Some sentences in use of “dublin”

How to use in-sentence of “dublin”:

+ In August 1922 the force accompanied Michael Collins Michael Collins when he met the Lord Lieutenant in Dublin Castle.

+ He lived in Dublin for much of his life.

+ Hansard quit school at age 13 to begin busking on local Dublin streets.

+ Tóibín died in Dublin on 13 November 2019, eight days before his 90th birthday.

+ In 1887 Thomas Middleton, a Dublin solicitor, thought that yacht racing was too expensive.

+ That new parliament, called “Dáil Éireann met in the Mansion House, Dublin in January 1919, although De Valera and leading Sinn Féin MPs had been arrested.

+ Educated in Dublin at Alexandra School and College; on October 1st 1907 she married Julius Mathison Turing, latter son of Reverend John Robert Turing and Fanny Boyd, in Dublin.

+ It was opened to the people of Dublin by Lord Chesterfield in 1745.

Some sentences in use of dublin
Some sentences in use of dublin

Example sentences of “dublin”:

+ The RSA was founded in 1754 by William Shipley as the Society for the Encouragement of Arts, Manufactures and Commerce, modelled on the Dublin Society for improving Husbandry, Manufactures and other Useful Arts.

+ She studied at Dublin High School Dublin High School.

+ In August 1878 when he was 38, Cope sailed to the British Isles to attend a scientific convention in Dublin Ireland.

+ It concerns the meeting of two Irishmen, Leopold Bloom and Stephen Dedalus, in the Dublin of 1904.

+ Robinson got the permission of the then Archbishop of Dublin, John Charles McQuaid to study in Trinity College, Dublin ; at the time Roman Catholics were forbidden by church rules from studying in TCD without special permission, called a dispensation.

+ It was disbanded after the end of the war in October 1923 and elements of it were absorbed into the Dublin Metropolitan Police.

+ Number 8 Hogan Avenue in Dublin near Grand Canal Dock was used for Rita’s house.

+ The RSA was founded in 1754 by William Shipley as the Society for the Encouragement of Arts, Manufactures and Commerce, modelled on the Dublin Society for improving Husbandry, Manufactures and other Useful Arts.

+ She studied at Dublin High School Dublin High School.
+ In August 1878 when he was 38, Cope sailed to the British Isles to attend a scientific convention in Dublin Ireland.

+ Wellesley was born in Dublin into a wealthy Anglo-Irish aristocratic protestant family.

+ Ormonde cleared the area around Dublin of Confederate forces.

+ Gambon was born in Dublin during World War II.

+ In 2010, Dublin Zoo received 963,053 visitors.

More in-sentence examples of “dublin”:

+ The river divides the city into two parts, North Dublin and South Dublin.

+ In 1938, the Dublin Metropolitan Garda Band and the Garda Band joined and were based at the Garda Headquarters in Phoenix Park.

+ His official residence was in the Viceregal Apartments in Dublin Castle.

+ Waterford and then Dublin were made royal cities and in the Middle Ages, Waterford was Ireland’s second city after Dublin.

+ This was in contrast to the attitude of the British Dublin Castle administration, which refused appeals from the Royal Irish Constabulary that that force be disarmed.

+ The band were formed in Dublin by Louis Walsh in 1993.

+ It is part of the County Dublin in the Provinces of Irelandprovince of Leinster.

+ He died in Dublin on 30 November 1983 at the age of 76.

+ The Dublin Zoo, in Phoenix Park, Dublin, Ireland is the largest zoo in Ireland.

+ Dion Dublin is an English former footballer.

+ The band started in Dublin in 1983 and are ended in 1997.

+ The River Liffey in Dublin city was used for many centuries for trade.

+ FitzGerald was born in Dublin in 1926 into a very politically active family.

+ FitzGerald was elected to Dáil Éireann at the 1969 general election, for the Dublin South-East constituency.

+ They usually met in the Council Chamber in Dublin Castle.

+ Out of these about 300 went into the General Post Office in Dublin led by Pádraig Pearse and James Connolly.

+ This left only districts in the north, the Dublin Pale, round Cork City, and certain smallish garrisons in the possession of Protestant commanders.

+ The Gardaí were also criticised in the Murphy Report, part 1, sections 1.93 On November 26, 2009, then Commissioner Fachtna Murphy apologised for the failure of An Garda Siochána to protect victims of child abuse in the Dublin Archdiocese.

+ The population is 525,383 in Dublin City, and 1,270,603 in Co.

+ The RIC worked together with the Dublin Metropolitan Police.

+ He lives in Sandymount, Dublin with his wife.

+ The following year Elizabeth ordered that Dublin Castle be improved so the lord lieutenant could live there.

+ Two Lords Lieutenant, William Cavendish, 4th Duke of DevonshireLord Hartington and the Duke of Portland, went from Dublin Castle to 10 Downing Street as Prime Minister of Great Britain, in 1756 and 1783 respectively.

+ Hillery died in Dublin on 19 January 2021, aged 83.

+ He served as Teachta Dála from February 2011 to February 2016 for the Dublin South constituency.

+ The river divides the city into two parts, North Dublin and South Dublin.

+ In 1938, the Dublin Metropolitan Garda Band and the Garda Band joined and were based at the Garda Headquarters in Phoenix Park.
+ His official residence was in the Viceregal Apartments in Dublin Castle.

+ Patrick’s Day in March he lived in Dublin Castle.

+ Murphy died on 15 May 2018 in Dublin at the age of 83.

+ Hansard also spent part of 2006 in front of the cameras for a music-infused Irish movie “Once”, in which Hansard plays a Dublin busker, and Irglová an immigrant street vendor.

+ Hopkirk was born in Belfast and studied at Clongowes Wood College in County Kildare from 1945–1949 before attending Trinity College, Dublin until 1953.

+ The Dublin and Monaghan bombings happened in Dublin and Monaghan, Republic of Ireland on 17 May 1974.

+ Homeless people live in many parts of the world including: San Francisco in California, Dublin in Ireland and Tallinn in Estonia.

+ He was born William FitzMaurice in Dublin in Ireland.

+ She was born in Ranelagh, Dublin and was a naturalised American citizen.

+ The “Official” part based in Dublin was not interested in fighting for people in Belfast, and the “Official” Sinn Féin was more interested in spreading Marxism rather than making Ireland united.

+ They looked at Cardiff and Dublin before deciding to move to Milton Keynes.

+ Wilkinson also performed with other professional choirs – the BBC Singers in London, the RTE Singers in Dublin and the Nederlands Kammerkoor.

+ Bridges outside of Dublin include the Liffey Bridge at Celbridge, “The Bridge at 16 and the Leinster Aqueduct – which takes the Grand Canal over the Liffey at Caragh.

+ The ceremony to announce the winner takes place at Vicar Street, Dublin in February or March each year.

+ While the Normans were in Ireland they built the original Dublin castle and many other stone castles.

+ It was produced by Steve Lillywhite, and recorded in a Dublin studio called Windmill Lane Studios.

+ Grace died on 11 July 2019 in Dublin from lung cancer at the age of 68.

+ In January 1919, these Sinn Féin MPs, or “TD”s, met in the Mansion House, Dublin and formed the First Dáil Éireann.

+ There are a few areas with rapids, mostly as the river comes close to Dublin city.

+ Padraic went to school for five years at University College Dublin with this money.

+ She was Leader of Sinn Féin#Vice PresidentsDeputy Leader of Sinn Féin from 2009 to 2018 and Dublin from 2004 to 2009.

+ He went to Dublin in 1361 to be the Chief Governor of Ireland.

+ Dewar dealt with the exams results fiasco and the lorry drivers strike, and attended the Labour party conference in Brighton in September, but at the end of September told the historian Tom Devine in Dublin that if there was no surge of the energy of old, he would have to reappraise the situation within a few months time.

+ Could someone look at the template to try to find out why? See Dublin for an example.

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