“new guinea” some example sentences

How to use in-sentence of “new guinea”:

+ It is found in lowlands and hill forests in mainland New Guinea and Misool Island of West Papua.

+ On the east side of New Guinea is the country Papua New Guinea.

+ Some birds, like those of the bird of paradise in Papua New Guinea have such beautiful feathers that they have been hunted for them.

+ They can be found in the lowland forests of northeastern Australia, New Guinea and nearby islands.

+ It is estimated that fewer than ten Unserdeutsch speakers live in Papua New Guinea today.

+ On 7 April, Papua New Guinea confirmed its second case of COVID-19.

new guinea some example sentences
new guinea some example sentences

Example sentences of “new guinea”:

+ The spray from one species, “Megacrania nigrosulfurea”, is even used as a treatment for skin infections by a tribe in Papua New Guinea by virtue of its antibacterial constituents.

+ That means Australia, New Guinea and neighbouring islands.

+ The Sambia tribe of New Guinea has rites of passage surrounding manhood which involve frequent ejaculation through fellatio.

+ He grew up in Papua New Guinea and Queensland.

+ As it crashed into the Pacific Plate on its northward journey, the high mountain ranges of central New Guinea were made around 5 million years ago.

+ New species are discovered in New Guinea with each botanical survey.

+ The bird is found in lowland forests, New Guinea and Salawati Island of Irian Jaya.

+ The northern cassowary in New Guinea is listed as vulnerable.

+ In two months, Wai and his unit had crossed New Guinea and recaptured three airdromes from the Japanese.

+ The hooded pitohui, is a songbird of New Guinea with black and orange plumage.

+ A single site in Costa Rica yielded about 300 species of lichen on leaves, in the understory of the rain forest; a single fallen “Elaeocarpus” tree in New Guinea held 173 species; the evergreen laurel “Ocotea atirrensis” was found with 50–80 lichen species on a “single leaf”.

+ Frogs from Microhylidae live throughout the tropical and warm temperate regions of North America, South America, Africa, eastern India, Sri Lanka, south-east Asia, through New Guinea and Australia.

+ The highest rate was 62% of men in Bougainville Island, Papua New Guinea who said they had raped a woman.

+ It is found mainly in Papua New Guinea between 2000 and 3000 meters above sea level.

+ Populations of the frog have been introduced into New Guinea and Guam.

+ Some of the islands near New Guinea are low lying islands made from soil washed down from the rivers.

+ The spray from one species, "Megacrania nigrosulfurea", is even used as a treatment for skin infections by a tribe in Papua New Guinea by virtue of its antibacterial constituents.

+ That means Australia, New Guinea and neighbouring islands.
+ The Sambia tribe of New Guinea has rites of passage surrounding manhood which involve frequent ejaculation through fellatio.

More in-sentence examples of “new guinea”:

+ Other animals, such as pigs, arrived in New Guinea after the sea levels rose and closed the land bridge and were not able to get to Australia.

+ They are native to New Guinea and Australia.

+ In March 1944, he was killed in action in Bougainville Island, Papua New Guinea at the age of 30.

+ He went ashore in New Guinea and the eastern coast of Australia, to study the animals, and the native peoples.

+ Some of the islands to the west of New Guinea such as Halmahera, Alor, and Pantar can also be considered part of Melanesia, although people in this area do not make use of the term.

+ The Governor-General of Papua New Guinea is the representative of Monarchy of Papua New GuineaPapua New Guinean monarch, known in Tok Pisin as ‘Missis Kwin’.

+ The lappet-nosed tree frog is a frog from New Guinea and Indonesia.

+ Scientists saw it in Papua New Guinea near the Fly River and Milne Bay, and they think it might also live in Indonesia.

+ The average population density in the Highlands and Islands is lower than that of Sweden, Norway, Papua New Guinea and Argentina.

+ It lives in both Papua New Guinea and Indonesia.

+ The bridge connected Australia and New Guinea and let humans move from Asia into Australia.

+ Other land bridges around the world have been created and re-flooded in the same way: about 14,000 years ago, mainland Australia was linked to both New Guinea and Tasmania.

+ The island of New Guinea or islands of Papua New Guinea are not always included in definitions of the Malay Archipelago.”.” “Worldworx Travel”.

+ Enough has survived of the ancient religions of cultures from pre-modern Africa, South America, New Guinea and Japan to give us quite a clear picture.

+ The Battle of Kaiapit was fought in 1943 between Australian and Japanese forces in New Guinea during the Finisterre Range campaign of World War II.

+ After Papua New Guinea gained independence from Australia in 1975, most of the Unserdeutsch speakers decided to take on Australian citizenship and to emigrate to Australia, especially Queensland, because offices and posts in their homeland were to be filled by indigenous Papuans.

+ The New Guinea frog is a frog from southern New Guinea.

+ The population of Papua New Guinea are mostly the Indigenous peoples of the island.

+ Their distribution is mainly in the tropical parts of New Guinea and northern Australia, though some species extend into central, western and southeastern Australia.

+ Peter O’Neill, CMG was the prime minister of Papua New Guinea from 2011 to 2019.

+ Somare died on 26 February 2021 in Port Moresby, Papua New Guinea from pancreatic cancer, aged 84.

+ Glasse, and researchers at the Papua New Guinea Institute of Medical Research have made reports that say that the cannibalism still happened.

+ Ottio died of a suspected case of cardiac arrest at a hospital in Port Moresby, Papua New Guinea on 9 January 2018 at the age of 23.

+ Another noted family member was Michael Rockefeller, son of Nelson Rockefeller, an anthropologist who came to media attention after he was presumed killed in New Guinea in 1961.

+ Ancestors of the Polynesians found the trees growing in the northwest New Guinea area around 3,500 years ago.

+ The islands remained unsettled by western Europeans until they became part of the GermanyGerman protectorate of German New Guinea in 1884.

+ Although hunting the species has been banned by the Indonesian and Papua New Guinea governments, traditional hunting is permitted.

+ In Indigenous AustraliansAustralia the first written records date from 1788 and in New Guinea from about 1900.

+ Hyakutake, with the agreement of General Headquarters, ordered his troops on New Guinea who were within of their goal of Port Moresby to pull back until the Guadalcanal battle was finished.

+ It is the east half of New Guinea island, plus some nearby islands.

+ He has been a member of the National Parliament of Papua New Guinea since July 2007, representing the electorate of Tari-Pori Open.

+ The pig has feral populations all over the world, including Australia, New Zealand, the United States, New Guinea and the Pacific Islands.

+ This disease was affecting many people among the Fore tribeSouth Fore people of New Guinea in the 1950s and 1960s.

+ They remained under Australian control – interrupted only by Japanese occupation during World War II – until Papua New Guinea became independent in 1975.

+ It seems songbirds evolved 50 million years ago in the part of Gondwana which later became Australia, New Zealand, New Guinea and Antarctica.

+ The cassowary lives in the tropical rainforests of New Guinea and north eastern Australia.

+ Japanese forces made a plan to invade and Occupied territoryoccupy Port Moresby in New Guinea and Tulagi in the Solomon Islands.

+ James Marape is a Papua New Guinea politician.

+ This particular mountain is in Papua New Guinea / Indonesia.

+ They have been found in southern New Guinea between Merauke in the west, to the Kelp Welsh River, east of Port Moresby, where they may be in open woodland.

+ Most of them are from Papua New Guinea but some live on the Moluccas islands.

+ The angiana tree frog is a large tree frog from Papua New Guinea and Indonesia.

+ Tok Pisin is a Lingua francamarket language used in parts of the South Pacific, mainly Papua New Guinea and the Solomon Islands, but also in areas of Vanuatu, where a second language known as Bislama is also spoken.

+ Torres Strait would not have been covered by water which means people and animals could walk between New Guinea and Australia.

+ After the colony was ceded to the United Nations Temporary Executive Authority in October 1962 and later to Indonesia six months later, Jouwe left New Guinea for the Netherlands, where he settled in the town of Delft.

+ The Australian bullfrog, Australian wood frog, water frog, Arhem Rana or wood frog is a frog from New Guinea and Australia.

+ It is resident from southeast Asia to Papua New Guinea and Australia.

+ Other animals, such as pigs, arrived in New Guinea after the sea levels rose and closed the land bridge and were not able to get to Australia.

+ They are native to New Guinea and Australia.
+ In March 1944, he was killed in action in Bougainville Island, Papua New Guinea at the age of 30.

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