How to use in-sentence of “hatching”:
+ The number of chambers increases from around four at the moment of hatching to thirty or more in adults.
+ A modern precocial bird takes for 3–6 weeks from hatching to flying.
+ Larvae burrow into the bark after hatching and consume the living tissue of vascular cambiumcambium and phloem.
+ About 25% of the species are oviparous ; the rest are ovoviviparous, with eggs hatching inside the mother.
+ The hatching larvae nourish themselves with the nutritive tissue of the galls, in which they are otherwise well-protected from external environmental effects.
+ Most crustaceans moult many times between hatching and adulthood.
+ The conspirators also planned to kidnap the royal children, Alice Hogge, “God’s Secret Agents: Queen Elizabeth’s Forbidden Priests and the Hatching of the Gunpowder Plot” HarperCollins p.344 and lead a popular revolt in the Midlands.

Example sentences of “hatching”:
+ Attached to rocks in shallow waters, the eggs take twelve months to develop before hatching out at around 30mm long.
+ Later they were given an egg that needed hatching and care.
+ This means it would take longer after hatching before it could fly.
+ Attached to rocks in shallow waters, the eggs take twelve months to develop before hatching out at around 30mm long.
+ Later they were given an egg that needed hatching and care.
+ This means it would take longer after hatching before it could fly.
+ An incubator is a machine used mostly for hatching egg eggs without the help of a hen or mother.
+ After hatching the larvae look like tiny maggots.
+ The Precursors died before they could discover the required ingredients necessary to allow the hatching of young Sea Emperors.
+ He was able to prove that the behaviour of chicks after hatching from the egg happened even when they had no experience, practice or even information from the senses.
+ Altricial, meaning “requiring care”, refers to a group or kind of creature that is incapable of moving around on its own soon after hatching or being born.
+ The Norwegian coastal waters are the most important spawning ground of the herring populations of the North Atlantic, and the hatching occurs in March.
+ This is because of a state known as diapause, where eggs can lie dormant for up to twenty years before hatching again.
+ They lay two kinds of eggs: thin-walled eggs that hatch quickly, and thick-walled eggs that are believed to be resistant to freezing, and thus capable of over-wintering and hatching in the spring.
