– Rites of passage are rituals performed by human beings, individually or collectively as a social group, that symbolically acknowledge the departure from one phase of life and the arrival into another.
– The colour of each overlay can be individually set.
– This category is for wars where the country of England was individually involved.
– The forest has a number of large, ancient pedunculate oaks, some of which are individually named.
– Sanger is the fourth person to have been given two Nobel Prizes, either individually or in tandem with others.Maria Skłodowska-Curie received the Physics Prize in 1903 for the discovery of radioactivity and the Chemistry Prize in 1911 for the isolation of pure radium.
Some in-sentence examples of individually
Example sentences of “individually”:
– Do include top executives even not individually notable, but do not wikilink them.
– Other storms were individually unusual.
– PLEASE NOTE: if editing this individually by section, the preview function will not show what the table will look like because the opening and closing parameters to the table are outside of the section.
– These locks are more difficult to pick than warded locks and are picked by putting tension on the keyhole and pushing the pins or wafers up individually until they reach the shear line.
– Battle shields were often individually decorated with various symbols.
– Some transistors are individually packaged, mainly so they can handle high power.
- Do include top executives even not individually notable, but do not wikilink them.
- Other storms were individually unusual.
– People always hate change when we are comfortable with what we had and we will easily be able to move back to monobook individually after the rollout.
– Other aspects such as that of writing developed individually in each area.
– The United States has been known for being a individualistic country as most American people prioritize themselves individually over others.
– The sambal can be added during the cooking process or added individually while eating, depending on the preference.
– A limitation to hot water blanching is the leaching of water-soluble nutrients and the degradation of thermal sensitive compounds.
– Unfortunately, humans are very sensitive to the venom that the spider gives in its bite.
– They are very sensitive to vibrations in the ground.
– The right is a sensitive one, and removes private data that can cause legal problems.
– Cone cells are less sensitive to light than rod cells.
– Coeliac disease sufferers and other people who are sensitive to gluten and other allergens may need to be careful how much xanthan gum is in their food.
– If we are having an ongoing account attack finding IPs or a range that can be blocked can be time sensitive to prevent further disruption.
– Xanthan gum is also a strong laxative and can cause diarrhoea in people who eat too much of it, or who are sensitive to it.
sensitive use in sentences
Example sentences of “sensitive”:
– If we had very sensitive photographic film that could be darkened by only one photon, then we would find a tiny speck of silver where the photon ended up.
– If something happened while I wasn’t there I would most likely wait for a request for the community since it isn’t as time sensitive or talk with other CUs for a second opinion.
– Women who are getting radiation therapy for cancer in the pelvic area may have pain during sex because the walls of the vagina have atrophied and are more sensitive to injury.
– Although many people believe this owl has exceptional night vision, its retina is no more sensitive than a human’s.
– The value of the assets were very sensitive to economic conditions, and increased uncertainty in these conditions made it difficult to estimate the value of the assets.
– I guess I am more sensitive than others to the removal of someone else’s question on this talk page.
– In November of 2013 the Barilla Group announced they would start a “more active, global leadership position on diversity, inclusion and social responsibility.” This included creating a board of experts to advise Barilla on these sensitive issues.
– Most are sensitive to cold and require a warm, usually tropical, habitat, although a few have adapted to the cooler climates of southern Australia.
– Researchers have developed more sensitive diagnostics, such as real-time PCR and improved culture methods, that have enabled them to identify pathogens in pasteurized milk.
– Most migraines cause a headache and nausea and might make the person dizzy or very sensitive to bright lights or loud noises.
– I was being sarcastic with the overusage of sensitive adjectives.
– Taylor’s idea was to take a photo of the light coming out of the holes with a special camera that was unusually sensitive to light.
– Hortencio sparked controversy in his village of Curchorem when he openly sang about the conflicts in the church which was one of the most sensitive topics during the time.
– The three types of cone cell are sensitive to different wavelengths of light.
– The switch is sensitive to some environmental cue or trigger.
– Hi all! Adolf Hitler is a very sensitive topic of the German history.
– Some research shows that the most sensitive area of the sex organ#Womenfemale sex organs includes the vulva, clitoris and the part of the vagina nearest the outside of a woman’s body.
– Bubble wrap is a kind of packaging, used for protecting sensitive things that can be broken during transportation.
– It is also used in photoresistors that are sensitive to infrared and red light.
– According to some researchers, highly sensitive people are about one fifth of the population.
- If we had very sensitive photographic film that could be darkened by only one photon, then we would find a tiny speck of silver where the photon ended up.
- If something happened while I wasn't there I would most likely wait for a request for the community since it isn't as time sensitive or talk with other CUs for a second opinion.
- Women who are getting radiation therapy for cancer in the pelvic area may have pain during sex because the walls of the vagina have atrophied and are more sensitive to injury.
More in-sentence examples of “sensitive”:
– In 1943 he was looking for a way to lessen the vibrations that sensitive equipment endured shipboard in rough waters.
– It can be alloyed with both cadmium and mercury mercury to make mercury cadmium telluride, an infrared sensitive semiconductor.
– Muslims are sensitive to and mindful of the circumstance that two mosques along with the rest of East Jerusalem are claimed and illegally occupied by the state of Israel.
– The main model of Social Engineering shows up with faked phone calls: the Social Engineer calls employees of a company and impersonates a technician who needs sensitive data to complete important technical operations.
– Many lichen are sensitive to changes around them.
– They have small eyes and poor sight, and hunt in the early evening and at night, using their hearing and long, sensitive whiskers to locate prey.
– No substitution cipher is safe for sensitive information.
– Many solids attract water and/or sensitive to oxygen.
– Also suppose C is larger than B, but this also can’t be seen without a sensitive measuring device.
– IBM took over the agency’s IT operations, and “IBM used subcontractors abroad, making sensitive information and an entire database of Swedish drivers’ licences accessible by foreign technicians who did not have the usual security clearance”.
– Photodiodes have a window or optical fiber connection, which lets light in to the sensitive part of the diode.
– He was a very sensitive player who listened very carefully to the other players and blended in with them.
– The Indian army has control of a large territory, as the state is a sensitive border area.
– Because human hearing is more sensitive to some frequency bands than others, thresholds vary depending on the frequency of the stimulus tone.
– A lot of children who are sensitive to dairy or gluten will find this leads to eczema flare ups.
– His feminism was matched by models of sensitive “virility” and he sorted out the master-slave model of government in order to find alternatives.
– Cats can notice slight changes in the weather, because of their very sensitive inner ears.
– It means that people with heavy dyslexia are sensitive to loud noise, may have problems speaking, and may not be able to concentrate.
– Since you clearly do not advocate that practice, and instead want to go on about petty nonsense like NPOV that has no basis in reality, you should not involve yourself in this sensitive case.
– Sarojini has her own credibility for the frankness to deals with the sensitive matters either it may be in politics or in sexuality.
– It is so sensitive that it can pick up the current in skin.
– Afghan Hounds are known to be very sensitive to injuries and complain a lot when they have them.
– They are sensitive to iron deficiency of the youngest leaves while the leaf veins remain green.
– They use their long tails for balance and as blankets to cover sensitive body parts against the severe mountain chill.
– The belts endanger satellites, which must have their sensitive components protected with adequate shielding if they spend much time in that zone.
– Oversight is about sensitive topics, about removing personal information, or information that damages the reputation of an editor.
– This value is much less sensitive to the factors affecting the surface gravity, mentioned above.
– It is also very sensitive to temperature.
– A sensitive subject, I’ve expanded American Airlines Flight 11 up to a point where I consider it meets the WP:VGA criteria.
– Another difference between films is how sensitive they are to light.
– There is at least one example, in the related “Corythosaurus”, of a slender stapes in place, which combined with a large space for an eardrum implies a sensitive middle ear.
– People with BPD can be very sensitive to the way others treat them.
– I’d also check with the list of sensitive IP addresses and check what collateral blocks of named users I’d be affecting.
– The three pairs of ganglia under the eyespots make a inverted U shape that have nerves sticking out to the outside of the head so that the head of the planarian is more sensitive than the rest of the body.
– They collaborated on several projects that became catalysts in the development of an environmentally sensitive approach to design – including the Samuel Beckett Theatre project.
– The voltmeter is not sensitive enough.
– In practice there are some difficulties with this technique: wet and dry fingers make very different images, and the system is sensitive to dust and dirt on the surface.
– The most sensitive area of the female genitals includes the vulva, clitoris, and the section of vagina closest to the outside of a woman’s body.
– The yellow spot is the most sensitive spot on the retina, the sharpest image of the object forms only here.
– Young guineafowl are very sensitive to weather, in particular cold temperatures.
– Human eyes are not sensitive to infrared light either.
– Inert atmospheres of gases such as dinitrogen and argon are routinely used in chemical reactions where air sensitive and water sensitive compounds are handled.
– A brilliant mathematician and cryptographer Alan was to become the founder of modern-day computer science and artificial intelligence; designing a machine at Bletchley Park to break secret Enigma encrypted messages used by the Nazi German war machine to protect sensitive commercial, diplomatic and military communications during World War 2.
– Again in the same month, Khan reportedly found another major lock screen bypass Vulnerability vulnerability affecting only the Indian version of Glance, which allowed exfiltration of sensitive user data despite MIUI’s lock screen protection, which was eventually fixed by Xiaomi after several media reports.
– In studies made in upper Beas Valley, it was found that the Cheer pheasants were sensitive to the presence of humans.
– I am a medical doctor and am used to dealing with confidential and private information in a mature and sensitive manner.
- In 1943 he was looking for a way to lessen the vibrations that sensitive equipment endured shipboard in rough waters.
- It can be alloyed with both cadmium and mercury mercury to make mercury cadmium telluride, an infrared sensitive semiconductor.
+ So, while a Crookes radiometer turns because of pressure, it is air pressure caused by the heat energy that light brings to the device.
+ The main goal is to transfer and transport unutilized heat energy from the IT environment to the external atmosphere.
+ The future of the Earth will depend on many things, including increases in the brightness of the Sun, loss of heat energy from the Earth’s core and change of the planet’s orbit by the other things in the Solar System.
+ Reverse happens if the matter is cooled.i.e., heat energy is taken out of it.
+ This law states that the amount of heat energy passing through a small portion of an area of a material, which is called heat flux density and denoted by.
+ A process called catabolysis will break down body tissues, using them as fuel to keep vital functions working.
+ Researchers have recently discovered a turtle’s organs do not gradually break down or become less efficient over time, unlike most other animals.
+ Glucagon helps break down some of these sugar stores into glucose. However, there is still not enough insulin in the blood to break down the glucose into energy.
+ Both producers and consumers need to break down organic compounds to free energy.
+ That is, they break down into other particles a fraction of a second after they are created.
Make sentence of break down
Example sentences of “break down”:
+ As the sugar heats, the molecules break down and turn into compounds with the colour and flavour of caramel.
+ The pancreas helps break down carbohydrates, fats, and proteins.
+ Inside the city, the districts break down into smaller divisions called city wards.
+ They also need less power and do not break down as much as vacuum tubes.
+ Despite the apparently harmless nature of static electricity, there can be significant risks in research, because a large charge can break down the equipment.
+ This helped to break down the idea of a divided city, and put the important tourist centre of Berlin under one local government.
+ The Governor’s forces use a tank to break down the fence.
+ When treatments break down ink particles into smaller pieces, macrophages can more easily remove them.
+ Enzymes break down the cytoskeleton of the cell.
+ They phagocytosiseat pathogens and break down their MHC molecules.
+ Tattoo removal is most commonly performed using lasers that break down the ink particles in the tattoo into smaller particles.
+ The crown-of-thorns climbs over its prey, releases digestive enzymes to break down its food, and then absorbs the coral polyp, which has now turned into a liquid.
+ As the sugar heats, the molecules break down and turn into compounds with the colour and flavour of caramel.
+ The pancreas helps break down carbohydrates, fats, and proteins.
More in-sentence examples of “break down”:
+ The traditional view is that no metazoan phylum can break down cellulose by producing the enzyme cellulase.
+ Their life style is called ‘saprophytic’, because they break down and intake organic matter through their cell walls.
+ When you are not eating, cells break down the stored glycogen into glucose to use as energy.
+ Phenylketonuria where a person’s body cannot break down an amino acid called phenylalanine.
+ Some break down natural chemicals in their environment.
+ Cadmium sulfide is a good pigment because it does not break down easily, is very bright, and does not react with air like other pigments can.
+ However, termites also help break down the trees and branches that fall on the forest floor.
+ They can also break down these compounds without oxygen, using anaerobic respiration or fermentation.
+ Work on why structures fail or break down is very important to engineering.
+ This concept began to break down prior to the First Crusade.
+ That was much larger, and stored microbes which produced cellulase to break down plant cell walls.
+ Thanks to everyone who participated in the social yesterday! We had a lot of fun! We discussed future ideas for Weekend Events and how to break down larger problem categories into manageable tasks.
+ Autophagy is the process that cells use to break down and recycle cellular components.
+ The human teeth function to Masticationmechanically break down items of food by cutting and crushing them in preparation for swallowing and digesting.
+ Once boiled rice and Nuruk are mixed, the enzymes in Nuruk break down carbohydrates in rice into sugar.
+ One in a million people have damaged copies of the lipase gene needed to break down fats.
+ Unfortunately silica particles have a tendency to allow absorb soluble components and they have the capacity to break down components into atoms.
+ It is found in germinationgerminating seeds such as barley as they break down their starch stores to use for food.
+ It occurs when the very small air sacs at the ends of the airways in the lungs start to break down from many sacs to form much bigger sacs.
+ Aang can form an “air ball” to break down obstacles and blow away objects by making a circle with the Wii Remote.
+ This is especially true for Parkinson’s disease, where the Glia break down dopaminergic cells, causing the symptoms associated with Parkinson’s.
+ The seeds and leaves will kill cattle and horses, but deer can break down the poisons and will eat yew foliage freely.
+ With this order, Himmler wanted to break down the resistance of the Polish people against the German occupation.
+ It is able to break down urea.
+ The traditional view is that no metazoan phylum can break down cellulose by producing the enzyme cellulase.
+ Their life style is called 'saprophytic', because they break down and intake organic matter through their cell walls.
+ When you are not eating, cells break down the stored glycogen into glucose to use as energy.
+ FactoryFactories use machines to break down the cocoa beans into cocoa butter and chocolate.
+ Decomposers break down cells of other organisms using biochemical reactions without need for internal digestion.
+ When growing on mineral surfaces, some lichens slowly break down the substrate, and extract tiny amounts of mineral nutrient.
+ In 1960, in order to carry out its plan and break down the economic backbone of the Jumma people of the CHT in the name of so-called industrial development, the Pakistani government built the Kaptai hydro-electric dam on the Karnaphuli river in the heartland of the indigenous Jumma people.
+ Hoatzins use bacterial fermentation in the front part of the gut to break down the vegetable material, much as cattle and other ruminants do.
+ The cells start starving, because they do not have insulin to break down glucose into a form that the cells can use for energy.
+ It can break down naturally.
+ The Railway has recently sold assets following the break down of talks with Cambrian Transport which an has been forced to leave Barry.
+ Some break down easily.
+ Chemists use strong acids to break down other molecules.
+ These features do not last long and break down soon after they are formed.
+ It will break down if exposed to air.
+ Supercids can break down molecules that stand up to most other acids.
+ Aldehydes will break down in air.
+ Unlike birds, the human stomach can break down the seed coat and release the taxanes into the body.
+ For example, lysosomes have enzymes inside them that break down the food the comes from food vacuoles, and peroxisomes have enzymes that break down peroxide, a poison, so it is not poisonous anymore.
+ The compounds in apple juice called phytonutrients delay the break down of LDL or cholesterol.
+ The introduction of animals or plants to new areas may break down ecosystems.
+ Light can break down riboflavin molecules into other molecules that the body cannot use.
+ Others help to break down forest litter and dead organic matter such as skin cells.
+ The other way is to break down a single protein into smaller pieces.
+ In 1908, unable to explain how a alleledominant gene would not become ubiquitous in a population, Reginald Punnett introduced his problem to Hardy, with whom he played cricket.
+ Following an eight-year career with the Eagles, in which he earned two Pro Bowl selections in 2004 and 2007, Westbrook signed with the San Francisco 49ers, for whom he played in 2010.
+ Unfortunately many of Louis’s policies, both domestic and foreign, caused great hardship to ordinary people, many of whom suffered starvation, fled their homeland, or lived in terror of persecution.
+ They are very selfish and discard people whom they have no further use for.
+ SUNY is governed by a Board of Trustees, which consists of sixteen members, fifteen of whom are appointed by the Governor, with consent of the New York State Senate.
+ In 1922, Minter was involved in scandal surrounding the murder of director William Desmond Taylor, for whom she said she was in love with.
+ He spent eight and a half seasons of his career with the Toronto Maple Leafs, with whom he won the Stanley Cup in 1962, 1963, 1964, and 1967.
whom in sentences?
Example sentences of “whom”:
+ Thus far, at least four different characters—each of whom somehow gained the power of the “Speed Force”—have assumed the role of the Flash in DC’s history: College athlete Jay Garrick who becomes “Impulse”, the second hero known as Kid Flash.
+ At the end of the 80s, Segura forms part of the costumbrista series “Mis Adorables Entenados”, by Ecuavisa, based on the theatrical work “¡Me la gané por Diosito Santo! where he played Felipe Vera, a young man of lower middle class with an attitude of superiority, who lives with his half brothers and his stepmother, a character with whom he became known nationally.
+ She does not realize, that boy whom she tries to seduce is actually gay, until Dionne opens her naive eyes.
+ He played for the Wild for a season and mainly stayed with their farm team, Houston Aeros whom he won the Calder Cup with in 2003.
+ Guyasuta and other leaders reluctantly handed over more than 200 captives, many of whom had been adopted into Native families.
+ He was then selected in the second round of the 1949 NFL Draft by the New York Bulldogs, from whom he played in 1949.
+ She is currently dating Aleksei Agranovich, with whom she has one child.
+ The Venetians, to whom the Dalmatians were already bound by language and culture, could afford to concede liberal terms as its main goal was to prevent the development of any dangerous political or commercial competitor on the eastern Adriatic.
+ Thus far, at least four different characters—each of whom somehow gained the power of the "Speed Force"—have assumed the role of the Flash in DC's history: College athlete Jay Garrick who becomes "Impulse", the second hero known as Kid Flash.
+ At the end of the 80s, Segura forms part of the costumbrista series "Mis Adorables Entenados", by Ecuavisa, based on the theatrical work "¡Me la gané por Diosito Santo! where he played Felipe Vera, a young man of lower middle class with an attitude of superiority, who lives with his half brothers and his stepmother, a character with whom he became known nationally.
+ He also shares his Los Angeles home with several cats, of whom he has posted pictures on his website.
+ According to a report issued in 2000 by a mixed Slovene-Italian historical commission established in 1993, the number of people missing from the region, most of whom finished in the “foibe”, alias local geological clefts, range from 1,300 to 1,600 but this estimate does not include those killed in current Croatian territory.
+ It has over 200,000 people, over 50% of whom are Asian-American.
+ Smith whom at the time was 16 when he made it.
+ They face the two gods, whom without their powers of fear and terror are extremely weak in battle, and are easily defeated.
+ He is a former member of D-Generation X and the tag team partner of Monty SoppBilly Gunn, with whom he made the The James Gang and Voodoo Kin Mafia in Total Nonstop Action Wrestling.
More in-sentence examples of “whom”:
+ He describes the state of enlightenment using the allegory of Padmakumara, whom he identifies with Amitabha Buddha and his own enlightened self.
+ If there were not a poverty line, the distribution of goods to those of whom are actually poor, would decrease.
+ The Prophets are human beings and children of Adam, whom God chose to be his messengers.
+ He describes the state of enlightenment using the allegory of Padmakumara, whom he identifies with Amitabha Buddha and his own enlightened self.
+ If there were not a poverty line, the distribution of goods to those of whom are actually poor, would decrease.
+ The Prophets are human beings and children of Adam, whom God chose to be his messengers.
+ He never hurts Mike, whom he respects.
+ On the other hand, the Seattle Minute Men, many of whom were veterans of the Spanish-American War, said that she was unpatriotic.
+ For most of its history, the band consisted of three brothers all of whom were born on the Isle of Man, a British Crown Dependency.
+ Nurses on whom she comes to rely are forced to leave their nursing career.
+ Thirteen of whom have served since the first Parliamentary election in 1979.
+ Egypt and Israel both claimed victory and till now historians argue as to whom the victory belongs to.
+ One way the ACLU tries to reach its goals is by helping people in court whom it believes are not being treated fairly by the law.
+ Their god was called Nyasaye whom used to stay at Ramogi Hills.
+ The organisation directly employed or controlled just over 13,000 people, about 3,200 of whom were women.
+ Its population is 134,572, of whom about a quarter live in the capital, and its population density is 9.36/km².
+ In 1954, he married actress Sandra Zober, whom he divorced in 1987.
+ A section from the Code of Hammurabi prescribes:If a man has put a spell upon another man and it is not justified, he upon whom the spell is laid shall go to the holy river; into the holy river shall he plunge.
+ The Party kills anyone whom it thinks threatens its grip on power, sometimes for reasons that make no sense.
+ In 1952, he joined Fulham for whom he made 204 first-team appearances, scoring 64 goals.
+ Some call them China’s “lost generation.” Famous authors who have written about their experiences during the movement include Nobel Peace Prize winner Liu Xiaobo, Jiang Rong and Zhang Chengzhi, both of whom went to Inner Mongolia.
+ Since the state’s founding, there have been 11 Democratic governor of Kansas, six of whom were elected after 1961.
+ According to Rowling, to characters for whom wizarding blood purity matters, Lily would be considered “as loathsome as a Muggle”, and derogatively referred to as a “Mudblood”.
+ Like Fisher, he continued the natural selection versus genetic drift debate with Sewall Wright, whom Ford believed put too much emphasis on genetic drift.
+ Zeus let fall in his sleep seed upon the Earth, which in course of time gave birth to an androgynous being, born both male and female, whom they called Agdistis.
+ That same year, she married pianist Leone Magiera, with whom she had a daughter, whom she called Micaela.
+ Dayaben enjoys close bonding with her mother Jeevdaya and brother Sundar, whom she calls “Sundar Veera”.
+ Santana married Deborah King in 1973, with whom he had three children.
+ The name “Khurram” was chosen for the young prince by his grandfather, Emperor Akbar, with whom the young prince was close in relation.
+ He was sentenced to seven years four months for the robberies, and continued serving his sentence for the murder of Abdi İpekçi, a left-wing journalist whom he shot.
+ On June 17, 1908, he married Mary Gaston Stollenwerck, whom he had met as a choir member.
+ The other was Glenn Seaborg, after whom seaborgium is named.
+ There are a lot of efforts to detect and ban trolls on social networks platform such as “TrollSpot” in which Li a user of the website and other members of the team whom are also users of the social media website use machine learning techniques or whats known as a computer robobt to propose a comprehensive approach to detect trolls.
+ Therefore, ratites are a group of medium to large birds, most of whom are flightless, with the exception of the tinamous.
+ They had a child whom she let his father raise in England.
+ There are about 150 people living in the community, most of whom are Ngaanyatjarra.
+ Italy started fighting as an ally of France and the UK, but Italian soldiers did not know whom to shoot.
+ The most noted was Briand, with whom he shared the Peace Prize.
+ Then Annina comes in and says she is Ochs’s wife whom he has deserted.
+ He is married to the goddess Sigyn, by whom he is the father of Narfi and/or Nari.
+ The character was partly inspired by Avatar Kyoshi of the original series, whom the creators say was very popular among fans.
+ Roberts was born in Smyrna, Georgia, Her older brother, Eric Roberts, from whom she was estranged until 2004; sister Lisa Roberts Gillan; and niece Emma Roberts, are also actors.
+ In 1905, he began to take twice-weekly private lessons from Rimsky-Korsakov, whom he came to regard as a second father.
+ Her coach Tcherkasskaia, with whom she was very close, died of cancer in November 2001.
+ He later married movie producer Martha Schumacher with whom he had two daughters.
+ Thinking that the picture was of Kazuya, his own son whom he threw into a volcano 20 years ago, Heihachi diverted all his resources into a search for the body.
+ However, he also performed with Ralph Stanley’s Clinch Mountain Boys, with whom he won a Grammy Award with.
+ Ancient Egyptians would make ibises into mummies and offer them to the god Thoth, whom they drew and carved with the head of an ibis.
+ The Venetian artist Jacopo de’ Barbari, whom Dürer had met in Venice, visited Nuremberg in 1500, and Dürer said that he learned much about the new developments in perspective perspective, anatomy, and Body proportions from him.
+ The Hajibeyov Azerbaijan State Symphony Orchestra was formed in 1920, at the request of composer Uzeyir Hajibeyov after whom it was later named.
+ Having a barren wife whom he would not divorce, the ephors, we are told, made him take with her a second.
+ It is about the lives of bizarre characters, most of whom are played by three of the show’s four writers – Mark Gatiss, Steve Pemberton, and Reece Shearsmith – who, along with Jeremy Dyson, formed the League of Gentlemen comedy troupe in 1995.
– Albiorix is the biggest member of the Gallic group of non-spherical moons.
– Julius Caesar described the Gallic Wars in his book “Commentarii de Bello Gallico”.
– The Norse group is one of these groups, as is the Inuit group, and the Gallic group.
– The diagram illustrates the Gallic group in relation to other irregular satellites of Saturn.
– At this Tetricus’s Rebellionrebel Gallic Empire came to its end.
– His armies overcame the armies of the Gallic Empire and the Palmyrene Empire.
– The war was fought on the side of Rome’s Gallic clients against the Germans, who wanted to invade Gaul.
– The International Astronomical Union reserves names taken from Gallic mythology for these moons.
gallic example in sentences
Example sentences of “gallic”:
– Studies found that these fragments made up a gallic calendar, which had been created for a period of five years.
– The Gallic Wars were military campaigns waged by the Roman proconsul Julius Caesar against tribes in Gaul between 58 BC and 50 BC.
– The name of the town of Vianden is derived from the Gallic word “vien” which means “rocky”.
– It was also a haven for Gallic rebels and the like, and so could not be left alone much longer.
– Julius Caesar invaded what is now England in 55 and 54 BC, as part of the Gallic Wars, and was defeated.
– The last section concerns the historical events from the Diadochisuccessors of Alexander down to either 60 BC or the beginning of Julius Caesar’s Gallic Wars.
– A Gallic oppidum, a pre-Roman town protected with a fort, was a feature on the massive Malpas and along the Rhone, the site of the Brégoule.
– There was the Gallic Empire, which included the Roman provinces of Gaul, Britannia and Hispania, and the Palmyrene Empire, with the eastern provinces of Syria Palaestina and Aegyptus.
– Erriapus is a member of the Gallic group of non-spherical, sharing a similar orbit and displaying a similar “light-red” colour, Erriapus is thought to have been formed in a break-up of a bigger body.
- Studies found that these fragments made up a gallic calendar, which had been created for a period of five years.
- The Gallic Wars were military campaigns waged by the Roman proconsul Julius Caesar against tribes in Gaul between 58 BC and 50 BC.
- The name of the town of Vianden is derived from the Gallic word "vien" which means "rocky".
– The terminal date of Caesar’s Gallic Proconsulate.
– Montsoreau is located on the borders of the territories of the Gallic tribes of Pictones, Turones and Andecavi.
– Caesar was the commander of the Roman legions during the Gallic War.
– As the last books have been lost, it is not known if Diodorus reached the beginning of the Gallic War as he promised at the beginning of his work or, as evidence suggests, old and tired from his labours he stopped at 60 BC. He used the name “Bibliotheca” to show that he was writing a work from many sources.
– Modern historians believe that Gallic forces were far smaller than Caesar claimed, and that they suffered tens of thousands of casualties.
– It is a member of the Gallic group of non-spherical moons.
– In Medieval France, fishwives in Paris were allowed to speak honestly and directly to the King himself when he went into the marketplace.
– I don’t want to know why, and honestly don’t care, but before supporting, I need to be certain that you won’t just become “disenchanted” with this project as well and up and leave us.
– In the first case it is to comfort man in his misery and a stimulus rousing his activity, in the second case it is the idle hope in which the lazy man indulges when he should be working honestly for his living cf.
– I honestly do not see anything that would make this person notable.
– My icons are based on the Enwiki versions, If we want to change them that is fine but I would honestly appreciate if we talk about it.
– A Buried alive match is a match where there is a grave dug out of dirt found outside the ring.
– Most people expected that the same thing would happen when dirt is added to the paper before the message was written—the more dirt, the less information can be reliably sent.
– They say he met Fleming when the two men raced on a dirt track and caused an accident.
– Because there is no liquid, it will not clean up dirt and other things on the metal.
– Blair, Jimmie Lewallen, and Fred Harb are the subject of the independent movie “Red Dirt Rising”, which is based on the book “Red Dirt Tracks: The Forgotten Heroes of Early Stockcar Racing” by Gail Cauble Gurley.
– These had been trampled into the dirt by hundreds of reptilian feet, judging from the many three-toed footprints that covered the damp cavern floor.
– GlacierGlacial scouring and deposition by the Wisconsin Stage created the rolling hills and good, healthy dirt in the region.
– Having the pouch face backwards prevents dirt from building up in the pouch and hitting the offspring in the face when digging.
How to use in-sentence of dirt
Example sentences of “dirt”:
– When pulled across the ground, the plow lifts up Soildirt and makes two lines of dirt behind it.
– Sometimes they will groom each other; combing and looking through each other’s thick fur; picking out the dirt and insects.
– Organists usually like to keep a pair of shoes which are worn only for playing the organ so that the soles do not have grit or dirt from the street.
– This dirt melts during the summer and is important for plants to grow.
– Several hundred female saltasaurs dug holes with their back feet, laid eggs in clutches averaging around 25 eggs each, and buried the nests under dirt and vegetation.
– Here I pay obeisance to VArdhamana, the saviour, the promulgator of the law, who is saluted by the suras, Asuras and lords of men, and who has washed off the dirt of destructive Karmas.
- When pulled across the ground, the plow lifts up Soildirt and makes two lines of dirt behind it.
- Sometimes they will groom each other; combing and looking through each other's thick fur; picking out the dirt and insects.
- Organists usually like to keep a pair of shoes which are worn only for playing the organ so that the soles do not have grit or dirt from the street.
– Joe Dirt was released on April 11, 2001 in North America.
– They covered the pig with banana leaves, ti leaves, old mats and then dirt to keep the heat inside.
– Almost the entire length of the route is dirt or gravel road.
– The dirt lifted by the plow is more loose than before.
More in-sentence examples of “dirt”:
- A C-130 was sent to the island to get the people and was able to land on the dirt runway.
- They trap dirt and clean water by filtering land runoff and removing pollutants.
– A C-130 was sent to the island to get the people and was able to land on the dirt runway.
– They trap dirt and clean water by filtering land runoff and removing pollutants.
– Tia Dalma was actually in the process of reviving Barbossa when Jack showed up and traded the cursed monkey for a jar of dirt to ward off Davy Jones.
– Sweat and dirt from a person’s wrist and neck will stick to the starch on the clothes, not to the fibers of the clothes, and will wash away along with the starch.
– They dig a small burrow in the forest floor, and covers it with a dirt trapdoor.The spider lurks in its burrow with the door half-open, until something to eat walks by without knowing that the spider is watching.
– This system was unreliable, because of dirt on the barcodes.
– Groundhog holes, called burrows, are easy to recognize; they are holes, about 9.in wide which usually have large piles of dirt and rocks at the entrance.
– This means that even though it does not rain often, when it does rain, the dirt cannot absorb all the water quickly enough, and the water can turn into a flash flood.
– He won short track championships as a child, driving on both dirt and asphalt, in Houston and San Antonio from 1975-1977.
– There still were colors though: white, the color the belt was originally; yellow, the color achieved thorough sweat soaking into the belt; green, a color that came though practicing outside and falling; blue, the color of the sky; red, the color of blood; and black, the color of all the dirt mixing with everything else on the belt.
– Fireworks and firecrackers became more and more common everywhere, but lately many places have stopped letting most people use them because of the danger of people injuryhurting themselves, of dirt in the air that can make people sick.
– So instead of throwing dirt at each other, we should take this chance to get at least a guideline how to do such things here.
– Like several other burrowing mammals with similar habits, they have short legs with powerful digging claws, very dense fur that repels dirt and moisture, and tough skin, particularly on the head.
– Then, it uses its other mouthparts to scrape any food matter it can from the dirt it has just put into its mouth.
– Walkers reach the church via a dirt track that passes a series of roadside monuments.
– In Australia, the word track can be used interchangeably with trail, and can refer to anything from a dirt road to a pedestrian walkway.
– The dirt sometimes had fire ants in it.
– A public dirt road crossed the mine site but that road was closed in 2013.
– Walker died in Miami, Florida when he was dirt biking when his bike was hit by a car.
– Their presence is unambiguously announced by the appearance of mounds of fresh dirt about 20 centimetercm in diameter.
– The dirt on top of the permafrost is called the “active layer”.
– The Shannon–Hartley theorem tells us that, all else being equal, a paper sent along a path that picks up less dirt can reliably deliver more information than another paper sent along a path that picks up more dirt.
– They also remove any dirt or parasites at the same time.
– Clean all dirt under fingernails.
– The smaller dirt and rocks are carried further by the water the melting glacier makes.
– This is particularly important since motocross is ridden on outdoor dirt tracks.
– Most of Aquitaine is in the Aquitanian basin,A basin, or sedimentary basin, is a low place in the Earth that gets filled with dirt and rocks.
– The part which remains today is a graded dirt road which crosses southeastern Riverside County and a part of Imperial County, beginning roughly 12 miles/19km east of North Shore and ending about 14 miles/23km southwest of Blythe for a total of 70 miles/113km.
– The bristle brush is a common household cleaning tool, often used to remove dirt or grease from pots and pans.
– Sometimes it is just called a “vacuum” because it uses the force of a vacuum to suck dirt into a large roomchamber from which it can be dumped into the garbage.
– A dirty paper code is a way for the writer to adapt his message to the dirt already on the paper.
– Gein would take the whole female corpse or just the parts he wanted, put the dirt back in the grave and take home what he took from the grave.
– Wash well with running water or with vinegary water to remove dirt and bugs that could remain.
– By rubbing the sponge against dirty surfaces, the dirt can be removed.
– This barrel is filled with water, and then rotated very quickly to make the water remove dirt from the clothes.
– They dig with their front feet, kick the soil backwards with their back feet, and then use their rump like a bulldozer to push the dirt out of the burrow.
– It absorbs dust and dirt and converts the earth.
– Nicholson has described his childhood as “growing up dirt poor in a tenant house without plumbing and sometimes without food”., whitehouse.gov; Accessed March 13, 2007.
– Fish was OK to eat because they believed fishes were not alive but just things that were sometimes produced from dirt and water.
– They came along a dirt road which later became Military Road.
– It only lives in places where the sand or dirt is loose enough for it to dig.
– There are a wide variety of materials that players can use, such as Dirt Blocks, Stone Blocks, Copper Ore, Wood, and many more.
– An example of this is someone who is afraid of dirt having dirt put on their hands without being able to wash it off.
– Being so close to land makes them often be damaged by poisons and dirt that can come from boats and the land nearby.
– Soaps and detergents help to spread the oils and dirt particles through the water, so they can be washed away.
– His skills may have been helped by handling the ball on the dirt courts of his hometown.
– While billed as a Detroit team, its home arena has been The Palace of Auburn Hills, located in the northern suburb of Auburn Hills, Michigan, from 1988 from 2018.
– The day-to-day operations of Auburn are run by the City Manager.
– This connected Auburn to the major cities of the state.
– Auburn‘s economy is centered around Auburn University and university-related services.
– A person with two copies of the red-haired allele will have red hair, but it will be either auburn or bright reddish orange depending on whether the first gene pair gives brown or blond hair, respectively.
– Newton transferred to Auburn University where he also played quarterback.
auburn – example sentences
Example sentences of “auburn”:
– Tuberville was the head football coach at the University of Mississippi from 1995 to 1998, Auburn University from 1999 until 2008, Texas Tech University from 2010 to 2012 and University of Cincinnati from 2013 to 2016.
– The NCAA found nothing that would indicate Auburn participated in a pay-for-play in recruiting Newton to become an Auburn student.
– Grubbs was drafted out of Auburn University by the Baltimore Ravens with the 29th pick in the first round of the 2007 NFL Draft.
– The Auburn University sports teams are named the Auburn Tigers and the mascot is a tiger named Aubie.
– Auburn is a college town and is the home of Auburn University.
– In the state are two medical schools, University of Alabama at Birmingham and University of South Alabama, two veterinary colleges, Auburn University and Tuskegee University, a dental school, University of Alabama, an optometry college, two pharmacy schools, Auburn University and Samford University, and five law schools, University of Alabama School of Law, Birmingham School of Law, Cumberland School of Law, Miles Law School, and the Thomas Goode Jones School of Law.
– The city of Auburn is in western Lee County.
– Money began to flow into Auburn again with America’s entry into World War II.
– It is named for President Andrew Jackson, it is one of two Chicago Park District parks with the name “Jackson”, the other being Mahalia Jackson Park in the community area of Auburn Gresham on the far southwest side of Chicago.
– About two percent of people have auburn hair.
– He died of leukemia on August 18, 1990, and is buried in Mount Auburn Cemetery, Cambridge, Massachusetts.
– Her appearance in the “NES Open Tournament Golf”.” “is more or less the same, aside from her hair now being more of an auburn color.
– Rice played college football for the Auburn Tigers, where he was named a two-time All-American.
– The NCAA said that there was not sufficient evidence that Cam Newton or anyone from Auburn had any knowledge of Cecil Newton’s actions.
– Ross played college baseball for Auburn University and the University of Florida.
- Tuberville was the head football coach at the University of Mississippi from 1995 to 1998, Auburn University from 1999 until 2008, Texas Tech University from 2010 to 2012 and University of Cincinnati from 2013 to 2016.
- The NCAA found nothing that would indicate Auburn participated in a pay-for-play in recruiting Newton to become an Auburn student.
- Grubbs was drafted out of Auburn University by the Baltimore Ravens with the 29th pick in the first round of the 2007 NFL Draft.