How to use in-sentence of “packed”:
+ Dried blood is better for first aid during combat than whole blood or packed red cells.
+ The density measured by NEAR Shoemaker, 1,300kg/m³, is less than half that of a normal carbonaceous chondrite; this may indicate that the asteroid is very loosely packed rubble pile.
+ Enslaved people were then packed onto the slave ships.
+ Later they may be alternately washed with water and packed with salt.
+ Like all members of the family, hawkweeds have tightly packed flowerheads made of many small flowers.
Example sentences of “packed”:
+ The stars are too closely packed to get an accurate count, but it certainly has more stars than some of the smaller galaxies.
+ It is not easily packed up and carried away like a tent, or moved like a caravan.
+ Nowadays some of them are packed with styrofoam.
+ Apart from the rather big size of Linux, µCLinux is much smaller and not as packed with features as Linux.
+ The lower parts of the big leaves are closely packed making a false stem that is not made of wood.
+ Sometimes rose petals are dried and packed so that you can use them for decoration or for scent.
+ Even if it is largely a topical update of Kubrick’s Dr Strangelove, it had a packed house at this north London fringe theatre cheering it to the echo.”.
+ Their feathers are very tightly packed and make a thick cover.
+ In solid materials, the atoms are tightly packed next to each other so they vibrate, but are not able to move as atoms in liquids do.
+ For these reasons columns could also be packed with porous gels.
+ The stars are too closely packed to get an accurate count, but it certainly has more stars than some of the smaller galaxies.
+ It is not easily packed up and carried away like a tent, or moved like a caravan.
+ Anchovies preserved by being gutted and saltsalted in brine, matured, then packed in oil, are an important food fish, both popular and infamous for their strong flavor.
+ When the fish are all tightly packed together, the Silky sharks attack the fish with great speed, and often consume the whole group of fish.
+ The pia’s capillaries are lined with cells that are packed very closely together.
+ There Humpty Dumpty explains that some of the unusual words in “Jabberwocky” are other words packed together into one word, as two parts of a portmanteau suitcase are packed together.
+ The bombs are often designed with objects such as nails, or ball bearings packed in and around the explosive device to act as shrapnel.
+ These Furbies, according to the story they come packed with, are from Furby Island.
+ James Montgomery from MTV describes the video as having “a clearing in the forest, one packed with party people — of all races, colors, creeds and proclivities, naturally — who are all in the midst of a totally excellent celebration.
More in-sentence examples of “packed”:
+ During the Golden Jubilee celebrations of Queen Elizabeth II in 2002, over one million people packed The Mall to watch the public displays and the appearance of the Royal Family on the palace balcony.
+ Today, goods other than bulk cargo are usually packed in shipping containers, which are carried.
+ Most of the Voortrekkers were not satisfied with the British government that ruled over them in the Cape in those years, that is why they packed their ox wagons and started to trek to greener valleys to the north of current South Africa.
+ Indian warriors did not fight in the European style of closely packed formations of soldiers, but more often fought as individuals.
+ He said the south side of the wall is packed with soil, which permits access to the top of the wall and makes it effectively invisible from the south side.
+ An Shell artillery shell is a hollow ball packed with explosive and a fuse.
+ Klima packed all the poison gas in the cylinders and sent it to Alabanda in an attempt to cause internal unrest and of course a civil war.
+ This is a rare transparency and translucencytransparent look at the huge group of closely packed stars at the Sagittarius constellation.
+ Penguins have a thick layer of blubber that helps them keep warm, and their feathers are very tightly packed to make another cover.
+ Gases trapped in clathrates are enclosed in ice and look like packed snow.
+ In an effort to get their hair back, men have tried “cures” like applying strange lotions or even having their heads packed in chicken manure.
+ Times New Roman is packed together, with tall lowercase letters.
+ The blend of spices or “masala” for these dishes is often sold in markets or packed by companies to be sold in shops.
+ Their horns are not like those of other horned mammals: the rhinoceros’ horn is made of keratin packed together very tightly.
+ A formation can be divided into ‘members’ and are themselves packed together in ‘groups’.
+ Then the chromatin is packed up into nucleosomes.
+ Its genome is much less densely packed than any other known virus.
+ Items are packed in Osaka and then shipped worldwide.
+ In earlier times, direct application of charcoal was packed onto the metal for carburization.
+ The dermal denticles are small, tightly packed and over-lapping, giving the hide a smooth or “silky” texture, giving the shark it’s name.
+ He follows her to a Grand Hotel packed with women.
+ Traditional tatami are packed with straw.
+ The genome of the virus is composed of multiple segments of double-stranded DNA packed in capsid proteins and a double or single layer envelope.
+ The Romans tried to transport it into the Roman Empire in tightly packed pots, but failed, according to Pliny.
+ Marks Avenue until her family packed up and moved to New Jersey.
+ When the British left Philadelphia, André packed up and stole many of Benjamin Franklin’s inventions, books, and other things.
+ During the Golden Jubilee celebrations of Queen Elizabeth II in 2002, over one million people packed The Mall to watch the public displays and the appearance of the Royal Family on the palace balcony.
+ Today, goods other than bulk cargo are usually packed in shipping containers, which are carried.
+ What you see as a single daisy is actually made of several hundred tiny flowers packed together.
+ One of the largest known star clusters, Messier 15, has several million stars, packed closely together, with a black hole at its centre.
+ Meristematic cells are packed closely together without intercellular cavities.
+ Like all hadrosaurs its beak was toothless, but its jaws were packed with around 1,500 tiny chewing teeth.
+ The “Ocean” came back in December and Collins wasted no time in getting most of the convicts and settlers packed up.
+ Everything is packed very tightly and can barely move.
+ Though it could be possible that binary stars may form when one star passes very close to another, it is highly unlikely, and would occur only in places where stars are densely packed together.
+ On May 14, six days before the vote, Trudeau made his final appearance at a packed Paul Sauvé Arena, where the PQ had celebrated their victory in 1976.
+ That same year, Bridget packed up her bags and headed off to Rome, never to return to her hometown again.
+ The bombs were packed into rucksacks and set off by the bombers themselves.
+ The tightly packed and highly charged sulfate groups of chondroitin sulfate generate electrostatic repulsion that provides much of the resistance of cartilage to compression.
+ The courtroom was packed with his friends and relatives, both Australian and U.S.
+ The Cheyenne lived in earth lodges with wood frames packed with dirt.
+ The owners and reasons for burial of the hoard are unknown, but it was carefully packed and the contents seem what a very rich family might have owned.
+ Beehives have hexagonal cells in them, packed together.
+ Towards the end of World War II, the camp was so crowded that 1,500 to 2,000 women were packed into barracks meant to hold only 250 people.
+ The Hungarians won the Women’s Chess Olympiads, with a team packed with Polgárs, in 1988 and 1990.Forbes, Cathy 1992.
+ The black powder was packed in a closed tube that had a hole in one end for escaping hot gases.
+ The Backpack Program partners with schools and community centers to distribute bags packed with a weekend’s supply of food.
+ By then, the ground is hard packed and grows only a few weeds.
+ After he had graduated he packed all his belongings into his Volkswagen and drove all the way across the United States to California where he got a job as a forklift operator.
+ During the Second World War the collection was packed up and moved out of London for to keep it safe.
+ Frozen blood taken from the individual previously can be used for a later transplant; packed red cells from a blood groupcompatible donor may be used, and blood substitutes may be used.
