike other common-origin ethnic or caste groups of Nepal, the Newar people are regarded as an example of a nation community with a relic identity, derived from an ethnically-diverse, previously-existing polity.

+ As ancient capital, Xian’s rich history is reflectey by the relic of Chinese dynasties such as ancient emperor story, imperial tombs, palace legends in the Qin, Han and Tang Dynasty.

+ The word relic comes from the Latin “reliquiae”.

+ The bluebell woodbluebell glades of Stocks Wood were said to be a relic of the Roman remains nearby.

+ During the 20th century RepublicRepublican and Communist governments saw this as a relic of the past.”Buddhist Funeral Cultures of Southeast Asia and China”, eds.

+ Sung Wong Toi is a historic relic in Hong Kong.

+ Tufa stećci on the Crkvenica riverbank is a relic of the Bogomil settlement in the twelfth century.

+ Most of the main levels have a Relic hidden in the level that the player can buy.

+ This relic was stolen in 1997.

+ A famous relic of the GDR is the low-powered automobile “Trabant” or “Trabi”.

+ Krom Phraya Dhamlong Racha Nupap says that Phetchabun established for 2 periods in the same relic of Buddha temple and ancient temple.

+ This is thought to be a relic of the endosymbiosisendosymbiotic origin of plastids from cyanobacteria.

In sentence examples of “humility”

How to use in-sentence of “humility”:

– At about sixteen, Henry Samson sailed on the Mayflower in the company of his aunt and uncle Ann Tilley and Edward Tilley and a cousin, Humility Cooper.

– I don’t know how much Humility Cooper features in the sources that have been provided.

– Many Amish do not allow posing for photographs; they say it is against their sense of humility and not standing out from the others.

– With affected humility they plead for mercy.

– In early ages she learned to practice humility and patience.

In sentence examples of humility
In sentence examples of humility

“law school” – sentence examples

How to use in-sentence of “law school”:

+ At the Law School he taught History of politics theories, General sociology, and Social science methodology classes.

+ He went to college and to law school at Penn State University.

+ After taking time off as a community organizer, Obama went to law school at Harvard University.

+ In 1970, he was appointed Professor of Law at Osgoode Hall Law School in Toronto and was appointed Dean in 1998.

+ Chris Dodd served in the Peace Corps for two years before going to law school at the University of Louisville.

+ Abraham received his law degree from Harvard Law School in 1979.

+ Zaitouneh finished law school in 1999.

+ Marco Antônio de Oliveira Maciel is a Brazilian politician, lawyer and law school professor.

law school - sentence examples
law school – sentence examples

Example sentences of “law school”:

+ He was president of Brigham Young University, a professor of law at the University of Chicago Law School and a justice of the Utah Supreme Court.

+ He took a break during law school to work with the Jesuit Volunteer Corps in Honduras.

+ The University of Michigan Law School keeps a list of people who have been exonerated from death row.

+ He went to the University of Pennsylvania in 1961 and received a Bachelor of Arts degree and later got a Juris Doctor from Villanova Law School in 1968.

+ To become a lawyer, a person has to complete a two- or three-year university program at a law school and pass an entrance examination.

+ He studied at the University of TexasUniversity of Texas Law School and at Abilene Christian University.

+ Kaine graduated from Harvard Law School with a law degree in 1983,Danielle Burton, “U.S.

+ He studied at Boston CollegeBoston College Law School and the private Hudson Catholic High School.

+ He then earned his Juris Doctor from Atlanta’s John Marshall Law School in Georgia, USA, passed the Georgian bar exam in 2001, and set up a law firm in Atlanta.

+ News Best Colleges Rankings” says that it was the 65th best law school in the United States.

+ He was a professor at the George Washington University Law School before opening his own law firm upon returning to Montana.

+ He had earlier served as Mexico’s foreign minister for two terms and was the director of a small law school in Mexico City for sixteen years.

+ He was president of Brigham Young University, a professor of law at the University of Chicago Law School and a justice of the Utah Supreme Court.

+ He took a break during law school to work with the Jesuit Volunteer Corps in Honduras.
+ The University of Michigan Law School keeps a list of people who have been exonerated from death row.

More in-sentence examples of “law school”:

+ Amoudruz entered the law school in Clermont-Ferrand.

+ She was awarded one’s degree in 1926 at Law School at the Charles University.

+ After leaving the Circuit Court, Dillon was a professor at Columbia Law School from 1879 until 1882, where he taught real estate and equity.

+ Castro entered Harvard Law School in 1997and graduated with a Juris Doctor law degree in 2000.

+ He is a professor at Harvard Law School and has been a visiting professor at Columbia Law School.

+ He was founder and director of the National Law School of India University and the National Judicial Academy.

+ Founded in 1931 by Harvard Law School alumnus Eli Whitney Debevoise and University of OxfordOxford-trained William Stevenson, Debevoise specializes in strategic and private equity, MA, insurance and financial services transactions, private funds, complex litigation, investigations, and international arbitration.

+ After retiring from Congress, Ottinger became a professor at the Elisabeth Haub School of Law, founding an environmental law program there, and served as the law school dean from 1994 to 1999.

+ He was going to go to Law school but took a job as a production assistant at WNYW-TV in New York.

+ He then went on to the Stanford Law School and received his J.D.

+ Bundy was still living in Utah in 1975 and was still attending law school but he began only killing people in Colorado.

+ He graduated from the University of Colorado Law School in 2001.

+ It was the top law school in the state of Kansas.

+ This is still the most widely practiced law school in the Sunni tradition.

+ Porter went to Harvard Law School in 1913 for a year.

+ The University of Chicago Law School named the Casper Platt Award for the best student paper in his honor.

+ In 1952, he was arrested by one of the teachers of the Soochow University Law School terming him as a “special suspect” and was sentenced to a minimum of ten years of labour reform.

+ He graduated from Cornell University Law School in 1939.

+ After completing law school and clerking for a federal judge, West entered the United States Army and served in the Judge Advocate General’s Corps.

+ Only two colleges charge tuition to its graduate students; the law school and the Academy of Arts and Design.

+ Reuben Clark Law School at BYU.

+ A Juris Doctor is earned by completing law school in the United States, Canada, Australia, and other common law countries.

+ The Law School has 81 full-time teachers.

+ The Law School at University of Colorado, Boulder, is ranked #40 by U.S.

+ While working as a faculty member at the Law School of the University of Arkansas, she married Bill Clinton on October 11, 1975.

+ He returned to Nevada after law school and served as Henderson city attorney before being elected to the Nevada Assembly in 1968.

+ One study done by Columbia Law School found that there were serious mistakes in two-thirds of all capital trials.

+ He taught physical education classes in Rome, New York for a couple years before going to law school at New York University in New York City.

+ Once finished with college, he went to law school in Northampton, Massachusetts.

+ When she was 18, Guo went to law school at Beijing University.

+ He then taught at Yale Law School from 1891 until 1892.

+ Oaks worked to make BYU bigger like Wilkinson, and added a law school and made plans for a new School of Management.

+ Before being a judge, he was a professor at Harvard Law School and a judge on the First Circuit Court of Appeals.

+ He also taught at Yale Law School and the University of Oxford.

+ He studied at Harvard College and Harvard Law School earning both a B.S.

+ He graduated from the Law School of Tokyo Imperial University in 1889, and entered the Foreign Ministry the same year.

+ He had enough money to go to law school if his contract was not renewed.

+ He studied in its law school and wrote his thesis on labour law.

+ After graduating from law school in 1986, Pence worked as an attorney in private practice.

+ I took three years of Latin in before law school and I’ve dealt with Latin over the last several years on multiple occasions.

+ In 1973/74, she held a Columbia University, International Research and Exchanges Board Fellowship used to study in the Sociology Department, Law School and the Russian Institute.

+ He received a law Degree degree from the University of Louisville Law School in 1849.

+ The University of Michigan Law School is the law school of the University of Michigan, in Ann Arbor.

+ Drake’s law school is among the twenty-five oldest in the country.

+ Osgoode Hall Law School is in Toronto, Ontario Canada.

+ Amoudruz entered the law school in Clermont-Ferrand.

+ She was awarded one’s degree in 1926 at Law School at the Charles University.
+ After leaving the Circuit Court, Dillon was a professor at Columbia Law School from 1879 until 1882, where he taught real estate and equity.

Sentence example of “newton”

How to use in-sentence of “newton”:

– Famous people who have studied there include Isaac Newton and Ludwig Wittgenstein.

– Leibniz is perhaps most famous for his involvement in development of calculus independent of Isaac Newton and creation of Leibniz Notation which is the standard form of calculus today.

– The NCAA said that there was not sufficient evidence that Cam Newton or anyone from Auburn had any knowledge of Cecil Newton‘s actions.

– For a short time in the early 1940s during World War II, she was married to Maurice Newton Long.

– Their first album, “The Shearer’s Dream” was made in 1974 with Dobe Newton on lagerphone and vocals, Mick Slocum on accordions and vocals, Jan Wositzky on harmonica, bush bass and vocals, Tony Hunt on fiddle and viola and Dave Isom on guitar.

– Auburn maintained throughout the scandal that they were not involved in any pay-for-play scheme, and that Cam Newton was allowed to play.

– All cast and crew members worked on all three movies, except for music composer James Newton Howard who did not work on “The Dark Knight Rises”.

– Albert Einstein kept a photograph of Faraday on his study wall alongside pictures of Isaac Newton and James Clerk Maxwell.

Sentence example of newton
Sentence example of newton

Example sentences of “newton”:

– Later in 1266, Norway ceded the Isle of Man to the Kingdom of Scotland, and Newton considered it likely that Alexander utilised the triskelion for the arms of his new possession.

– Electrical flux has SI units of volt metres newton metres squared per coulomb.

– On December 1, the NCAA announced that Auburn had declared Cam Newton to be ineligible.

– In 1687 Newton published in the “Principia” a proof that the Earth was an oblate spheroid of flattening equal to 1/230.Isaac Newton:, translated into English by Andrew Motte.

– Apple made an early version of a tablet computer in 1993 called the Newton MessagePad.

– Brigadier General Kenneth Newton Walker was a United States Army aviator.

– Isaac Newton used a prism to split white light into a spectrum of color, and Fraunhofer’s high-quality prisms allowed scientists to see dark lines of an unknown origin.

- Later in 1266, Norway ceded the Isle of Man to the Kingdom of Scotland, and Newton considered it likely that Alexander utilised the triskelion for the arms of his new possession.

- Electrical flux has SI units of volt metres newton metres squared per coulomb.
- On December 1, the NCAA announced that Auburn had declared Cam Newton to be ineligible.

– In January 2009, Newton transferred to Blinn College a junior college in Brenham, Texas.

– Isaac Newton discovered that gravity controls the orbit of the planets and moons.

– On July 29, 2011, Newton signed a four-year deal worth over $22 million that is fully guaranteed.

– Isaac Newton died on in London, England.

More in-sentence examples of “newton”:

– That made the newton the standard unit of force.

– This method first appeared in John Flamsteed’s “Historia Coelestis Britannica”, a book that was published by Edmond Halley and Isaac Newton together in 1712.

– Born Gwyllyn Samuel Newton Ford in Quebec City, Canada.

– Sir Newton James Moore was the 8th Premier of Western Australia from 7 May 1906 until 16 September 1910.

– After their deaths he lived at Newton Abbott and then, from 1908 until death, in Torquay.

– Surrey has six town centres: Whalley, Newton Town CentreNewton, Guildford, Fleetwood, Cloverdale, and South Surrey.

– Visiting in 1787, the geologist James Hutton found his first example of an unconformity to the north of Newton Point near Lochranza.

– The “Philosophiæ Naturalis Principia Mathematica” is a trilogy, written by Isaac Newton and published on 5 July 1687.

– Isaac Newton discovered them.

– Army colonel Isaac Newton Lewis in 1911, based on initial work by Samuel Maclean.

– Diamond is a city in Newton County, MissouriNewton County, Missouri, United States.

– Richard Newton Gardner was an American politician.

– At the same time, Jasper and Newton Counties are very conservative.

– It is in western Newton County, Arkansas and rises to.

– Isaac Newton developed three laws of motion that are fundamental to dynamics.

– John Newton Mitchell was an American politician and lawyer.

– Isaac Newton was the first person to solve to the general two-body problem.

– Auburn found evidence that Cecil Newton did in fact solicit Mississippi State for money in exchange for Cam Newton‘s athletic service.

– Isaac Newton applied his theory of mechanics to the tides and the precession of the equinox.

– Several hundred years ago, the famous scientist Isaac Newton did an experiment where he showed that even white light from the Sun was made up of all the colors of the rainbow.

– The station was formerly known as Newton Circus.

– In the eighteenth century, the same possibility was mentioned by Isaac Newton in his “Principia”.

– In the 17th century, Galileo Galilei, Johannes Kepler and Isaac Newton began helping people understand physics more clearly.

– Before Newton said this, people believed that comets go in to the sun, then another comes out from behind the sun.

– In “Method of Fluxions Sir Isaac Newton examined the transformations between polar coordinates, which he referred to as the “Seventh Manner; For Spirals”, and nine other coordinate systems.

– He corrected many of the things that Newton did.

– Isaac Newton used geometry to describe the relationship between acceleration, velocity, and distance.

– Francis Newton “Frank” Gifford was an American football player and television sportscaster.

– The town was founded in 1911 and named for Isaac Newton Van Nuys, one of its developers.

– Therefore, if we want to observe an effect in a moving system at constant speed, we can apply the Newton laws directly.

– The laws of mechanics of Galileo and Newton are valid in a Galilean coordinate system.

– But both Newton and Leibniz were the first to design a system that describes how things change over time, and can predict how they will change in the future.

– The SI unit for moment is the newton meter.

– No deaths or injuries were reported in Newton Falls due to all residents taking shelter.

– George Berkeley argued that optics from Isaac Newton and Johannes Kepler also had this problem.

– After Newton died, however, the college declined, and it was dissolved in 1816.

– Isaac Newton thought that light was made of very small things that we would now call particles.

– Isaac Newton went on thinking about gravity.

– It is a relatively new town, being only a small village called Newton on a 1695 map.

– Important discoveries by people working for the British Museum included the Mausoleum of Halicarnassus by Charles Newton in 1857 and the Temple of Artemis in 1869.

– Young Newton remained with his maternal grandmother, Margery Ayscough.

– Halley also persuaded Sir Isaac Newton to publish a book about his discovery of gravity.

– In the 1670s and 1680s, Sir Isaac Newton in England and Gottfried Leibniz in Germany figured out calculus at the same time, working separately from each other.

– Meanwhile, Isaac Newton improved the ideas of gravity and dynamics and showed how the Solar System worked.

– Galileo’s findings were ignored by most people, and Aristotle’s view was still accepted as correct until Isaac Newton proved Galileo was right.

– In 1710, William Newton became the Principal of Hart Hall.

– It is sometimes told that Isaac Newton was reading a book under a tree when an apple from the tree fell next to him.

– What Newton and Leibniz found was a way to work out the slope exactly, by using simple and logical rules.

– Isaac Newton also wrote a book about gravity, which helped to prove Copernicus’s idea right.

- That made the newton the standard unit of force.

- This method first appeared in John Flamsteed's "Historia Coelestis Britannica", a book that was published by Edmond Halley and Isaac Newton together in 1712.
- Born Gwyllyn Samuel Newton Ford in Quebec City, Canada.

Use in sentence of “quicksand”

How to use in-sentence of “quicksand”:

– The stability of the colloidal quicksand is changed by the presence of salt.

– In extremes, a quicksand may be danger to man and animals.

– Due to their sheer size, they churn up the ground with each step, creating quicksand that becomes a death trap for the small Hypsilophodonts travelling with them.

– This makes it difficult to distinguish quicksand from the surrounding environment.

– Fry falls into a quicksand bog and dies.

– The tapestry shows Harold GodwinsonHarold, Earl of Wessex helping two Norman knights from the quicksand around Mont-Saint-Michel during a battle with Conan II, Duke of Brittany.

Use in sentence of quicksand
Use in sentence of quicksand

“fee” – example sentences

How to use in-sentence of “fee”:

+ Kakadu National Park brought in an entry fee in April 2010.

+ In other states, no extra fee is required.

+ Fees Must Fall was a student protest to ask universities to drop fee hikes in South Africa and Namibia between 2015 and 2017.

+ Nirvana founder Kurt Cobain said the credit was a token of thanks to Everman for paying a fee of US $606.17 to record the album.

+ A fee is the price one gives as payment for services, especially the honorarium paid to a doctor, lawyer, consultant or member of a learned profession.

+ Before they can even consider the granting of arms, an application, must be made to the Earl Marshal, and a fee paid.

fee - example sentences
fee – example sentences

Example sentences of “fee”:

+ These cards had a much lower fee than American Express fees, which at the time charged 4% for each transaction.

+ The fee was £9 million.

+ The governments make people pay a fee to send something.

+ Ronaldo joined Real Madrid on 1 July 2009 for a fee of €94 million.

+ On 1 July 2014, it was announced that Chelsea had agreed a fee with Atletico to sign Costa for a fee of £32 million.

+ In August 2007 he signed up to play for Sunderland for a fee of 10 million pounds.

+ The smaller banks get cash through the correspondent banks, which charge a fee for the service.

+ These cards had a much lower fee than American Express fees, which at the time charged 4% for each transaction.

+ The fee was £9 million.
+ The governments make people pay a fee to send something.

+ On June 20, 2016, De La Fuente paid the $10,440 qualifying fee to run for the Democratic nomination of the 2016 Senate election in Florida to decide the Democratic nominee for the Senate seat occupied by Republican Party Republican Marco Rubio.

+ These bikes may be free of charge or have a small fee that increases however long the bike is away from a dock.

+ The miller charged a fee called, which was usually 1/24 of the total grain milled.

+ People do not pay any fee to enjoy the festival.

+ In December, 2020 Roblox announced they would no longer require premium to upload clothing, but instead, pay a fee for 10 Robux per clothing.

More in-sentence examples of “fee”:

+ Lawyers generally charge a fee for the work that they do, but sometimes advice is offered freely, which is called “pro bono” meaning “for the public good.” In many countries, if a person is accused of a crime and unable to pay for a lawyer, the government will pay a lawyer to represent them using tax money.

+ That was a world record transfer fee at the time.

+ Aguero joined Spanish club Atlético Madrid in May 2006, for a fee of around €20 million.

+ Commodore licensed BASIC from Microsoft on a “pay once with no royalties” basis after Jack Tramiel turned down Bill Gates’ offer of a $3 per unit fee stating “I’m already married”, and would pay no more than $25,000 for a perpetual license.

+ Young’s Market Co.”, the Supreme Court held that a state could require a license fee for importing beer from other states and also for manufacturing beer within the state.

+ They usually charge a fee for installing the connection and a monthly fee for maintaining it.

+ If the user does not pay the fee in time, the ransomware will uninstall itself and ask the user to download it again.

+ However, MP4 is a patent-encumbered format, and using a proprietary format would be a departure from our current practice of only supporting open formats on our sites — even though the licenses appear to have acceptable legal terms, with only a small fee required.

+ This means that the store or other seller must pay a fee to the credit card company or app company.

+ In July 2017, he joined Liverpool in July 2017 for a believed fee of around £8million.

+ This fee is usually in the form of stamps.

+ Alan Shearer was the previous record transfer at £15 million, which was also the world’s largest transfer fee when he signed in 1996.

+ If one returns the bottle, the fee is returned, and the supplier must return the bottle for re-use or recycling.

+ Some of the Park’s campsites charge a nominal fee as these have shower and toilet facilities, others are free, however they have limited or no facilities.

+ The court recognized that “Prior to the Twenty-first Amendment it would obviously have been unconstitutional” for a state to require a fee for such a privilege.

+ The RHF also demanded that foreign teams pay an annual fee of p.1,500,000.

+ If old newspaper and magazine articles are archived, there may be a fee for accessing them.

+ Leslie becomes frustrated by Janice’s fee for entering the toilet.

+ They are put on the corner of an envelope to pay the fee for having the postal service take the envelope to where it is being sent.

+ He started playing with Derby in 2008 after a transfer fee of £1.5 million.

+ The owner of a bingo club is allowed to charge an entrance fee and also a “participation fee“.

+ Automobiles were also carried for a fee of $3.00 per automobile.

+ Ozil joined Arsenal in September 2013 at a transfer fee believed to be around €50 million.

+ He will expect to be paid a professional fee for the job.

+ In the future they might not offer public IPv4 addresses or might charge a large fee for them, due to supply and demand.

+ Although for taxi services the fee is anywhere from 25 to 30 dollars.

+ There is sometimes a fee charged for parking in such an area.

+ In July 2018, he signed for Liverpool for a fee of €72.5 million, a world record transfer fee for a goalkeeper at the time.

+ The fee will be collected when the driver leaves.

+ His transfer to Celtic from Hibs in the summer of 2007 broke the record for the biggest transfer fee paid between two Scottish clubs.

+ In 1854 the miners at Ballarat, VictoriaBallarat refused to pay the fee and built a defensive fort, known as the Eureka Stockade.

+ OLMs were what Q-Link called “Plus Services” meaning they charged an extra per-minute fee on top of the monthly Q-Link access costs.

+ There may be an attendant on duty who will collect a flat fee for parking or issue a ticket noting the driver’s arrival time.

+ The cost of public health is supported by the government, but users must pay a fee which varies in accordance with the capacity of the user to afford it.

+ The licence fee varies in size from a few euros to around 350 euros per year in Iceland.

+ The fan club can only be joined by mail and requires an admission fee of 3.500 yen, with yearly re-applications for membership.

+ Also, since the same fee can be collected by anyone finding and returning the bottle, it is common for people to collect these and return them as a means of surviving.

+ The fee for one year was two shillings and sixpence.

+ They had agreed to transport, clothe and feed the convicts for a fee of £17 7s.

+ Like many World Heritage sites around the world, including Yellowstone National Park, Serengeti National Park, Stonehenge, Pompeii and Herculaneum and the Pyramids of Giza – a park use fee will help maintain world-best management practices and facilities for the more than 200,000 visitors who experience Kakadu each year.

+ The $25 fee will apply to all interstate and international visitors aged 16 years and over.

+ On 21 May 2013, West Ham and Liverpool agreed a fee of around £15 million to make the loan move permanent Carroll agreed to the move and signed a six-year contract with West Ham on 19 June 2013.

+ This reciprocal fee has become more common in recent years with the decision of the United States to charge nationals of various countries a $100 visa processing fee.

+ A toll road is a road for which vehicles must pay a fee to use, called a “toll”.

+ An admission fee is charged.

+ His authentic, informal style and radical policies appealed to many of the young new members who had joined after the membership fee had been reduced to £3.

+ There is an admission fee charged to see the crater.

+ When he leaves, he rolls down his window and pays the parking fee at the exit.

+ In December 2019, Haaland joined Borussia Dortmund for a fee reported in the region of €20million.

+ Lawyers generally charge a fee for the work that they do, but sometimes advice is offered freely, which is called "pro bono" meaning "for the public good." In many countries, if a person is accused of a crime and unable to pay for a lawyer, the government will pay a lawyer to represent them using tax money.

+ That was a world record transfer fee at the time.
+ Aguero joined Spanish club Atlético Madrid in May 2006, for a fee of around €20 million.

“lantern” some ways to use

How to use in-sentence of “lantern”:

+ There is no national holiday with time off work, but different events go on for the full traditional 2 weeks up to the Lantern Festival.

+ The dispatcher in the station would have to go outside and show a red lantern to the freight train, because there were no signals in the station.

+ A legend says that it started when a cow knocked over a lantern in Catherine O’Leary’s barn on De Koven Street.

+ The church is known to most Americans because it was here that a lantern signal was sent by sexton Robert Newman from the church steeple on the evening of April 18, 1775 to warn American patriots that British soldiers were approaching Lexington and Concord by sea and not by land.

+ The Sichuan lantern drama is popular in Sichuan.

+ The lantern which Guy Fawkes carried in 1605 is in the Ashmolean Museum, Oxford.

+ The festival is held at Sanam Chan Palace, and features beauty pageants, krathong contests, hanging lantern contests, and local entertainment, among others.

lantern some ways to use
lantern some ways to use

Example sentences of “lantern”:

+ The city holds the annual Giant Lantern Festival every December where large lanterns are displayed in competition.

+ It started as a local traditional ice lantern show and garden party during Chinese Spring Festival.

+ It changes quickly to the lantern festival car which a doll is removed, and displayed 500 lanterns on the all sides of the festival car at night.

+ Characters such as The Atom, Green Lantern and the JSA, now reinvented as the Justice League of America soon followed and a new superhero boom was kicked off.

+ Link also has a magic meter like in “Zelda II”, which he needs to use items like the Lantern and Ice Rod.

+ It included things such as americium from smoke detectors, thorium from camping lantern gas mantlemantles, radium from clocks, and tritium from gunsights.

+ Chinese New Year, the day before it, the day after it, and the Lantern Festival are national holidays in Brunei.

+ Typically rear projection was used to keep the lantern out of sight.

+ Eventually, Edmund heals is crowned to the Great Western Wood by Aslan as King Edmund the Just, co-ruler of Narnia with Queen Lucy, Queen Susan and High King Peter, and is knighted as Duke of Lantern Waste, Count of the Western March, and Knight of the Noble Order of the Table.

+ At the top is an octagonal lantern from the 18th century.

+ People go out and watch the lantern festivals everywhere.

+ The city holds the annual Giant Lantern Festival every December where large lanterns are displayed in competition.

+ It started as a local traditional ice lantern show and garden party during Chinese Spring Festival.

+ The other lantern was the Earl of Surrey.

+ Perry is then seen in a dark forest, holding a lantern and trying to escape it like a maze.

+ The Seoul Lantern Festival is a festival that takes place in Seoul, South Korea.

+ The Chinese Festival of Arts starts on the 5th day and runs for the rest of the holiday until the Lantern Festival.

+ Chinese New Year used to last 15 days until the Lantern Festival on the year’s first full moon.

+ After an alien creature invades Earth, a history buff named Kriyad travels back in time from the 98th century to acquire a Green Lantern power ring.

+ A lantern is a device that can be moved from one place to another, used to create light and to light up open areas.

+ Each Green Lantern wears a power ring that allows the Green Lantern to control the physical world by strength of will.