– Shoreham Nuclear Power Plant never operated commercially as an authorized Emergency Evacuation Plan could not be agreed on due to the political climate after the Three Mile Island and Chernobyl accidents.
– Altogether 50 or so SS women worked in this camp until its evacuation in April 1945.
– According to professor Lars Dencik, from the University of Roskilde, the Danish state used the opportunity of this evacuation to test its anti-terrorist security forces.
– Officials in Mississippi identified the need for 110 to assist in an evacuation process in case of a possible landfall.
– On Evacuation Day, the last British occupation forces left the city on 25 November 1783.
– It is speculated that these would allow for the evacuation of a small number of randomly chosen civilians, in addition to most of the elite military personnel.
– Wallace was preparing for the evacuation of Alderney, and went there to inspect the kittiwake colony.
evacuation some ways to use
Example sentences of “evacuation”:
- An increase of a lot of water at the Peñitas Dam made evacuation plans.
- Louisiana's hurricane evacuation plan calls for local governments in areas along and near the coast to call for evacuations in three phases, starting with the immediate coast 50 hours before the start of tropical storm force winds.
– An increase of a lot of water at the Peñitas Dam made evacuation plans.
– Louisiana’s hurricane evacuation plan calls for local governments in areas along and near the coast to call for evacuations in three phases, starting with the immediate coast 50 hours before the start of tropical storm force winds.
– During a mass evacuation of the city, the queen of Atlantis is ingested by the “Heart of Atlantis”, a giant crystal protecting the city, leaving behind her daughter Kida.
– The Lower Dularge East Levee in Terrebonne Parish was overtopped, prompting a mandatory evacuation for nearby areas.
– On 3 August 1943, Patton was visiting the 15th Evacuation Hospital.
– The mass evacuation of children also had a major impact on the lives of mothers during the war years.
– Nishinomiya had 194 evacuation spots with 44,351 evacuees.
– Myanmar recommended a large evacuation in order to be prepared for the storm; however, for this reason people wanted to escape by boat.
– Fierce conflict with the Zulu population led to the evacuation of Durban, and eventually, the Boers accepted British annexation in 1844 under military pressure.
– The performance of the Spitfire during the Dunkirk evacuation came as a surprise although the German pilots retained a strong belief that their 109 was the superior fighter.
– Dilation and evacuation is a medical procedure.
– Fears of radiation leaks led to a 20km radius evacuation around the plant while workers suffered radiation exposure and were temporarily moved out at various times.
– An area of densely built panel housing apartments served as a location for the evacuation scenes.
– León was in charge of the evacuation and treatment of victims of a flood in Babahoyo.
– However, the FAA says that the maximum time for an evacuation is 90 seconds.
– Joseph Dennis in 1909 having reached a unanimous consensus on the month and date of Major Cadell’s event, of February 25 1955, an act of Legislature was passed, declaring May 9 of each year as Armed Forces Day with a proclamation that it should be officially observed throughout Liberia as a National holiday.
– Amending the Articles required a unanimous vote, which was virtually impossible with thirteen states each having their own interests.
– Mulatu Teshome was elected the President of Ethiopia by a unanimous parliamentary vote on 7 October 2013.
– In 1983, the vote was finally held regarding the merger, with a unanimous 151 presbyteries in the UPCUSA affirming it, and the PCUS affirming it 53 to 8.
– In writing for a unanimous court, Chief Justice John Marshall asked, “What is a contract?” His answer was: “a compact between two or more parties.” Marshall argued that the sale of land by the Georgia legislature, though fraught with corruption, was a valid “contract”.
– He was elected the President of Ethiopia as a surprise choice on 8 October 2001 by a unanimous vote of the Ethiopian Parliament.
– Ogden”, decided by a unanimous Court in 1824.
– In 1954, Maxim gave future world heavyweight champion Floyd Patterson his first pro defeat by unanimous decision in eight rounds.
Use in sentence of unanimous
Example sentences of “unanimous”:
– On June 21, 2011, he was re-elected for a second term as UN Secretary General by unanimous votes.
– In a unanimous decision, the court rejected all three arguments.
– The unanimous majority opinion was delivered by Chief Justice Earl Warren.
– His photo was the unanimous selection for a 1958 Pulitzer Prize, but since the story had earned the Arkansas Gazette two other Pulitzer Prizes already, the Prize was awarded to another photographer for a pleasant photograph of a two-year-old boy in Washington, D.C.
– On Wednesday, December 7th 1955, Baker beat Nino Valdez in a rematch, again by unanimous decision.
– Senate by unanimous consent on January 22, 2009.
– His most notable victory was a sound unanimous decision defeat of solid CanadaCanadian George Chuvalo, the future Canadian heavyweight champion, by unanimous decision on September 9 1957.
- On June 21, 2011, he was re-elected for a second term as UN Secretary General by unanimous votes.
- In a unanimous decision, the court rejected all three arguments.
– Disregarding the votes by these editors, this RfD is closed as deleted – there was a unanimous decision.
– Critics and ballet lovers alike were unanimous in their praise of Lee.
– Under the Articles of Confederation, amendments had to be approved by a unanimous vote in all 13 state legislatures.
– During the first few hours of it being up, I received nearly unanimous support.
– Some of these animals may have traits that a breeder will want to carry over to the next generation.
– It is named after Nikolai Vavilov, a Russian plant breeder who discovered the idea.
– Bo is a gift through a breeder and is not a shelter dog.
– After producing two cars with alphanumeric designations, Lamborghini once again turned to the bull breeder for inspiration.
– Geoff Capes is an English peopleEnglish shotput champion, two times world’s strongest man and a champion budgerigar breeder now president of the British Budgerigar Breeding Association.
– A breeder or pet store will get it spayed or neutered and also de-scented.
– It was developed by a South Carolina breeder called Ed Currie.
– On April 23, 2007, the FBI heard that Hahn may have a second breeder reactor in his freezer.
– Some of the most famous music players in Ethiopia like Elias Melka, played in Evangelical churches has subsequently converted to secular music.
– Since the majority population is Orthodox, Voice of the Martyrs claims no criminal investigations are carried against Oriental Orthodox mobs who burn Evangelical churches, destroy houses and even murder P’ent’ay Christians.
– Around 1974 he converted to Christianity, and became an Evangelical Christian.
– Today, there are 88 Armenian Evangelical Churches in the following countries: Argentina, Armenia, Australia, Belgium, Brazil, Bulgaria, Canada, Cyprus, Egypt, England, France, Georgia Georgia, Greece, Iran, Lebanon, Syria, Turkey, Uruguay, and the United States of America.
– The Protestant Evangelical Church in Germany is a group of 20 regional churches.
– In Europe and Latin America the word evangelical is often used to simply mean Protestant, as different from Roman Catholic religion.
– There, she founded the Gladys Aylward Orphanage, “IDEA – Magazine of the Evangelical Alliance” Jan/Feb 2018 p.18 with photo where she worked until her death in 1970.
– Friedrich’s parents belonged to the Evangelical Lutheran faith.
evangelical – sentence examples
Example sentences of “evangelical”:
- The Moravian Church and the Federation of Evangelical Reformed Congregations are associate members.
- The Christadelphians, the Church of God of the Abrahamic Faith and the Biblical Unitarians are Evangelical Unitarians.
- He also was a bishop of the International Communion of Evangelical Churches.
– The Moravian Church and the Federation of Evangelical Reformed Congregations are associate members.
– The Christadelphians, the Church of God of the Abrahamic Faith and the Biblical Unitarians are Evangelical Unitarians.
– He also was a bishop of the International Communion of Evangelical Churches.
– The Evangelical and Nontrinitarian branches of Christianity are much more divided up than any of the others.
– This depiction of the chalice is a statement of evangelical teaching meaning that the Lutheran belief is the proper religion.
– Most German Protestants are members of the Evangelical Church in Germany.
– The Evangelical churches arose in reaction to what they views as needs for reform within mainstream Protestantism.
– The university is supported by the Armenian Evangelical Church.
– Sun Myung Moon’s controversial religious and political Unification Movement, which includes not only the Unification Church but an enormous constellation of civic organizations, including the Washington Times Foundation, is allied politically with evangelical Christians such as Jerry Falwell and Tim LaHaye.
– Broadly, the Family are a Christian evangelical movement.
– There are many activities to teach students about the Christian principles, such as Gospel Week, Gospel Camp Evangelical Team, Evangelical Broadcast, Bible Study Groups and Christian Fellowship.
– Many evangelical Christians still believe masonry to be of the devil.
– He was former Director General of the National Economic Development Council, and president of the Evangelical Alliance.
– In 1958, he led the East Swiss Evangelical Home of Wartensee.
– He helped establish the Evangelical movement, which was based on the idea that Salvation salvation could be achieved through believing in Jesus and following God’s word in the Bible.
– The ELCC started in 1986, when the Evangelical Lutheran Church of Canada merged with the Canadian section of the Lutheran Church in America.
More in-sentence examples of “evangelical”:
– The term “P’ent’ay” is a shortening of the word “Pentecostal”; however, it is widely used when referring to all Protestant Christians but especially Evangelical Protestant Christians whether they are actually Pentecostal by denomination or not.
– Klara Church is a Swedish Evangelical Mission church building in Stockholm, Sweden.
– Many of these groups describe their religious practices as culturally Eastern Christian, but Protestant Evangelical by doctrine.
– He is also an influential evangelical leader.
– Some modern singers often mimic American Evangelical artists, allegedly including other lifestyles that are not genuine depictions of traditional Ethiopian Evangelicalism.
– Outside the United States, the word evangelical can mean different things.
– The Evangelical Lutheran Church in Canada is a LutheranismLutheran denomination in Canada.
– Spurgeon never called people to come forward after his sermons, which is a custom of many evangelical preachers, who like to talk to the people who have been moved in their faith by the preaching.
– The NAE is a member of the World Evangelical Alliance.
– Although Perry is a Methodist, he now attends an Evangelical “megachurch”.
– Although most Christian denominations perform some sort of evangelism, Evangelical and Pentecostal denominations are very focused on this issue.
– Christians in general, especially within the Evangelical tradition, use the term “to testify” or “to give one’s testimony” to mean “to tell the story of how one became a Christian”.
– Chick tracts are used to spread Evangelicalism and evangelical Christian ideas.
– His ideas caused controversy with some clerics of the Catholic church, and some evangelical movements.
– Instead, they are broadly linked to Pentecostalism or similar other independent evangelical and revivalistic movements that originated in the beginning of the 20th century.
– He was Professor of New Testament at Trinity Evangelical Divinity School.
– Although almost all Evangelical Protestant branches in Ethiopia and Eritrea have one or two theological differences or different approaches in the interpretation of the Bible, all of the four major branches follow the beliefs common to born-again Christians.
– Billy Graham was probably the best known evangelical of the last 100 years.
– He was Bishop of Evangelical Church of the Augsburg Confession in Poland from 1991 to 2001 and Chairman of Polish Ecumenical Council from 1993 to 2001.
– In an August 2008 interview with the “Daily Mail”, Perry’s mother, Mary Hudson, who is an evangelical Christian preacher, was reported as saying that she disliked the song, stating: “It clearly promotes homosexuality and its message is shameful and disgusting…” However, Perry took to her official blog stating that her mother’s supposed comments were completely fabricated, while also saying her parents love and support her and attend many of her shows.
– His musical debut began in the evangelical church Iglesia de la Restauración in Cristo en Bayamón, where he became the pastor for four years but he left because of a sentimental disappointment.
– In 1915, he went to the Evangelical School in the town of Schiers.
– Even in much of Latin America, which is historically Catholic, Evangelical churches, which follow many of the Protestant ideas have greatly expanded.
– White became chair of the evangelical advisory board in Donald Trump’s administration.
- The term "P'ent'ay" is a shortening of the word "Pentecostal"; however, it is widely used when referring to all Protestant Christians but especially Evangelical Protestant Christians whether they are actually Pentecostal by denomination or not.
- Klara Church is a Swedish Evangelical Mission church building in Stockholm, Sweden.
– On April 26, 1847, twelve pastors met in Chicago, Illinois, and officially started the “German Evangelical Lutheran Synod of Missouri, Ohio and Other States”.
– The Evangelical Church in Germany is not a church like the Church of England or the Roman Catholic Church.
– He has written many books and has been a guest on Larry King’s television talk show many times as a representative of conservatismconservative evangelical Christianity.
– He had been a member of the Evangelical Church in Germany since 1972.
– Osborne studied at Fort Wayne Bible College, Trinity Evangelical Divinity School, and the University of Aberdeen.
– He mainly wrote evangelical FundamentalismChristian fundamentalist tracts and comic books.
– The frequency rights of Channel 11 under call letters DWXI-TV in Metro Manila was given to a joint venture of influential religious groups in the 1990s: “El Shaddai El Shaddai” a Catholic charismatic-based group headed by evangelical protestant group headed by Eddie Villanueva.
– Frederick was the leader of an important group of Protestant princes, called the Evangelical Union.
– Todd Bentley claims to be a CanadiansCanadian Evangelical Christian and practiced as an Evangelist before being denounced.
– Charles William “Chuck” Missler was an American author, evangelical Christian, Bible teacher, engineer, and former businessman.
– Evangelische Kirche in Mitteldeutschland Since 1960 he was a member of the Synod of the Evangelical Church.
– The rising importance of the Reformed churches, and of Calvin, happened in the second phase of the Protestant Reformation, when evangelical churches began to form, after Martin Luther, another important Reformer, was excommunicationexcommunicated from the Roman Catholic Church.
– The ECFE, or Evangelical Church Fellowship of Ethiopia, is a consortium of born-again, Trinitarian Christians.
– He performed several leading positions in the Evangelical Church in Germany.
– Focus on the Family is an American evangelical group.
– Each separate Evangelical church is often called a “denomination”.
– The Bible Belt is term for a part of the United States in which many people believe in Conservatismconservative Evangelical Protestantism.
– Despite Ethiopia’s well-known religious tolerance, culture related acceptance issues and the growth of some Evangelical churches have also led to some violence, especially as non-Orthodox Christians and Muslims seek to gain equal economic and social status as the traditionally privileged Orthodox Christians.
– He was also a member of the synod of the Evangelical Church in Germany from 1979 to 1981.
– There are also some Protestant groups estimated to be about 200-300 thousand believers, especially Evangelical Church in Poland.
– The Evangelical Free Church in Sweden, “EFK”, is a ChristianityChristian Protestant denomination in Sweden.
– Awana, is an evangelical non-profit organization.
– There are two species of grebe that cannot fly at all.
– Bar-headed geese have a slightly larger wing area for their weight than other geese, which is believed to help them fly at high altitudes.
– They have sexual dimorphism as can be seen from the illustrations, and fly at night.
– They fly at high altitude on a 9,000-mile migration.
– They appear on bird-like dinosaurs before there were any flying birds, and they appear on dinosaurs which are too heavy to fly at all.
Some example sentences of fly at
Example sentences of “fly at”:
- It can fly at speeds up to 113km/h.
- They can fly at speeds over 15m/s.
– It can fly at speeds up to 113km/h.
– They can fly at speeds over 15m/s.
– It was also used by the navy as a “night fighter”, which means that a radar was put on it so it could fly at night.
– This meant that the Boeing 307 could fly at 20,000ft, which is above most weather.
– It could fly at 11,500ft at full weight.
– The adults are nocturnal, they only fly at night, and during the day they sit on tree trunks or branches.
– The Blackbird was designed to fly at more than Mach numberMach 3 – three times the speed of sound.
– PAF often fly at the Paris Air Show, which is held at Le Bourget airport.
– When writing a speed as a Mach number, the number comes after “Mach.” For example, the Concorde airplane could fly at Mach 2, and a satellite re-enters the Earth’s atmosphere at about Mach 25.
– Some swifts can fly at 514m per second.
– The bird is a strong flier, and can fly at up to 88km/h.Bastin E.W.
– If a swift needs to fly very fast, it can fly at 60m per second for a short amount of time.
– The main physiological challenge of bar-headed geese is getting oxygen from thin air to their aerobic muscle fibres so they can fly at high altitudes.
– The article Human has been targeted by different IPv6 addresses since Oct 15.
– It was released on Oct 28, 2003.
– The Women Airforce Service Pilots also Women’s Army Service Pilots “Cornwall Postmaster Ferried Warplanes in World War II” The Evening News, Oct 8, 1971, page 3a; “Women Pilots May Become Members of the Army Air Forces” The Reading Eagle, Nov.
– By THOMAS WOOD New York Times Oct 18, 1953: X5.
– He wrote books, including “The Physics of Fusion”, “The Physics of Fusion”, Academic Press, Oct 1979.
– Winn, 28 Oct 2019 They are cooler and less massive than the inflated low-density hot-Jupiters.
– Borland J, “Wired Science”, 8 Oct 2007 The Schwarzschild solution of Einstein’s equations can be maximally extended to predict a black hole having a flip side—another universe emerging from a white hole.
– Sangtarashan cave is located in the Jahrom, in southern Iran, it is the largest handmade cave in the world.
– Although handmade posters existed before, they were mainly used for government announcements.
– Tradition, party and colour join during the parties, filling the population during these days of national visitors and foreigners attracted by the big espectacularidad of the handmade costumes.
– In 2016, she founded her own brand of handmade jewelry “TiMe Deluxe” and opened a boutique of branded clothing in Surgut.
– Nuremberg is still associated with gingerbread products, sausages, and handmade toys.
– In the late 1970s Harrison formed a movie production company, Handmade Films, which produced movies including Monty Python’s “Life of Brian” and Terry Gilliam’s “Time Bandits”.
– Shopping for handmade goods such as masks, Murano glass jewels, etc.
– However, he enjoyed sharing his drawings with his family and friends, often in the form of ornately handmade calling cards, many of which were given as gifts to visitors when he was in political exile.
– During the first season’s penultimate episode, a former employer, Greef Karga tells Din that the Empire has overridden his town and he promises to take the bounty of The Child’s head if he helps take out the Imperials.
– Taxonomic identifiers of each taxon are stored and retrieved from each taxon’s corresponding Wikidata entry, but can be overridden in individual articles with locally entered data.
– The template’s defaults can be overridden and the parenthesis excluded, in which case there may be no visible changes to the text where it’s used.
– It can be overridden by using.
– The parameter values need to be set, to establish the default for this map, which can be overridden as required.
– These error outputs can be overridden by using.
– The parameters marked as using Wikidata in the right hand column automatically call the value of the parameter from the associated Wikidata item if one exists; the called value can be overridden by using a parameter below.
overridden some example sentences
Example sentences of “overridden”:
- This template returns values from Wikidata where they are available; these values can be overridden by passing values to the relevant parameters.
- A veto may be overridden by the Legislature if there is a two-thirds majority in favor of overriding in each House.
- But now the text formatting has been overridden by the local "style" statement; all of the text in the table has been made italic and 120% normal size, and the wikitable border has been replaced by the red dashed border.
– This template returns values from Wikidata where they are available; these values can be overridden by passing values to the relevant parameters.
– A veto may be overridden by the Legislature if there is a two-thirds majority in favor of overriding in each House.
– But now the text formatting has been overridden by the local “style” statement; all of the text in the table has been made italic and 120% normal size, and the wikitable border has been replaced by the red dashed border.
– If another value is needed beyond these values, it can be overridden manually.
– This order can be overridden using.
– If there is another type beyond these that is needed, this parameter can be overridden manually.
– Also optionally, the existence of the file can be checked, and an error message can be overridden by a text or a blank.
– It also sets the map scale, which can however be overridden by “dim:” or “scale:”.
– The location can be overridden by specifying the margin parameter which overrides the CSS margin property.
– The car selected to run under emergency power can be manually overridden by a key or strip switch in the lobby.
– This template draws most of its values from Wikidata, but they can be overridden by locally entered data.
– These values can be overridden by passing values to the relevant parameters in the article.
+ Note, in many cases a null nowiki tag anywhere, but the internal storage puts a 43-character marker for “lt;nowiki/ ” in string length.
+ This is the version Android with several modifications and internal customizations like gestures, a shell and a dark mode from OnePlus.
+ It takes blood away from the skin, hands and feet, and puts it to the brain and important internal organs.
+ The volume listed is the internal volume, the size of the inside of the container.
+ In wartime, the Army proper could call the support of the paramilitary Azerbaijani National Guard, the Internal Troops of Azerbaijan, and the State Border Service of Azerbaijan Georgia, defense.
+ Also, some more research was done on the internal and external dimensions of problem recognition, constraint recognition, and level of involvement.
+ In some specimens the internal body structures was preserved with fossilised soft tissues such as mouths, guts, and eyes.
How to use in sentence of internal
Example sentences of “internal”:
+ This creates some internal pressure and forces liquid surfaces to contract to the minimal area.
+ Canonical jars were used by Egyptians to hold the internal organs.
+ He was Commissioner for the internal market and industrial affairs in the Delors Commission from 1989 to 1995.
+ This creates some internal pressure and forces liquid surfaces to contract to the minimal area.
+ Canonical jars were used by Egyptians to hold the internal organs.
+ He was Commissioner for the internal market and industrial affairs in the Delors Commission from 1989 to 1995.
+ External frame packs have a fabric “sack” part which is usually smaller than the sack of internal frame packs.
+ They do look rather like bivalves, but their internal organisation is quite different.
+ His internal organs were buried at Chalus, near Limoges in central France.
+ She was Director General of MI5, the British internal Security Service, from October 2002 until her retirement on 20 April 2007, aged 58.
+ Many cases of plagiarism, especially in schools, can lead to internal punishment.
+ Typical “engines” in this meaning are steam engine and internal combustion engine, while typical “motors” are electric motor and hydraulic motor.
+ Oxford English Dictionary gives a similar etymology but from Latin corvellum or corvellus Similarly, the French refer to a bracket-corbel, usually a load-bearing internal feature, as a “corbeau”.
+ The venom acts as a blood thinner, and will cause death by heart failure and massive internal bleeding in as little as 30 minutes.
+ If the file system on the internal hard drive is unluckily damaged somehow, the drive may become inaccessible and the system may fail to start.
+ Children who have a positive internal working model are also likely to be kind to other people.
+ It has been replaced by a new legal framework, also dealing with matters of sustainable development, judiciary and internal affairs.
+ In order to designate the proper sequence of dits-and-dahs for a long special symbol, the standard practice is to list alphabetic characters which contain the same dits-and-dahs in the same order, with a bar atop the character sequence to indicate that there should not be any internal spaces in the transmission.
+ The separatism-prone Croatian clergy forced Croatian Sokols to leave the “Yugoslav Sokol Alliance” in 1919–20, fueling internal conflicts within the Alliance on political grounds.
+ The second diff may be debatable, as modern historians believe the naval blockade and the internal unrest in Germany led to her eventual defeat – especially as the US troops had not yet reached the front-line in any real numbers – but the first diff is fairly shocking.
+ XSP was originally the name of the internal project at Microsoft that became ASP.NET.
More in-sentence examples of “internal”:
+ The nobles of Spain no longer had to fight anyone since the internal feuds were over.
+ The Internal Troops are under the authority of the Ministry of Internal Affairs, who also control the police.
+ The AR-15 is a lightweight, magazine-fed, air-cooled rifle with a rotating locking bolt actuated by propellant gas expanding within an internal gas piston operating system.
+ This destruction was possibly caused by the mysterious Sea Peoples or internal struggle.
+ Such organization of processor internal modules reduces the instruction’s overall processing time.
+ Boutwell was the first commissioner of the Bureau of Internal Revenue.
+ The Internal Troops are the descended from the Soviet Union’s Internal Troops.
+ Truman, the interior rooms were completely taken apart and a new internal load-bearing steel frame was built inside the walls.
+ It contains a mutual-assistance pact in case one of the empires should be attacked by a third party, or in the event of internal strife.
+ In 1963 he published “Interaction of color” which presented his theory that colors were governed by an internal and deceptive logic.
+ Ollongren studied economics and history at the University of Amsterdam, public administration at the École nationale d’administration in Paris and internal relations at Clingendael Institute in The Hague.
+ This does the training for internal personnel and many forecasters from around the world.
+ Sikhye is one of the fermented foods which can help internal organs’ movement and this movement of internal organs helps a digestion.
+ They found the new cloud architecture resulted in significant internal efficiency improvements.
+ A CSS class is used within the internal formatting template, and the class setting can be changed from a user’s personal file.
+ A sensory receptor, or sense organ, is the part which responds to a stimulus in the internal or external environment of an organism.
+ Windows 10 changes the internal version number to 10.0, which is the first time since 1996 that the internal version number has matched the marketing number.
+ The two-stroke engine is an internal combustion engine.
+ With Direct Memory access a device can use hardware to map internal memory to FireWire’s “Physical Memory Space”.
+ In May 1871 he became collector of internal revenue, and then in October 1871 register of the city.
+ They are also used in internal combustion engines as superchargers and turbochargers.
+ The internal history means how the languages evolved and were used inside the fictional story by the fictional people who spoke them.
+ For his research into the internal electrical impulses that take place as the eye processes vision, Ragnar Granit was given the 1967 Nobel Prize in Medicine or Physiology.
+ In addition, because of their fit, the better internal frame models have replaced external frame backpacks for many activities.
+ Although non-vascular plants do not have these tissues, some of them have other tissues for internal transport of water.
+ The internal structure of a graphene battery is quite similar to that of a standard lithium-ion battery pack.
+ This in turn calls internal processes that turn all the data supplied at edit time into a rendered bitmap image, so that there is no calculation overhead by the time the page is read by a user, any more than any other commons image.
+ A gas turbine, also called a combustion turbine, is a type of internal combustion engine.
+ When the Simple English entry is created, the template and the ordinary blue link display the same effect, and the entries are classified as Category: A page with a blue chain but without removing the internal link assistant template.
+ She is the current Minister of Internal Affairs and also a Deputy Prime Minister.
+ We may concur that being an educator is one of the most effective ways to contribute to national development.” She pointed out some of the challenges she observed, explaining, “A part of those challenges is the endeavor to strike an important balance between the intense teaching load, the commitment to research and publication, and the need to be of service internal and external to the university.
+ One can also calculate the internal energy of electromagnetic or blackbody radiation.
+ A naturally aspirated engine is an internal combustion engine in which air intake depends solely on atmospheric pressure and which does not rely on air forced through a turbocharger or a supercharger.
+ As of 2019, most automobile burn a fuel to make an internal combustion engine run.
+ The doctor may want to perform a Rectumrectal examination which will help detect internal hemorrhoids, anoscope to be inserted in the anus.
+ Virus Malware Attack:- If a system is attacked by a virus, the important boot files stored in the internal hard disk may be deleted, leading to boot failure.
+ It is a very important specimen in that it has fossilized remains of many of its internal organs and muscles.
+ The movements themselves, such as the abolitionist movement, were not completely unified and had internal disagreements over what should be done or how to go about it.
+ Along with simple normal rhymes, “met” and “get”, “sad” and “add”, and one internal rhyme, “health” and “wealth”, Hunt creates sets of clever two-word rhymes.
+ Copulation is the union of the sex organs of two sexually reproducing animals for internal fertilization.
+ Santelli died on 15 October 2020 in Cosenza from an internal hemorrhage caused by cancer, aged 51.
+ All members use internal fertilization.
+ Jean-Francois Marchet, Osprey autohistory, 1983 It was the company’s second internal combustion engine.
+ The main differences were the internal mortar, better mobility and better resistance.
+ The story takes the viewer deep into the bowels of Russian internal affairs and politics, and was well-received in cinemas.
+ As an example, Aldi uses EAN-8 codes starting with 290 or 221; 290 and 221 are the country-specific parts “for internal use”.
+ Abramoff also owes the Internal Revenue Service $1.7 million because of the tax evasion.
+ Xiaomi later posted a response stating that the collection of aggregated usage statistics data is used for internal analysis, and would not link any personally identifiable information to any of this data.
+ For its internal parameter processing, this template uses the sub-template.
+ The nobles of Spain no longer had to fight anyone since the internal feuds were over.
+ The Internal Troops are under the authority of the Ministry of Internal Affairs, who also control the police.
+ The AR-15 is a lightweight, magazine-fed, air-cooled rifle with a rotating locking bolt actuated by propellant gas expanding within an internal gas piston operating system.
– Potts devotes several pages to a fairly detailed criticism of the evidence presented in Grace Sowerbutts’ statement, giving an insight into the discrepancies which existed during the early 17th century between the Protestant establishment’s view of witchcraft and the beliefs of the common people, who may have been influenced by the more continental views of Catholic priests such as Christopher Southworth.
– However, while taking a graduate course on Salem witchcraft during the late 1990s, Paula Keene discovered that, although the legislators intended to pardon all six of the women in 1957, only Ann Pudeater’s name was listed on the official documents.
– Many movies have focused on witches and witchcraft such as; “Bewitched”, “Harry Potter”, the Wizard of Oz, “Hocus Pocus Hocus Pocus”, and “Rosemary’s Baby”.
– The belief in witchcraft and its practice seem to have been widespread in the Ancient Near East and NileNile Valley.
– She attended Hogwarts School of Witchcraft and Wizardry from 1984-1991, the time of Charlie Weasley, and was Sorted into Hufflepuff House.
– Nathaniel Ingersolls in Salem village in order to her examination Relating to high suspicion of sundry acts of Witchcraft donne or committed by her upon þ bodies of Mary Walcot, Abigail Williams, Ann Putnam, and Mercy Lewis of Salem village or farms whereby great hurt and damage hath been donne to þ bodies of said persons….
– The English experience of witchcraft was somewhat different from the European one, with only one really mass witch hunt, that of Matthew Hopkins in East Anglia during 1645.
Use in sentence of witchcraft
Example sentences of “witchcraft”:
– Witchcraft and accusations of witchcraft are still very common in some parts of West Africa.
– All the things and powers which are commonly called supernatural, such as God, Soulsouls or witchcraft do not exist, according to this position.
– For Praetorius, witchcraft cannot exist, because it is beyond the faculties of either man or the devil.
– It is “Hogwart’s School of Witchcraft and Wizardry”.
– A witch is a person who practices witchcraft or magic.
– George died in 1686, leaving Susannah an impoverished widow by the time of the second accusation of witchcraft in 1692.
– It is about Harry PotterHarry’s his fifth year at Hogwarts school of Witchcraft and Wizardry.
– On Harry’s eleventh birthday, he learns he is a wizard from Rubeus Hagrid, Keeper of Keys and Grounds at Hogwarts School of Witchcraft and Wizardry, and enrols in Hogwarts.
– Slughorn was the former professor of Potions over at the Hogwarts School of Witchcraft and Wizardry.
– Shirley later wrote about witchcraft accusations in her book for young readers, “The Witchcraft of Salem Village”.
– On his eleventh birthday, Harry finds that he is a wizard when Rubeus Hagrid tells him that he is to go Hogwarts School of Witchcraft and Wizardry.
– A person practicing witchcraft is called a witch, although a man practicing witchcraft is often mistakenly called a wizard.
– Christians thought that witchcraft was the work of the devil, and the Bible was used as evidence against witchcraft.
- Witchcraft and accusations of witchcraft are still very common in some parts of West Africa.
- All the things and powers which are commonly called supernatural, such as God, Soulsouls or witchcraft do not exist, according to this position.
- For Praetorius, witchcraft cannot exist, because it is beyond the faculties of either man or the devil.