Use in sentence of “wander”

How to use in-sentence of “wander”:

+ After “Nickel Creek” sold 500,000 copies, Thile released “Not All Who Wander Are Lost” in 2001.

+ The American bison lives in North America where they formerly wander around the prairies in huge herds.

+ God decided because of this that the Israelites would wander forty years in the wilderness, and every one except Joshua and Caleb from that generation would die without seeing the promised land.

+ But the rest, countless plagues, wander amongst men; for earth is full of evils and the sea is full.

+ One of the important parts of Duccio’s design is the gold border of the Madonnna’s robe, which seems to wander around the painting in a waving line, and frames the Madonna’s face in a way that holds the attention of the viewer.

Use in sentence of wander
Use in sentence of wander

Example sentences of “wander”:

+ In order to solve ADAM shortages, the Little Sisters were mentally conditioned to wander the city and extract ADAM from the dead, recycling it into raw ADAM in their stomachs after swallowing it.

+ Thile’s third album, “Not All Who Wander Are Lost”, was released in 2001.

+ They have to wander the desert for 40 years.

+ During the rebooting, the dangerous “Velociraptors” escape and start to wander the park.

+ It can also wander to Europe by flying there if weather and wind conditions are right.

+ In it, players take on the role of a character which they create, and use it to wander around in a big and diverse world.

+ In other words, the river channels wander across a flat area.

+ As such they tend to get the “we focus on core articles here, we aren’t big enough to expand to that” warning and they wander off.

+ Dattatreya left home at an early age to wander naked in search of the Absolute.

+ Once Yoko Ono decided to let her attention wander off to another project and drop the funding for this space, the museum will all but certainly shift the space to the next topic of the moment.

+ This angers Lord Hater, one of the most powerful villains in the galaxy, who tries to defeat Wander with his army of Watchdogs.

+ This game adds the ability to make your own Peep groups to wander around your park.

+ While at the bank, Tommy and Chuckie wander around, looking for the “MM machine while inadvertently foiling a bank robbery by two crooks posing as bank examiners.

+ These points of light seemed to wander around the sky throughout the year.

+ In order to solve ADAM shortages, the Little Sisters were mentally conditioned to wander the city and extract ADAM from the dead, recycling it into raw ADAM in their stomachs after swallowing it.

+ Thile's third album, "Not All Who Wander Are Lost", was released in 2001.

Use the word “urging”

How to use in-sentence of “urging”:

– As early as 1761, the Seneca began to send out war messages to the Great Lakes and Ohio Country tribes, urging them to unite in an attempt to drive out the British.

– At the urging of his mistress Marcia, Commodus had Cleander beheaded and his son killed.

– His wartime photographs were so impressive that after the war he was hired by “Life” to join its staff at the urging of J.R.

– I am urging any active user here to please become more active in these three processes as they could very well not be able to work on here.

– Many new parks are currently being planned and legally passed by various Parliaments and Legislatures at the urging of dedicated individuals around the globe who believe that “in the end, dedicated, inspired people empowered by effective legislation will ensure that the spirit and services of wilderness will thrive and permeate our society, preserving a world that we are proud to hand over to those who come after us”.

Use the word urging
Use the word urging

Example uses in sentence of “get into”

How to use in-sentence of “get into”:

+ The disabled person is able to get into and out of the store or restaurant with little difficulty.

+ They would make jokes, play funny characters, and pretend to get into fights when they performed.

+ Many communist parties in Latin America have lost many members because these parties do different things than what they promised once they get into power.

+ Once the larvae hatch, they somehow get into gastropods, insects, or earthworms, which live in moist habitats.

+ The Fall, for many Christians, means humans can not make themselves holy enough to get into Heaven when they die.

+ However, drivers who are “stoned” are much less likely to get into car accidents than drunk drivers and in some cases, sober drivers.

Example uses in sentence of get into
Example uses in sentence of get into

Example sentences of “get into”:

+ He was one of the candidates in the 2010 Polish presidential election, but got only 1.44% of votes and didn't get into the second round.

+ However, if a person has a cut or wound on their skin, any toxin will be able to get into the body through that wound.
+ The mosque's imam said that a person called Abdul Aziz stopped the attack before Tarrant could get into the building.

+ He was one of the candidates in the 2010 Polish presidential election, but got only 1.44% of votes and didn’t get into the second round.

+ However, if a person has a cut or wound on their skin, any toxin will be able to get into the body through that wound.

+ The mosque’s imam said that a person called Abdul Aziz stopped the attack before Tarrant could get into the building.

+ She was inspired by her parents to get into political activism.

+ They believe that God has control over everything and has chosen to make some people follow Jesus Christ but not others, and that only followers of Jesus may get into heaven.

+ They must get into a special room within a certain time limit.

+ The sheriff stopped him and asked him to get into the police car for questioning.

+ Manholes usually have metal or polypropylene steps on the wall to make it easier to get into the manhole.

+ Settlers can get into the rainforests because modern machines have opened roads deep into the jungle.

+ Every day Tori and her friends and sister get into wacky situations.

+ They get into a fight with some men because they do not believe that he is really Hercules.

+ He uses a human spaceship to get into space while the explosion destroys Halo.

More in-sentence examples of “get into”:

+ Driver complaints erupted because of the track’s troublesome situation where the sun can get into the driver’s eyes in Turn 1, including leading to a crash during the time the sun sets in that area of the track between Jeff Gordon and Jamie McMurray, led to the abandonment of the 3PM start after this race.

+ In most episodes, Beaver would get into trouble.

+ Julie sidesteps Will’s affection for her, while Tyrell and Karla get into the hot tub.

+ The flavours from plant material get into the solvent by putting in the plant material and letting it stay there for quite a time.

+ Jumbo would not get into the box.

+ They may have said bad things about the rulers in that country or tried to get into power themselves.

+ Other pictures include “Rain, Steam and Speed”, which shows a steam Railwaytrain crossing a bridge, and “Snowstorm” which shows a steamship in a snowstorm trying to get into a harbour.

+ The Euphrates flowed next to the walls and Cyrus decided to use the river to get into the city.

+ Toxins can get into the body through inhalation.

+ The people notice that Deianeira is missing and Hercules and the people use an underground tunnel to get into the city.

+ So they felt that Milton Keynes was “jumping the queue” to get into the League.

+ If a person gets a high enough dose of a blood agent, they will suffocate because the oxygen they breathe in cannot get into the body’s cells.

+ Toxins can get into the body in four different ways.

+ Without insulin, sugar stays in the blood and cannot get into the cells.

+ If African trypanosomiasis is not treated at this point, the parasite will also get into the circulatory system and defeat the body’s natural defenses.

+ Even if she lied to get into the army, her bravery was recognized and she was honored by her General and Congress as well.

+ Without mixing, oxygen from above can’t get into the brine pool.

+ Cash and Dixie get into an argument.

+ What makes them an obligate parasite is that if they are not able to penetrate the fish’s skin they will die, so to survive, they need to get into the fish.

+ When a person has fluid in their lungs, there is not enough space left for air to get into the lungs.

+ He saw many people take what the Beats wrote as a kind of permission to get into trouble, or abandon people and things they cared about.

+ His recordings with James Brown include the singles “Cold Sweat”, “There Was a Time”, “I Got The Feelin'”, “Say It Loud – I’m Black and I’m Proud”, “Ain’t It Funky Now”, “Mother Popcorn”, “Get Up, Get Into It, Get Involved” and the album “Sex Machine”.

+ They have lids so germs in the air can not get into them, or “contaminate” them, and ruin the experiment.

+ Hyde tells Ana to get into a car parked in an alley and give her phone to the driver to discard.

+ The opera is a “rescue” opera, a typical French kind of opera describing a man who is imprisoned and rescued by his lover who disguises herself as a man and manages to get into the prison.

+ He can get into a nearby vehicle or steal one from another person if it is being driven.

+ Before the rally, Sanders spoke to an additional 3,000 supporters outside who could not get into the arena.

+ The person driving the car shot the person that tried to get into the car, but they did not die.

+ In May 2019, “The Stage” partnered with the Andrew Lloyd Webber Foundation and UK Theatre to start Get Into Theatre, a website dedicated to theatre careers.

+ He and Linda soon get into a relationship.

+ If too much is eaten, however, it can get into the stomach and cause many problems.

+ Other people believe that when Jesus sacrificed himself, man was free from sin but he was not certain that he would still get into Heaven.

+ They may need help to get into a special chair.

+ A friend is one who admires a person’s skill and helps or encourages them to make the right choices and do not get into any trouble at all.

+ This would allow allow organised crime syndicates to get into the EU.

+ They then get into a safe position.

+ Mormonism believes that The Fall was part of a plan thought up by God so that His children could get into Heaven.

+ When botulinum toxins get into food or wounds, they cause botulism, a dangerous disease.

+ He did get into the third group.

+ Inhalation is one of the easiest and fastest ways for toxins to get into the body.

+ Some chemicals cannot get into the bloodstream from the gastrointestinal tract.

+ Despite this, the party “Ukraine – Forward!” did not get into parliament, gaining 322,198 votes in Ukraine, or 1.58% of the total number of people who took part in the election.

+ Kubrick finished high school in 1946 and could not get into a college.

+ Many episodes revolve around Lucy’s attempts to get into Ricky’s show.

+ In 1968, for the first time, an admission price was required to get into the park, originally set at 25 cents.

+ She believes that this is what inspired her to get into writing, which became an “outlet for all the bad stuff was feeling”.

+ To get into the city one has to change to another East West Line train at Tanah Merah or, since 2017, to the Downtown Line at Expo.

+ Driver complaints erupted because of the track's troublesome situation where the sun can get into the driver's eyes in Turn 1, including leading to a crash during the time the sun sets in that area of the track between Jeff Gordon and Jamie McMurray, led to the abandonment of the 3PM start after this race.

+ In most episodes, Beaver would get into trouble.
+ Julie sidesteps Will's affection for her, while Tyrell and Karla get into the hot tub.

“minute” – sentence examples

How to use in-sentence of “minute”:

– It has a pair of muscular jaws supplied with minute teeth, and a plate on the lower surface that bears a comb-like structure which they use to scrape smaller organisms off of the grains of sand that make up their anoxic seabed mud habitat.Barnes R.F.K.

– On November 11, 2018, at the international sports festival SN PRO EXPO FORUM, Andrey recorded an attempt to set an absolute Guinness World Records record for the most number of push-UPS per minute with the result of 122 repetitions.

– It is an about 45 minute driving distance from Jackson.Robertson, Campbell.

– The 500meter freestyle was won by Austrian swimmer Paul Neumann, who defeated his opponents by more than a minute and a half.

– On 2 December 2018, after coming on as a substitute, he scored his side’s 96th minute 1–0 winner over Everton in the Premier League.

– A fire hose might have an intensity of 100 buckets of water per minute per open window of a certain size in a burning building.

– At minute 46:25 of Milo and Otis footage, seagulls eat a kitten, showing a live terrified, running kitten eaten into flying blood flesh into the air of a cliff, which clearly evidences that the Japanese filmmaker in Japan and those related in the Japanese film industry refused to stop the attacking on the kitten running for its life.

minute - sentence examples
minute – sentence examples

Example sentences of “minute”:

– Later the Pretoria Minute was another step towards resolution where agreements at Groote Schuur were reconsolidated and steps towards setting up an interim government and drafting a new constitution were established as well as suspension of the military wing of the ANC – the Umkhonto we Sizwe.

– The match went for a minute and Akebono won the match after he threw The Big Show out of the ring, thus winning the Sumo Match.

– This was the last time 30 minute episodes would air.

– In Live Mode, 1 second of real time=1 minute in in-game time.

– The Astros play their home games at Minute Maid Park in Houston.

– He was very pleased, but at the last minute was rejected due to budget cuts.

– The film was has two versions- a three minute clipping to screen during seminars and conferences and a longer version which was uploaded to the biodiversity page of the university website.

– On June 24, 2013, He scored the game-winning goal in the final minute of game 6 of the 2013 Stanley Cup Finals to help the Blackhawks win their fifth cup and the second cup in four years.

– She concluded that even transferring minute amounts lead to infection in a healthy bulb.

– Probably, algae get access to the minute amounts of minerals, which the fungus gets from the substrate or from dust settling on the thallus.

– Please be aware that you are also not supposed to surpase 12 edits a minute with any automated/semi automated editing per the bot policy.

– The first league goal at BMO Field scored by a Canadian came when Miguel Cañizalez scored for Toronto FC in the second minute of their 2–1 defeat to the Columbus Crew on September 22, 2007, snapping an 824-minute MLS goalless streak.

- Later the Pretoria Minute was another step towards resolution where agreements at Groote Schuur were reconsolidated and steps towards setting up an interim government and drafting a new constitution were established as well as suspension of the military wing of the ANC – the Umkhonto we Sizwe.

- The match went for a minute and Akebono won the match after he threw The Big Show out of the ring, thus winning the Sumo Match.
- This was the last time 30 minute episodes would air.

More in-sentence examples of “minute”:

– This is the last season with 22 minute episodes.

– It started as a series of 1-2 minute shorts under the title Ooohhh Asis.

– He gave Buffy an ultimatum and at the last minute she decided on him.

– When the minute hand moves all the way around the face of the clock, the hour hand moves forward one section.

– As the closest and most developed beach town from Costa Rica’s Juan Santa Maria International Airport in San Jose, Jaco is only a 1 hour and 10 minute ride from the airport.

– Submission is about a 10 minute short movie.

– The mini episodes were only five minute clips from the first season.

– The section of tracks between this station and Dhoby Ghaut is the shortest between any two MRT Stations on the North South Line, taking 1 minute for a train to travel between these two stations.

– Possibly, they could have mixed with minute numbers of residual inhabitants, with a constant input of immigrants from neighbouring countries and later, even from afar.

– The album had the club and RB/hip-hop hit “One Minute Man”.

– Eric Singer, of later KISS fame, was brought as the last minute replacement for Cozy Powell, who had died in a car accident earlier that year.

– Strong winds that go on for about one minute are called “squalls”.

– Q1 is 20 minutes long, followed by a seven minute break.

– His last words were reportedly, “I’ve had a hell of a lot of fun and I’ve enjoyed every minute of it”.

– They look leafless, with the leaves reduced to minute scales.

– However, only a minute number of Romans died due to this storm.

– Circular slide rules are mechanically more rugged and smoother-moving, but their scale alignment precision is sensitive to the centering of a central pivot; a minute 0.1mm off-centre of the pivot can result in a 0.2mm worst case alignment error.

– There are four 15-minute quarters with a 15 minute break at halftime and a 2 minute break after the 1st and 3rd quarters.

– Sturm GrazSK Sturm, where he came on in minute 46 for Jakob Jantscher.

– The marquee lights on Broadway were dimmed for one minute on June 5, 2013 at 8 p.m.

– Besides soft drinks, the company also makes Minute Maid and Odwalla fruit juices, Powerade, and Dasani bottled water.

– On September 6, 2006, a seven hour and 54 minute audiobook version of “The Sea of Monsters”, read by actor Jesse Bernstein was published worldwide by Listening Library.

– He is known for scoring the 2010 FIFA World Cup winning goal against the Netherlands national football teamNetherlands in the 116th minute of extra time.

– If a person stares at a single color for about a minute then looks at a white surface, an afterimage of the complementary color will appear.

– On 12 February 2011, Rooney scored a stunning bicycle kick in the 78th minute of the Manchester derby, which ended up to be the winning goal in their 2–1 win over Manchester City.

- This is the last season with 22 minute episodes.

- It started as a series of 1-2 minute shorts under the title Ooohhh Asis.

– West Germany beat Czechoslovakia with a 25th minute Lothar Matthäus penalty.

– It reduces congestion at Bras Basah MRT Station, which is a minute walk away.

– At the last minute he received another 15,000 men making his the larger of the two main Southern armies.

– In the same manner, the half hours and the minute lines would be calculated.

– The minute are larger units.

– After several minutes of shelling, “Hood” turned 20° left to use its rear turrets and after a minute of firing, “Prinz Eugen” scored a hit on “Hood” causing an ammunition fire which was quickly extinguished.

– The international ballroom Rumba is a slower dance of about 120 beats per minute which corresponds, both in music and in dance to what the Cubans of an older generation called the “bolero-son”.

– You wouldn’t last a minute where I’m from / You’d go missing / So appreciate what you got / ‘cos I’m still wishing.’ And then he grabs the rich kid by his coat, pulls him toward him, and punches him in the face.

– In the final, Mario Götze scored at the 113th minute to help Germany defeat Argentina 1–0.

– The next official step towards rebuilding South Africa was the Groote Schuur Minute where the government and the ANC agreed on a common commitment towards the end of violence and intimidation, as well as a commitment to stability and to a peaceful process of negotiations.

– The section of track between this station and Somerset is the shortest between any two stations on the North South Line; it takes 1 minute for a train to travel between these two stations.

– During the initial run of the film, a Danish audiologist named Ole Bentzen died during a screening when his heart rate rose to an estimated 250–500 beats per minute from laughing at a scene too hard, leading to a fatal heart attack.

– It was asked to the members of European parliament to make a minute of silence when the death of Ophélie was announced.

– Courtney Love was almost cast in the role, but lost out to Kidman at the last minute because Luhrmann felt that Love would not fit into the movie well.

– The game started perfectly for the Portuguese, as Nani scored at the 5th minute when Geoff Cameron’s clearance landed at the feet of Nani.

– Adapted from books turned in to short one minute to promote the series and made available online.

– The wedding for Mary Jane Watson is about to take place, but at the last minute she cancels and runs to the apartment.

– The only goal of the contest arrived in the 85th minute when Mexican referee Edgardo Codesal awarded a Penalty kickpenalty to West Germany, after a foul on Roberto Sensini.

– The Apgar test is usually done one minute after birth, and again five minutes after birth.

– In the Euro he played in the second match versus Poland and the third match versus Germany where he came on in minute 55 for Martin Hiden.

– He was also one of the final 23 Japan national football players participating in 2010 World Cup although did not play any minute during the tournament.

– If the second vote does not break the tie, a two minute discussion will start where the non-tied players must come to a decision as to who should be voted off.

– MP Xpress has a length of 2,260 feet and one ride takes 1 minute and 26 seconds.

How to use in-sentence of “adaptive”

How to use in-sentence of “adaptive”:

– Transposons may have been co-opted by the Adaptive immune systemvertebrate immune system as a means of producing antibody diversity: The VJ recombination system operates by a mechanism similar to that of transposons.

– The surviving species adaptive radiationradiated and flourished throughout the Triassic perod.

– The adaptive radiation of teleost fish meant their new prey were fast swimming and highly evasive.

– Its odd shape was revealed by adaptive optics on the ESO 3.6m telescope at La Silla.

– Tip-tilt mirrors are effectively segmented adaptive optics mirrors having only one segment which can tip and tilt, rather than having an array of multiple segments which can tip and tilt independently.

How to use in-sentence of adaptive
How to use in-sentence of adaptive

Example sentences of “adaptive”:

– They are a vital part of the adaptive immune system.

– The trait arose a number of times in different groups during the Cenozoic, and in each instance was immediately followed by an adaptive radiation.

– Both innate and adaptive immunity depend on the ability of the immune system to distinguish between self and non-self molecules.

– This is one of the most complete evolutionary sequences of early mammalian adaptive radiationradiations after the K/T extinction event.

– These cells allow the adaptive immune system to mount faster and stronger attacks each time this pathogen is encountered.

– The adaptive unconscious is a set of unconscious mental processes influencing judgment and decision making.

– The Gruiform Adaptive radiationradiation in the Palaeocene and Eocene produced a large variety of medium to large-sized birds.

– Fossil bryozoans first appear in the early Ordovician and had a huge adaptive radiation.

– Later, after a new technology called adaptive optics was discovered, it was possible to see Pluto and Charon as separate disks using ground-based telescopes.

- They are a vital part of the adaptive immune system.

- The trait arose a number of times in different groups during the Cenozoic, and in each instance was immediately followed by an adaptive radiation.
- Both innate and adaptive immunity depend on the ability of the immune system to distinguish between self and non-self molecules.

– In contrast, the adaptive unconscious is thought to be involved in “high-level” cognition such as goal-setting as well.

– This relates to the chromaticitychromaticities of a single phosphor set, a given transfer curve, adaptive whitepoint, and viewing conditions.

– Speciation processes in the adaptive radiation of Hawaiian plants and animals.

– These adaptive traits may be structural, behavioural or physiological.

– Though less famous than the Cambrian explosion, the Ordovician featured an adaptive radiation, which was no less remarkable.

– In 2006, good measurements of the orbit from the Keck telescopesKeck Laser guide star adaptive optics system were reported.

– The adaptive immune system is switched on by the evolutionarily older innate immune system.

More in-sentence examples of “adaptive”:

– Once the amniotes were truly land animals, there followed a huge adaptive radiation.

– An antigen is a molecule expressed by a bacterium or virus that is recognized by the adaptive immune system as foreign which can stimulate the production of antibodies and combine specifically with them.

– The Permian was also a period of adaptive radiation in insects.

– This is called adaptive immunity, because it ‘remembers’ previous infections.

– Emotional intelligence in the context of adaptive personality: implications for counseling psychology.

– These terms refer to evolution above the species level, including such events as mass extinction, adaptive radiation, and the major transitions in evolution.

– Early versions of the PKCS standard used constructions, which were later found vulnerable to a practical adaptive chosen ciphertext attack.

– Vertebrates also have adaptive immunity.

– This adaptive radiation produced the first members of the main groups of animals, called phyla.

– The foreign source of the spacers was a sign to researchers that the CRISPR/cas system could have a role in adaptive immunity in bacteria.

– The cleidoic egg is a good example of an evolutionary innovation which permitted the invasion of a vast range of new habitats, and led to one of the greatest adaptive radiations in the history of the vertebrates.

– Polyphenic pigmentpigmentation is adaptive for species which reproduce several times a year.

– In February, 2006, a team of astronomers led by Franck Marchis measured accurately the orbit of the system using the Keck telescopesKeck Laser guide star adaptive optics system.

– The Adaptive Combat Rifle is a modular assault rifle, designed by Magpul Industries of Erie, Colorado, and known initially as the Masada.

– The Cambrian explosion or Cambrian Adaptive radiationradiation was the relatively rapid appearance of most major animal phyla around 530 million years ago in the fossil record.

– Vaccines are examples of antigens in an immunogenic form, which are intentionally administered to a recipient to induce the memory function of the adaptive immune system towards antigens of the pathogen invading that recipient.

– This rapid adaptive radiation happened to the reptiles on land, the fish in the seas, and a number of other groups, like the insects.

– The adaptive immune system is made of specialized cells and processes which kill pathogens or prevent their attack.

– Imaging the cool hypergiant NML Cygni’s dusty circumstellar envelope with adaptive optics.

– There are other animals and plants on the Hawaiian archipelago which have undergone similar, if less spectacular, adaptive radiations.

– For this setup, an analog joystick can be “self calibrated” just by leaving the joystick in the middle position and taking a measurement, and then using some arbitrary or adaptive threshold to detect movement and excursion from the middle position.

– Cryptosystems proven secure against adaptive chosen-ciphertext attacks include the Cramer-Shoup system and RSA-OAEP.

– The asteroid has an odd shape, as evidenced by adaptive optics images, the first of which were taken in December 2003, with the Keck telescope.

– An important point made by Reber is that “implicit learning is a fundamental ‘root’ process, one that lies at the very heart of the adaptive behavioral repertoire of every complex organism”.

– Ants became dominant after adaptive radiation at the beginning of the Cainozoic.

– The evidence for there being such a thing as the adaptive unconscious is a series of case studies which are hard to explain any other way.

- Once the amniotes were truly land animals, there followed a huge adaptive radiation.

- An antigen is a molecule expressed by a bacterium or virus that is recognized by the adaptive immune system as foreign which can stimulate the production of antibodies and combine specifically with them.
- The Permian was also a period of adaptive radiation in insects.

– This is a key part of the adaptive immune system, and the reference attached here summarizes the process.

– The discovery shows that some of the major groups of bird alive today had already adaptive radiationdiversified in the Cretaceous.

– The Maluridae are one of the many bird families to have evolved from a great adaptive radiation of what were crows to new ecological opportunities in Australasia.

– In 1942, he and Salvador Luria of Indiana University demonstrated that bacterial resistance to virus infection is caused by random mutation and not adaptive change.

– Earlier it was thought that NK cells play no role in the adaptive immune responses, but now it seems they do.

– The simplest form of adaptive optics is tip-tilt correction, which corresponds to correction of the tilts of the wavefront in two dimensions.

– Usually for animals memories that are made during times of stress and discomfort are important for adaptive values.

– In the long term, however, he has become known as a founder of idea of the adaptive unconscious.

– The adaptive immune system includes cells and systems that do require previous exposure to a pathogen.

– It first initiates an innate immune response, which then causes the activation of the adaptive immune response.

– Many of these became extinct during the Permian, but the remaining sharks underwent a second burst of adaptive radiation during the Jurassic, around which time the skates and rays first appeared.

– Tonegawa is best known for elucidating the genetic mechanism in the adaptive immune system.

– Its small obvious size has made it difficult to study visually; most telescopic data was quite limited until the arrival of the Hubble Space Telescope and large ground-based telescopes with adaptive optics.

– The adaptive immune response gives the vertebrate immune system the ability to recognize and remember specific pathogens.

– The adaptive radiation of birds in the Lower Cretaceous, teleosts in the Cretaceous, flowering plants in the Upper Cretaceous, mammals in the Eocene, moths in the Cretaceous are striking examples of macroevolution.

– CRISPR interference: RNA-directed adaptive immunity in bacteria and archaea.

– He is part of the Program of Sports and Adaptive Motor Activities.

– This older system is non-specific, whereas the adaptive system is tailored to specific targets.

– Molecular dating suggests that the family DeerCervidae originated and radiated in central Asia during the Late Odocoileini dispersed to North America during the Miocene/Pliocene boundary and underwent an adaptive radiation in South America after their Pliocene dispersal across the Isthmus of Panama.

– Whereas the innate immune system is found in all metazoa, the adaptive system is only found in vertebrates.

– Adapiformes adaptive radiationradiated throughout much of the northern continental mass, reaching as far south as northern Africa and tropical Asia.

– Pollination syndrome is the set of adaptive traits which help flowers to get pollinated.

– Research suggested that the chickens’s adaptive feather genes will soon die out and need to be preserved.

Use in sentence of “floodplain”

How to use in-sentence of “floodplain”:

– The floodplain is the land that is covered when the river is in flood.

– After this, it flows into a floodplain in the Ayalon Park and gets filled with water.

– The Zauro polder project is an irrigation plan for the Rima River floodplain in Kebbi State, Nigeria.

– Fluvial terrace is an abandoned floodplain with a long, narrow stairs that is formed when the river flowed at a higher level than at present.

– What is now badlands was then a Volcanovolcanically active floodplain dominated by rivers, with a strongly seasonal rainfall.

– The environment in which “Cetiosaurus” lived was floodplain and open woodland.

– When “Anchiceratops” was alive the Horseshoe Canyon Formation was a floodplain with forests.

Use in sentence of floodplain
Use in sentence of floodplain

Example sentences of “floodplain”:

– It would supply water to of farmland in the Rima floodplain between Argungu and Birnin Kebbi.

– Much of the town lies in a floodplain and floods are common during the springtime.

– The river was once free-flowing, winding across a floodplain that occupied much of the Los Angeles Basin.

– A floodplain is a very fertile area due to the rich alluvium deposited by floodwaters.

– They lived in a huge rainforest floodplain in the area which is now Kazakhstan, India, and southwest China.

– It is one of the best-conserved examples of floodplain grassland.

– A floodplain is the smaller area over which the rivers flood at a particular period of time, and the alluvial plain is the larger area, where floodplains have shifted over geological time.

– They were got from Mongolian sediments which were deposited in a humid floodplain about 70million years ago.

– It flows on a wide floodplain before getting into a narrow valley near Hesperange.

– This is usually found in semi-open landscapes with small woodlands, hedges, scattered old trees, edges of forests and floodplain forests.

- It would supply water to of farmland in the Rima floodplain between Argungu and Birnin Kebbi.

- Much of the town lies in a floodplain and floods are common during the springtime.
- The river was once free-flowing, winding across a floodplain that occupied much of the Los Angeles Basin.

– However, the downtown area was built on a broad, flat floodplain at the junction of the Kansas and Big Blue rivers.

– Arezzo is placed on the floodplain of the Arno.

– This area was a rainforest floodplain before the Himalayan uplift changed the climate.

– The natural environmentpaleoenvironment of the Ischigualasto Formation was a volcanically active floodplain covered by forests with strong seasonal rainfall.

– The Flooded Forest: Guidance for policy makers and river managers in Europe on the restoration of floodplain forests.

– It has had significant impact on downstream floodplain cultivation.

– Dahl’s aquatic frog, the northern waterfrog, Dahl’s olive tree frog, Dahl’s tree frog, floodplain frog, northern lagoon frog or aquatic frog is a tree frog from Australia and New Guinea.

Example sentences of “migrate”

How to use in-sentence of “migrate”:

+ During the prophase of mitosis, the centrosomes migrate to opposite poles of the cell.

+ Typically, over time, the meanders don’t disappear but gradually migrate downstream.

+ Their flight is not powerful, but can continue for long periods, and many species migrate annually.

+ It is usually migrationresident, but in the north some migrate if the conifer cone crop fails.

+ Garhwal land is facing troubles of unemployment and therefore most Garhwali youngsters migrate to the cities.

+ But since in the African grasslands, there is not always grass, wildebeest are forced to migrate to find food all year round.

+ A person who has become forced to migrate is called a “forced migrant” or “displaced person”.

+ Even birds which do not migrate do benefit from flying to find nest sites and get their food.

Example sentences of migrate
Example sentences of migrate

Example sentences of “migrate”:

+ One hope for this program as I understand is expecting the students to migrate to other Wikimedia projects.

+ Light pollution stops migrating birds from having any way of seeing the moon and stars that they need to use to navigate the direction of their migration, therefore not being able to migrate to the correct place.

+ Many people from this area migrate to Gulf countries to find jobs as unskilled labourers.

+ Ruddy shelduck, marbled duck, and Audouin’s gull inhabit the lagoon permanently, and a big number of species migrate here in winter.

+ Monocytes which migrate from the bloodstream to the tissues will then differentiate into macrophages or dendritic cells, which then stay in the tissue.

+ During gastrulation, some of the cells of the blastula migrate inwards to make an inner layer, the “endoderm”.

+ They are gregarious, and migrate in small herds of twenty or so animals.

+ Many groups of fin whales migrate between feeding grounds and breeding grounds.

+ They migrated into central Siberia and then about 3,000 years ago started to migrate to the Baltic region in northeastern Europe.

+ One hope for this program as I understand is expecting the students to migrate to other Wikimedia projects.

+ Light pollution stops migrating birds from having any way of seeing the moon and stars that they need to use to navigate the direction of their migration, therefore not being able to migrate to the correct place.
+ Many people from this area migrate to Gulf countries to find jobs as unskilled labourers.

+ Huge numbers of herbivores migrate each year, followed by the big cats.

+ During the Triassic period, all the continents were connected to form the supercontinent of Pangaea, and animals could migrate freely between them.

+ Since the kingdom of Chu destroyed the country, the descendants of the king led some of the subjects to migrate to Fujian and merged with the Yue people into the Yue ethnic group.

+ B cells mature into B lymphocytes in the bone marrow, while T cells migrate to and mature in a distinct organ, called the thymus.

+ People migrate due to the changes in their environment, and the find a new home.

+ Sometimes they migrate downwind.

+ They migrate over a year between their winter range and calving grounds on the Beaufort Sea.

More in-sentence examples of “migrate”:

+ Most other scientists do maintain that the original Proto-Indo-Europeans did live about 5,000 years ago in the area in Europe east of Ukraine and north of the Caucasus Mountains and that the original Aryans did migrate west from there.

+ A few hundred to over a thousand Greeks now migrate to Turkey yearly for employment or educational purposes.
+ About 3000 years ago, dogs began to migrate from the Arctic into temperate climatetemperate Europe, North America, Asia, and sometimes Africa.

+ Most other scientists do maintain that the original Proto-Indo-Europeans did live about 5,000 years ago in the area in Europe east of Ukraine and north of the Caucasus Mountains and that the original Aryans did migrate west from there.

+ A few hundred to over a thousand Greeks now migrate to Turkey yearly for employment or educational purposes.

+ About 3000 years ago, dogs began to migrate from the Arctic into temperate climatetemperate Europe, North America, Asia, and sometimes Africa.

+ Later in development, tiny bone structures break loose from the jaw and migrate to the inner ear area.

+ These offspring have underdeveloped rear limbs, and after birth they migrate to the marsupium where they attach to a nipple.

+ They migrate to the southern United States, the Caribbean, and South America.

+ But if the water where it lives freezes in the winter, it must migrate to the south or to the coast to find something to eat.

+ Birds such as geese that migrate from one country to another fly very long distances.

+ Many fish migrate from south to north through the canal.

+ This natural reserve is home of many animals some of which migrate from Galapagos Islands, it includes blue-footed boodies, albatrasses, frigate birds, seals, iguanas, dolphins, stingrays and reef fishes.

+ Most great tits do not migrate except in places with harsh winters.

+ The Red Sea is also poor in nutrients, so species who migrate will find more nutrients.

+ Birds which migrate cannot be managed in the same way.

+ State Department, expatriate workers from nations throughout Asia and parts of Africa voluntarily migrate to Qatar as low-skilled laborers or domestic servants, but some subsequently face conditions indicative of involuntary servitude.

+ It is highly recommended you migrate to the core framework.

+ Geese migrate in groups in the spring and fall, flying together in a V-shape.

+ It is mostly a resident, although northern and eastern populations migrate south in winter.

+ Mexican free-tailed bats in southeastern Nevada, southwestern Utah, western Arizona, and southeastern California come together to migrate southwest to southern California and Baja California.

+ Grebes only migrate if they live in North America, Europe or Asia.

+ The krill that make up part of the megamouth’s diet also migrate from deep waters to the surface.

+ During the cold winters most of the animals migrate to the lower regions of the Himalayas while others like the brown bear hibernate instead.

+ Most of them migrate to the south during the winter.

+ It is probably best noted for the large number of sharks that frequent its coastal waters, as well as the increasing numbers of Southern Right Whales that migrate in the region.

+ The first people to migrate to the land of Palestine were Canaanites, who came from north of Arabia,normally speaked Arabic.

+ The people who migrate are called migrants or, more specifically, emigrants, immigrants or settlers, depending on the historical setting, circumstance, and perspective.

+ When they are old enough, they aggregate into dense shoals and migrate southwards, returning to the Agulhas banks in order to restart the cycle.

+ It is mainly resident, but some northernmost populations migrate further south.

+ It is mainly a resident bird, but those from colder regions migrate south for the winter.

+ In the Pacific, at latitudes between 20°N and 50°N, they are known to migrate to higher latitudes during the summer and lower latitudes during the winter.

+ For winter they migrate to coasts where sea does not freeze.

+ They migrate to the Arctic tundra to breed in June and July.

+ By the end of October, the monarchs that are east of the Rocky Mountains migrate to Mexico.

+ These sharks live very deep in the water but they migrate up to about 650 feet at night, to hunt.

+ They are found in the Falkland Islands, South America, Chile and Argentina and migrate Brazil.

+ There is an advantage only if the birds which migrate have a better chance of leaving descendants.

+ Atlantic salmon used to migrate upstream to spawn.

+ Each shell can only contain a certain number of electrons before new electrons must migrate to the next shell or “energy level.” Starting with the third energy level, however, electrons sometimes move up a level even before the current one is full.

+ Birds from the north of its range in Europe and Asia migrate south to spend the winter in warmer places.

+ When Thapki and her family migrate to Noida, Thapki handles the move well and impresses Dhruv.

+ Blue sharks are known to migrate thousands of miles for food and for mating.

+ Sometimes, they migrate “en masse”, in long files of lobsters across the sea floor.

+ They then flock together with other American Robins before they migrate to their wintering places.

+ Due to periodic changes/redesigns on the ABS website, these links may change: the advantage of using the template is therefore that all articles using this template will migrate with it.

+ In the western Atlantic OceanAtlantic Bull sharks migrate north along the coast of the U.S during summer, swimming as far north as Massachusetts, and then return to tropical climates when the coastal waters cool.

+ All this is relevant, since they fly through the high passes in the Himalayas when they migrate to from the Indian subcontinent.

+ Oh god I hope we don’t add this….its a nuisance on en.wiki and I would hate to see it migrate here.

+ Salmon can no longer migrate to the upper Columbia River system.

+ The fauna of Ladakh has much in common with that of Central Asia in general and that of the Tibetan Plateau in particular.Exceptions to this are the birds, many of which migrate from the warmer parts of India to spend the summer in Ladakh.

“idiopathic” – sentence examples

How to use in-sentence of “idiopathic”:

+ One syndrome is “Benign idiopathic neonatal seizures”.

+ Cole died on July 12, 2020 in Sioux City, Iowa from idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis at the age of 75.

+ Murray was diagnosed with idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis in 2016.

+ Davies died on 2 September 2020 from idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis, aged 81.

+ Dina died on 12 April 2019 in Lisbon from idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis at the age of 62.

idiopathic - sentence examples
idiopathic – sentence examples

How to use in sentence of “reincarnation”

How to use in-sentence of “reincarnation”:

+ Corelli’s writings in particular seek to reconcile mystical beliefs such as reincarnation with Christianity, and Cayce may have been subconsciously trying to accept this idea.

+ Many Hindus, Jainists, Celtic pagans, Buddhists, and people who follow some African religions believe in reincarnation or rebirth/ transmigration.

+ A high school student living in Tokyo and the reincarnation of Kikyo.

+ Stevenson found that the best evidence supporting the belief in reincarnation comes from the cases of young children who, typically between the ages of 2 and 5, make statements about a previous life they claim to have had before being born.

+ Ian Stevenson found that the best research evidence supporting the belief in reincarnation comes from the cases of young children who, typically between the ages of 2 and 5, make statements about a previous life they claim to have had before being born.

+ Then Yama take the records out and decides where the soul will be set in the next life, according to the Reincarnation of Hinduism.

How to use in sentence of reincarnation
How to use in sentence of reincarnation

Example sentences of “reincarnation”:

+ Note that both Reincarnation and Metempsychosis “See Also” make reference to Zalmoxis article as related reading.

+ Many Chinese Buddhists believe he was a reincarnation of Maitreya, the person who will become the next Buddha after Gautama Buddha.

+ Jamyang Khyentse Chökyi Lodrö says that he is the reincarnation of Tertön Sogyal, a teacher to the Thirteenth Dalai Lama.

+ It presents an overview of more than 40 years of reincarnation research at the University of Virginia into children’s reports of past life memories.

+ Stevenson saw reincarnation as the survival of the personality after death, although he never suggested a physical process by which a personality might survive death.

+ Ten years later, Goku meets and trains Boo’s human reincarnation Oob, to have him becoming the world’s protector.

+ The movie is about an Egyptian mummy that returns to life to stalk a woman who is the reincarnation of his lost love.

+ In Buddhism, Nirvana is the state of perfect peace free from reincarnation reached by not wanting more than you have.

+ However, Stevenson has never claimed that he had proved the existence of reincarnation, and cautiously referred to his cases as being “of the reincarnation type” or “suggestive of reincarnation“.

+ Druids are known to have practiced such as reincarnation as animals of worship, but such cannot be proved as what we know so far.

+ She is considered a reincarnation of the Buddha’s own mother.

+ Cayce also claimed while in a supposed trance that the Essenes had believed in reincarnation but that view was expunged from the Bible following a popepapal council decision in around 500 AD.

+ Note that both Reincarnation and Metempsychosis "See Also" make reference to Zalmoxis article as related reading.

+ Many Chinese Buddhists believe he was a reincarnation of Maitreya, the person who will become the next Buddha after Gautama Buddha.
+ Jamyang Khyentse Chökyi Lodrö says that he is the reincarnation of Tertön Sogyal, a teacher to the Thirteenth Dalai Lama.

“industrialization” use in-sentences

How to use in-sentence of “industrialization”:

– Countries with high GDP per capita and mature industrialization are described as “developed countries”.

– Before the industrialization visiting cards were hand made.

– Mexico experienced an era of huge economic growth after World War II, a heavy industrialization process and a growth of its middle class, a period known in Mexican history as the “”El Milagro Mexicano””.

– His attempt at industrialization and collectivization with the Great Leap Forward led to the deaths of many people from famine.

– Besides, the fascist government favored the industrialization of the province to attract Italian immigrants: as a result of this “Italianisation”, today 135,000 people use Italian as mother tongue.

– However, the industrialization of the Ruhr area did not reach Soest, which continued to be a small city.

– Modernization, Westernization, and especially Industrialization are other terms people have used when discussing economic development.

industrialization use in-sentences
industrialization use in-sentences

Example sentences of “industrialization”:

- They are known because they had very high growth rates and fast industrialization between the early 1960s and 1990s.

- It was Centre of the University reform in 1918, the industrialization of 1930, the Revolution freedom in 1955 and the Cordobazo, in 1969.

– They are known because they had very high growth rates and fast industrialization between the early 1960s and 1990s.

– It was Centre of the University reform in 1918, the industrialization of 1930, the Revolution freedom in 1955 and the Cordobazo, in 1969.

– It was the new center of Germany’s industrialization and the home of the weapons industry.

– The reasoning behind this is that he felt that industrialization would give owners the ability to exploit their workers even more which will result in a weakened proletariat class.

– People started talking about the working class after industrialization in the early 19th century.

– Many of these countries have a lot of natural resources but not the Industrialization that would use them, so the resources are sold to the countries which can use them.

– While Karl Marx viewed industrialization to play vital role in the proletariat since factory workers were most likely the ones suffering under capitalism.

– The town changed with industrialization and became one of the United States’ biggest areas for big industry and manufacturing.

– With increased industrialization and development, many of the nation’s eastern trout rivers were nasty, polluted, or allowed to silt up, raising water temperatures and killing off the native brook trout.

– This would initially help supply the Allies industrial demand for steel, and after the war, contribute to the country’s industrialization and development.

– Developing countries may be in the process of industrialization and underdeveloped countries usually depend on agriculture, often subsistence farming.

– Mao on the other hand, does not support industrialization or technology.

– Both of these countries have said that the fact that China and India are using exceptions to the treaty in the name of industrialization is unfair and that they will not ratify because of this, although it is believed that the U.S.

– China experienced industrialization and modernization but suffered conflicts between the Nationalist government in Nanking, the CPC, warlords, and the Empire of Japan.

– In the North, urbanization and a never-before-seen Immigration to the United Statesinflow of immigrants from Southern and country’s industrialization grow rapidly.

– The social tensions resulting from the industrialization and the huge growth of population promoted a strong labour movement.

– Other scholars say that the Holodomor was an unexpected consequence of the rapid and massive industrialization started by Stalin, that brought radical economic changes to the farmers and the country, and which was not done on purpose.