“oman” – sentence examples

How to use in-sentence of “oman”:

– The national flag of Oman has three stripes with a red bar on the left that contains the national emblem of Oman.

– In March 2007, it was confirmed that Heron had signed a funding deal with the State General Reserve Fund of Oman to provide the equity for the development.

– Baluchistan States Union – The BSU was formed after the formal Accession of four individual princely states into the new Dominion of Pakistan on the 31st of March in 1948, apart from the enclave of Gwadar that was in cessation from Oman to Pakistan on the 8th of September in 1958.

– The Strait of Hormuz is a narrow, strategically important strait between the Gulf of Oman in the southeast and the Persian Gulf.

– She was born in Muscat, Oman to Scottish parents.

– The countries of Yemen and Oman are south of Saudi Arabia.

oman - sentence examples
oman – sentence examples

Example sentences of “oman”:

– Below the governorates, Oman is divided into provinces.

– The Persian Gulf and Gulf of Oman littorals form the southern border.

– The waters around Arabia are: on the southwest the Red Sea and Gulf of Aqaba; on the southeast the Arabian Sea; and on the northeast the Gulf of Oman and the Persian Gulf.

– He plays for Bolton Wanderers and the Oman national team.

– On the east, it connects with the Gulf of Oman by Strait of Hormuz.

– The sultans of Oman are members of the Al Said dynasty, which is the ruling family of Oman.

– He fled into exile firstly to Oman and then to the United Kingdom, where, as of 2012, he continues to live in Portsmouth with his wife and six children as the Head of the Zanzibari Royal Family and as the Sovereign of the Order of the Brilliant Star of Zanzibar and the Most Illustrious Order of Independence of Zanzibar.

- Below the governorates, Oman is divided into provinces.

- The Persian Gulf and Gulf of Oman littorals form the southern border.

– The attacks took place a month after the similar May 2019 Gulf of Oman incident and on the same day that Ali KhameneiAyatollah Khamenei met with Japanese Prime Minister Shinzō Abe in Iran.

– The National Emblem of Oman consists of a khanjar dagger in a sheath that is superimposed upon two crossed swords.

– Yemen and Oman were ruled by different people at times, including the Rasulid dynasty in Yemen.

– Still, Saudi Arabia’s borders with the United Arab Emirates and Oman are not final.

“stand” – example sentences

How to use in-sentence of “stand”:

+ Every year pupils can volunteer to stand for election.

+ Since Otis is weaker, Dag makes a deal that he and his pack will take some of the animals, but if he tries to stand up for all of them, they will kill everyone.

+ The Speaker of Ireland says he does not need to stand for re-election, he is given the first seat in his constituency.

+ A taxicab stand is a queue area on a street or on private property where taxicabs line up to wait for passengers.

+ When they are not looking for food, they stand or perch in trees or on man-made structures.

stand - example sentences
stand – example sentences

Example sentences of “stand”:

+ The letters in the top row stand for months: January, February, etc.

+ In 1994, due to the Taylor Report, the new redeveloped, all seater stand was opened by City legend Bert Trautmann.

+ They then run through a carpark and stand by the railings to see the sunrise.

+ For example, victims of “Torstehen” had to stand outside naked with their arms raised – like a gate hanging on its hinges.

+ Bucciarati’s right-hand man with erratic in mood that is reflected in his Stand Purple Haze, which indiscriminately releases a flesh-eating virus that rapidly friends and enemies alike.

+ The Ionic columns normally stand on a base which separates the shaft of the column from the stylobate or platform.

+ This lets the dancer stand on tiptoe.

+ Rob appeared on various stand up TV shows including ‘First Exposure’ for Channel 4 and ‘Stand Up’ for ITV and also presented a number of TV programmes including ‘Friday Now’ and ‘Weekend Live’ for LWT.

+ The letters in the top row stand for months: January, February, etc.

+ In 1994, due to the Taylor Report, the new redeveloped, all seater stand was opened by City legend Bert Trautmann.

+ The total number of people that can be seated is about 31,700, although the view from some seats in the Stan Cullis stand are restricted by the Steve Bull stand roof until it is redeveloped, due to this they are never sold.

+ The East of England Co-operative Stand was built in 1952 as a concrete seating area.

+ The main antagonist of “Vento Aureo”, the Boss of Passione with an unnatural body and two souls whose Stand King Crimson can erase a moment in time.

+ This connection between name and existence was so well established that often it was not uncommon for the serekh of a royal to stand in his place.

+ An example would be that if a person were to stand on a collapsing star right before the singularity forms, and they sent a signal every second to a nearby observer, time and space would slow down as the singularity is being formed.

+ Meg releases Charles from IT’s clutches and tessers with him through time and space, landing in her twin brothers’ vegetable garden on Earth, where her father and Calvin stand waiting.

More in-sentence examples of “stand”:

+ Hinata was the first daughter of the main house, but because she was shy and couldn’t stand up for herself, her father Hiashi disowned her.

+ RVD would then stand up on top of the 15-foot ladder and hit Finlay with a Five-Star Frog Splash.

+ This is a strange-looking stand, as the steel girders run for the full length of the pitch, but the stand only runs for two thirds the length of the pitch.

+ Randy Roth took the stand and talked for twenty hours.

+ Women were stripped naked, made to sit on ice blocks, stand in cold rooms, and raped and sexually assaulted using objects such as eggplants smeared with chili peppers.

+ Samurai kept their katana on a special stand for swords, called katana-kake.

+ The North Stand is the most recent addition to Oakwell Stadium and is a large covered singled tiered seating area with a capacity for 6,000 spectators.

+ The newborn elephant can often stand within a half hour after it is born.

+ People would stand on a raised platform called the bema to speak.

+ He is brave and compassionate, as he will not back down against any foe and give them all he has got, but his compassionate nature makes it so he always tries to “defends the weakerist”, as he cannot stand seeing the weak and helpless get abused.

+ They walk along and eat, but also stand still and eat what they can reach.

+ The Jarrold Stand is sponsored by Jarrolds, a local department store.

+ The Japanese breed generally weighs between 40 and 60kg, while the non-Japanese breeders have focused on dogs that weigh from 55 to 95kg and stand 24.5 to 31 inches at the withers.

+ Usually, a hitchhiker will stand at the side of a road and hold his or her thumb in the air waiting for a passerby to come and pick her or him up.

+ Many Victorian buildings still stand around the town.

+ She says they fear his violent nature, so few are willing to stand up to him.

+ The last Confederate general to surrender was Brigadier General Stand Watie, who surrendered on June 23, 1865, in Oklahoma.

+ He does not stand on a podium.

+ Stands generally work as a first-come, first-served queue, so that the first taxicab to arrive on the stand serves the first passenger to arrive, and as the first taxicab leaves, each taxicab behind it moves ahead one spot, with the last taxicab to arrive taking the last spot.

+ His Stand went through 2 transformations, giving him access to Act 1, Act 2 and Act 3.

+ This contrasts with a morpheme, which is the smallest unit of meaning but may not stand on its own.

+ He did not try to avoid death by apologizing for his actions because he thought it was morally right to stand by his principles.

+ Non-Load Bearing Wall doesn’t help the structure to stand up and holds up only itself.

+ Unofficially, the East stand in the new stadium is also named Kippax.

+ Hinata was the first daughter of the main house, but because she was shy and couldn't stand up for herself, her father Hiashi disowned her.

+ RVD would then stand up on top of the 15-foot ladder and hit Finlay with a Five-Star Frog Splash.
+ This is a strange-looking stand, as the steel girders run for the full length of the pitch, but the stand only runs for two thirds the length of the pitch.

+ The letters “neo” stand for “New Engine Option.” The family will replace the Airbus A320 family of airplanes.

+ He has been played by Vinnie Jones in X-Men: The Last Stand and voiced by Ryan Reynolds in Deadpool 2.

+ That’s not going to be the case here, so they simply stand out as plain notices that the subject of the article is underway or will be soon ndash; a message that would be quite clear from the text of the article anyway.

+ Tyche and her sister Eudora stand for a joining of bounty and luck.

+ Over the years, Butler has become disillusioned with politics, saying “For me, it’s almost pointless voting anymore because it seems to be the same no matter what party or politics you stand for.

+ He forced Arminius’ army to stand in open battle at the Weser River.

+ The Pantheon’s dome stands on a round wall like a drum, with only one doorway in it, but Bramante’s dome was designed to stand on a drum, which was standing high up on four wide arches.

+ The World Assembly is an Organizationorganisation and part of the game acting as a stand in for the United Nations.

+ Tumby Bay hosted the popular event Triple J’s One Night Stand on 2 April 2011.

+ It has a peg at the bottom to stand it.

+ Janeane Garofalo is an AmericansAmerican political activist, stand up comedian and actress.

+ Apart from difficulty sitting, they usually cannot stand nor walk without help.

+ At the taurobolium ritual, the high-priest would stand inside a pit made specifically for the purpose of the ritual, a bull would be led above the pit and sacrificed above him, the blood of the bull would pour down onto the priest, showering him in the blood.

+ When the meerkat group is eating, a guard will stand up and look for any animals that might eat its family.

+ The election agreement between the Co-operative and Labour Parties means that 30 candidates can stand as “Labour Co-operative” candidates, and get money for election expenses from the Co-operative Party.

+ Today, the stadium has an unbalanced look, with one large stand and three smaller stands.

+ The coat of arms consists of three dolphins, which were featured on the earlier Anguillan flag, and which stand for friendship, wisdom and strength.

+ The biggest ones can stand nearly 4 feet.

+ The new settlement was attacked by raiders in 1886, a few guards volunteered to keep it safe from raiders, in total the settlement had six guards, the last and most famous out of them is Avraham Shapira, his original house stand til this day intact.

+ The three points of the star stand for land, air and sea because Daimler’s engines were used not only in cars and trucks but in airplanes and boats.

+ There stand two large gravestones of Samson and his father Manoah.

+ Like the other gun crew members, the matross had a specific place to stand as he performed his duties.

“torso” use in sentences

How to use in-sentence of “torso”:

+ Catsuits are close-fitting one-piece garments that cover the torso and the legs, and often the arms.

+ There are different kinds of kick boxing, most popular form is one where kicks are allowed towards head torso only.

+ His torso was that of a man, but his legs were coils of vipers that would hiss and attack as he moved.

+ The hippopotamus has a torso that is shaped like a barrel, a very big mouth and teeth, an almost hairless body, short legs and great size.

+ There is a huge rock, rectangular, with three grooves at the top, the head, the torso and the limbs of a person.

+ The official number of murders caused by the Cleveland Torso Murderer is thirteen, although recent research has shown there could have been as many as twenty.

torso use in sentences
torso use in sentences

“devour” some ways to use

How to use in-sentence of “devour”:

– A “Tyrannosaurus rex” attempts to devour Ann, but Kong kills it to defend her.

– Packs of lesser bandicoot rats have been known to attack and devour infants left alone.

– Raccoons, gulls, and skunks have been known to devour loon eggs.

– ADDING OR REMOVING EVEN ONE WILL CAUSE THE FIRES OF HELL TO BREAK LOOSE AND DEVOUR YOUR SOUL.

– This generally stuns or injures the prey sufficiently for the sawfish to devour it.

– Fenrir was tied up by the gods, but was destined to break free from his bonds and devour Odin during Ragnarök, afterwhich he is killed by Odin’s son, Víðarr.

– They are said to devour those who would present false information to or otherwise lie to Odin.

devour some ways to use
devour some ways to use

“dramatically” use in-sentences

How to use in-sentence of “dramatically”:

– Because the League of Nations mandate for Namibia was cancelled by the United Nations and the fact that Namibian independenceNamibia became independent, the Jewish population in Namibia dramatically declined since 1965, with only 60 to 100 Jews living in Namibia today.

– The ensuing constitutional crisis was resolved dramatically when the Governor-General Sir John Kerr John Kerr dismissed the Labor Prime Minister Gough Whitlam, appointing Malcolm Fraser as caretaker Prime Minister pending the 1975 general election.

– Differentiation dramatically changes a cell’s size, shape, metabolic activity, and responsiveness to signals.

– The opera is celebrated for the sextet “Chi mi frena” and Lucia’s lengthy Mad Scene, a technically and dramatically demanding double-aria “tour de force”.

– If this process could be harnessed it could dramatically reduce pollution, because the carbon you make your fuel with is the carbon dioxide from the air.

– When Union republics began to turn away from the Soviet system, Gorbachev’s power was dramatically reduced.

– McKinley dramatically improved the memory hierarchy and allowed Itanium to become reasonably competitive.

– The new document dramatically increased Pak’s power.

dramatically use in-sentences
dramatically use in-sentences

Example sentences of “dramatically”:

– By moving the guns from place to place during the battle, formations of enemy soldiers could be broken up to be handled by the infantry wherever they were massing, dramatically increasing the overall effectiveness of the infantry.

– I have changed dramatically and for the better over the past few months and, as promised in my 9th RfA, I decided to wait for about half a year before requesting adminship again.

– The 4000 Series’ maximum operating speed is adjusted to 100 km / h, locomotive the starting tractive significantly increased to 480 kN, continuous tractive effort increased dramatically to 341 kN.

– Recent advances in manufacturing efficiency and photovoltaic technology, combined with subsidies driven by environmental concerns, have dramatically accelerated the deployment of solar panels.

– The range of the species increased dramatically after it was domesticated, because the species went feral in cities around the world.

– With the painting Les Demoiselles d’Avignon 1907, Picasso dramatically created a new and radical picture depicting a raw and primitive brothel scene with five prostitutes, violently painted women, reminiscent of African tribal masks and his own new Cubist inventions.

– Foreign traders had been illegally exporting opium mainly from India to China since the 18th century, but that trade grew dramatically from about 1820.

– While Javier peaked at Category 4, with windspeeds of 150mph, it weakened dramatically before striking land south of San Ignacio in Baja Sur as only a tropical depression.

– Most of the above orders as defined by Cronquist have been dramatically redefined on the basis of recent molecular systematic studies.

– This composition has since likely changed dramatically due to militancy having forced substantial minority communities to the Hindu dominated districts near Jammu.

– Nowadays, the people’s attitude has changed dramatically though seismic loads, sometimes, exceed ability of a structure to resist them without being broken, partially or completely.

– The North Sea stock decreased dramatically in the 1960s because of direct overfishing.

– It ended as dramatically a decade later on September 3, 1939, when the Second World War began.

– This has increased dramatically recently with internet usage and online trading platforms.

– This has improved dramatically since it was nominated, but it appears it could use some collaborative efforts to simplify the language.

- By moving the guns from place to place during the battle, formations of enemy soldiers could be broken up to be handled by the infantry wherever they were massing, dramatically increasing the overall effectiveness of the infantry.

- I have changed dramatically and for the better over the past few months and, as promised in my 9th RfA, I decided to wait for about half a year before requesting adminship again.
- The 4000 Series' maximum operating speed is adjusted to 100 km / h, locomotive the starting tractive significantly increased to 480 kN, continuous tractive effort increased dramatically to 341 kN.

“kali” some ways to use

How to use in-sentence of “kali”:

+ There are some temples of Hindu deities like Goddesses Maa Kali and Shiv mandir etc.

+ In the times of unification of Nepal, Kshetris were more rigid to worship of ferocious forms of Godess Kali and Lord Shiva.

+ To end this battle between Raktabeeja and Durga, Kali consumed every drop of blood until Raktabija Bled out.

+ HinduismHindus believe that there are periods of time called yugas : Satya Yuga, Treta Yuga, Dvapara Yuga, and Kali Yuga.

+ The Tezpur Ryot Sabha sent Kali Krishna Barkakoti to as its delegate to the National Congress in 1885.

+ According to the author, the book is the story of God coming in this age, the Kali Yukam or Iron Age, to rule the world by transforming it into that of Dharma Yukam.

+ In Hinduism, the deityGoddess Tara Tantric manifestations of Mahadevi, Kali or Parvati.

+ Though now slightly run down, the building still stands next to Kali Besar in Jakarta.

kali some ways to use
kali some ways to use

Example sentences of “kali”:

+ Kshetri commonly have warrior like deities as Bhadrakali, Kalika Bhawani and different forms of Goddess Kali as female deity and Rudra, Veerbhadra as male deity.

+ Devi is depicted as in gentler forms like Parvati, the consort of Shiva; or, as warrior goddesses like Kali and Durga.

+ It is located between Thathari Bazar and Wari, on a road named after this temple, called 24 Joy Kali Temple street.

+ All avatars have appeared except Kalki, who will appear at the end of the Kali Yuga.

+ Durga and Kali killed many asuras who used to disturb human beings.

+ Major tributaries of the Chambal River include Mej, Banas, Kali Sindh, Parbati, and Shipra.

+ The statue of Kali is of great significance to the Hindus.

+ Oachira Kali is celebrated in commemoration of the battle of Kayamkulam, fought between Marthanda Varma, the Maharaja of Travancore and the Raja of Kayamkulam.

+ The river originates from the lapse of Kali Kundi glacier and adjoining area south-west of Bhadarwah in Doda District.

+ The Kali Gandaki divides it from Palpa District to the south.

+ He is trained in Indian classical music under the guidance of his father Kali Ganguly and his pisima Shibani Roychowdhury.

+ There is a Kali temple near the waterfalls.

+ Vishnu is the preserver god, which means he protects the universe from being destroyed and keeps it going, according to this religion, and he has come to earth in nine forms so far, with Kalkione yet to come at the end of Kali Yuga to destroy evil.

+ Boro Kali Bari is one of the oldest Hindu temples in the city of Mymensingh, Bangladesh.

+ The Ramna Kali Mandir, also known as the Ramna Kalibari was one of the most famous HinduismHindu temples of the Indian subcontinent.

+ The goddess Kali is also worshipped there.

+ Hence, Kali is considered the goddess of time and change.

+ Kshetri commonly have warrior like deities as Bhadrakali, Kalika Bhawani and different forms of Goddess Kali as female deity and Rudra, Veerbhadra as male deity.

+ Devi is depicted as in gentler forms like Parvati, the consort of Shiva; or, as warrior goddesses like Kali and Durga.

In sentence use of “predicate”

How to use in-sentence of “predicate”:

+ In predicate logic it is the mathematics of calculating the path of the ball that determines your action.

+ A sorites is a form of argument in which a series of incomplete syllogisms is so arranged that the predicate of each premise forms the subject of the next until the subject of the first is joined with the predicate of the last in the conclusion.

+ In informal logic, a term can also refer to the subject or predicate of a statement.

+ The subject NP is shown in green, and the predicate VP in blue.

+ It has also recently become popular in formal logic under predicate abstraction.

In sentence use of predicate
In sentence use of predicate

Example sentences of “predicate”:

+ A quantifier is used in conjunction with a variable in order to talk about a general instance of x, and in doing so, this allows predicate logic to make statements about quantity.

+ Since a predicate is a way of describing something that is true, another way to say this is that if one thing that is true about a variable is not true about the other variable, then they are not "equal" as far as mathematical logic is concerned: two things are only equal if anything that is true about one has to be true about the other.
+ In the notation of predicate logic, quantifiers directly precede variable names, which are then followed by other quantifiers or mathematical expressions, where the said variables are found.

+ A quantifier is used in conjunction with a variable in order to talk about a general instance of x, and in doing so, this allows predicate logic to make statements about quantity.

+ Since a predicate is a way of describing something that is true, another way to say this is that if one thing that is true about a variable is not true about the other variable, then they are not “equal” as far as mathematical logic is concerned: two things are only equal if anything that is true about one has to be true about the other.

+ In the notation of predicate logic, quantifiers directly precede variable names, which are then followed by other quantifiers or mathematical expressions, where the said variables are found.

+ In Aristotelian logic, a proposition is a specific kind of sentence that confirms or denies an action or predicate took place through a subject.

+ Two basic kinds of quantifiers used in predicate logic are universal and existential quantifiers.

+ One of these is predicate logic, which defines logical predicates, and looks at how they can be applied to arguments.

+ First-order predicate logic uses rules of inference to deal with logical quantifiers.

+ A “table” in an SQL database schema corresponds to a predicate variable; the contents of a table to a relation; key constraints, other constraints, and SQL queries correspond to predicates.

+ It is an unusual language because it is based on predicate logic, and because it is made to have no syntaxsyntactic ambiguity.

+ In logic and philosophy, predicate logic is a system of mathematical logic.

+ Heterogeneous “n-ary” relations are used in the semantics of predicate calculus, and in relational databases.

Some in-sentence examples of “date back to”

How to use in-sentence of “date back to”:

+ Proposals for constructing a bridge across the River Tay date back to at least 1854.

+ The first written records of Rapla date back to the 1241 Danish census.

+ The first revolvers date back to late 1500s in Europe.

+ The tradition of wall painting can be traced back to Indian rock art paintings that date back to 4000 BC.Bhatia.

+ Predecessors of the bikini date back to Ancient historyantiquity, in Çatalhöyük Prithvi Kumar Agrawala 1984.

+ The oldest rocks date back to the Proterozoic era 1.8 billion years ago.

+ There are finds of this type that date back to the paleolithic.

+ The earliest saddles were simple pads fixed with a surcingle seen by 800 BC, with the saddle tree coming into use about 200 BC, and paired stirrups by 322 AD Saddles in use today, date back to the 1700s.

Some in-sentence examples of date back to
Some in-sentence examples of date back to

Example sentences of “date back to”:

+ Waterbeds intended for therapymedical therapy date back to the 19th century.

+ Both districts date back to 1816 when the new Prussian province of Rhineland was created.

+ Waterbeds intended for therapymedical therapy date back to the 19th century.

+ Both districts date back to 1816 when the new Prussian province of Rhineland was created.

+ In the most recent round of schedule changing, NASCAR elected to move the Labor Day weekend race back to Darlington Raceway, which hosted the Southern 500 on that weekend from 1950 until 2003, and moved Atlanta’s lone date back to the early season.

+ The oldest mentions of Minsk date back to the 11th century.

+ They date back to the late 1920s.

+ The traditional arms date back to the 13th century.

+ The national emblem is said to date back to the 18th century.

+ The first “modern humans” found in Western Europe date back to about 36,000 years ago.

+ Official records about these working cats only date back to 3 June 1929.

+ These traditions date back to at least 1612.

+ Today it is a busy town and has managed to retain a much of its heritage; a large proportion of its buildings date back to Tudor, Jacobean and Georgian times, the town is an important conservation area, and has more listed buildings than any other town in Cornwall.

+ Taino-Arawak ancestors date back to 4,000 B.C.

+ Known sightings of Mercury date back to at least the first millennium BC.

+ There are historical sites on the path that date back to Neolithic times.

+ SABMiller’s origins date back to the foundation of South African Breweries in 1895 as to serve a growing market of miners and prospectingprospectors in and around Johannesburg.

+ Sauces in French cuisine date back to the Middle Ages.

+ The earliest texts come from the cities of Uruk and Jemdet Nasr and date back to 3300 BC.

“measured” some ways to use

How to use in-sentence of “measured”:

– Atmospheric pressure is the pressure exerted by oxygen and other molecules on a body/point/area at sea level, and is equal to approximately 100000 Newtons or 100Kn.Atmospheric pressures is measured using instruments such as the barometer which uses the principles of pressure and vaccum to measure the atmospheric pressure.

– It is measured in units of time such as seconds, hours, years, or any other measurement of time.

– The amount of fuel used to find specific impulse can be measured in different ways.

– The GMR effect can be measured when a magnet is used to change the flow of electricity.

– The outcome of this can be measured by a UV-visible spectrophotometer.

measured some ways to use
measured some ways to use

Example sentences of “measured”:

- The frequency of the analog circuit is often measured or controlled in analog signal processing.

- Slots for cars are measured out and are painted on the pavement.

– The frequency of the analog circuit is often measured or controlled in analog signal processing.

– Slots for cars are measured out and are painted on the pavement.

– This usage is not consistent, as sometimes the term “channel” refers to an individual measured item, with “parameter” referring to the setup information about that channel.

– The speed of light was first measured in 1676 by the DenmarkDanish astronomer Ole Christensen Roemer.

– The pH has been measured at 8.26.

– Desiccation resistance in insects is generally measured by the change in mass during dry conditions.

– The Planck time is the length of time at which no smaller meaningful length can be validly measured due to the indeterminacy expressed in Werner Heisenberg’s uncertainty principle.

– When scientists measure salt in water, they usually say they are testing the salinity of the water: salinity is measured in “parts per thousand” or “ppt”.

– Speed is measured through a speed trap covering the final to the finish line, indicating the approximate maximum speed of the vehicle during the run.

– TFT response time is measured as the average time it takes to change the pixels from one shade of grey to another shade of grey.

– The Baud rate is different from the gross bit rate, measured in “bits/second”.

– Most of these entries should be measured in SI units.

– The magnitude that represents this characteristic is the resistance, and it is measured in ohms.

– Intuitively, one may think that the speed of the light from the flashlight as measured on the train should be 2/3 the speed measured on the ground, just like the speed of the baseball was 2/3.

– The power of an automobile is usually measured in Kilowattkilowatts or horsepower.

– It is usually measured as a water surface elevation, expressed in units of length, but represents the energy at the entrance of a piezometer.

– For example, if velocity is measured in meters per second, and if time is measured in seconds, then acceleration is measured in meters per second squared.

More in-sentence examples of “measured”:

- The variable measured is most often the light's intensity but could also, for instance, be the polarization state.

- One unit of mass is measured in grams or kilograms with regard to specific heat.

– The variable measured is most often the light’s intensity but could also, for instance, be the polarization state.

– One unit of mass is measured in grams or kilograms with regard to specific heat.

– Earthquakes 4.5 or higher on the Richter scale can be measured all over the world.

– All participants are timed or have a distance measured and this is their end result.

– When it is measured in cycles or rotations per unit time.

– It is measured by a unit of speed.

– Distances can be measured on a map using dividers,compasses with two spikes.

– Its effect is measured by testing to see if the behavior has been successfully changed.

– Longitude is measured using degrees, the same way an angle ihs.

– Sidereal time is a “time scale based on Earth’s rate of rotation measured relative to the fixed stars”.

– There are two types of viscosity: “fluid dynamicsdynamic viscosity”, measured in pascal kinematic viscosity”, measured in squared.

– The size of the viola is measured from the bottom to the neck of it.

– Races are run from a standing start, in a straight line, over a measured distance, usually a ¼-mile straight track.

– Of the $3.98 trillion daily global turnover, as measured in 2007, trading in London accounted for around $1.36 trillion, or 34.1% of the total., published in December 2007.

– The level of noise is measured in decibels and after this level, the workplace needs to make sure that workers are protected from the noise.

– Word length is measured by counting the letters in each word, or by counting syllables.

– The affect of an earthquake can be measured by a seismometer.

– Peña Nieto also claimed that he halved the murder rate in the State of Mexico during his time as governor, but retracted this claim after “The Economist” showed that the murder rate did not diminish and was being measured in a different way.

– Material damages, measured in millions of Swedish crowns, were reported.

– They also measured the moon’s surface temperature.

– We could give the measured length as 2 metres or 3 cm—depending on the length of the rod under observation.

– Body jewellery is measured in gauges from 20g up to 000g; sizes larger than that are measured in fractions of inches.

– In common language, the weight of something is typically understood to be the value measured at or near the Earth’s surface.

– These units are usually measured in degrees, noted °GL, or °GT.

– Temperature is measured in degrees Fahrenheit.

– Plancks constant can now be measured with very high precision.

– Army trucks are measured by how many tons each cargo model can carry.

– Initiative’s ViewerTrack study, which measured 2005 sports audiences, showed the sport’s highest-profile match, the All-Ireland Football Final, to be the most watched event of the nation’s sporting year.

– It was first measured in 1922, but not all maps showed the same height.

– In other words, mass is measured by scalars, just like distances are measured by scalars.

– His scale worked like a seismogram, measured by a particular type of “seismometer” at a distance of 100 kilometers from the earthquake.

– The number of back-and-forth movements in one second is its frequency, measured in Hertz.

– Parts of a car engine are measured to 0.01 of a millimeter and some engine parts fit together very tightly.

– One night Set measured Osiris to make a tomb for him.

– Earthquakes are measured using watching from seismographs.

– The frequency is measured in Hz.

– According to Tolkien, the Shire measured 40 leagues Tolkien takes a league to be 3 miles, see “Unfinished Tales”, The Disaster of the Gladden Fields, Appendix on Númenórean Measure.

– The Soviet Union’s highest mountain was Communism Peak in Tajikistan measured at.

– The speed of a vessel relative to the fluid in which it travels is usually measured in knots.

– Before that, economics was about the king’s personal interests, and the wealth of a nation was measured by the king’s treasury.

– Disc size is measured in imperial or metric units.

– For the other new planet, 581g, the group measured a mass that was 3.1 times the mass of the Earth and an orbit that was 36.6 days long.

– The temperature of the chamber is measured either using a thermometer or thermocouple.

– PAOP and PVR can not be measured directly with echocardiography.

– However, they noticed that no matter who performed the experiments, where the experiments were performed, or what star light was used, the measured speed of light in a vacuum was always the same.

– Bearings can be measured different ways.

– At that time, a body that measured about 5feet, 7inches was buried as the body of Anastasia.

– All roads are measured from this point.

Make sentence of “maori”

How to use in-sentence of “maori”:

– There are many theories about where the Maori came from.

– There were 600 Maori warriors and only 140 British soldiers.

– Two Maori men were captured in New Zealand and taken to Norfolk to teach the convicts how to use the flax.

– The Maori had many uses for the nīkau palm.

– What if someone created a site on simple maori or simple dutch? Simple yoruba, etc, need I go on.

Make sentence of maori
Make sentence of maori

Example sentences of “maori”:

- The Maori All Blacks won the match 40–15.

- A Maori tattoo takes a lot of time to do; generally the Maori people start tattooing themselves in adolescence and they finish in adulthood.

– The Maori All Blacks won the match 40–15.

– A Maori tattoo takes a lot of time to do; generally the Maori people start tattooing themselves in adolescence and they finish in adulthood.

– He went to New Zealand and took part in the Maori Wars in 1861.

– At first, land was easily bought but then as time went on, it became more difficult and Europeans wanted more and more of Maori farmland, as Maoris were returning to the area and did not want to sell the land.

– Each time the Maori cut down the flag pole, the British Army made a new one.

– The Maori had many more fighters than the British.

– In another type of story, the world is created from the union of male and female deities, as in the Maori mythologyMaori story of Rangi and Papa.

– Kakapo means ‘night parrot’ in the Maori language.

– The Maori were unhappy with the problems in the town.

– The Maori facial tattoo was used as a kind of “identification card”.

– Many people say that Samoan people are related to Māori people because lots of the language words are very similar to Maori language.