In-sentence examples of “milk”

How to use in-sentence of “milk”:

– This keeps the milk supply going.

– Skimmed milk is milk sold with some or nearly all of the fat removed.

– According to Greek mythology, she then pushes the baby away and a stream of her milk sprays the night sky, making a faint band of light known as the Milky Way.

– After 420 to 450 days of pregnancy the mother gives birth to one baby okapi, which drinks milk for up to 6 months.

– Pasteurised cows’ milk will turn sour if it is not kept in a refrigerator.

In-sentence examples of milk
In-sentence examples of milk

Example sentences of “milk”:

- The young are fed crop milk by the parents.

- The Fort Belknap Indian Reservation is just south of the town, across the Milk River.

– The young are fed crop milk by the parents.

– The Fort Belknap Indian Reservation is just south of the town, across the Milk River.

– There are three main types of chocolate: white chocolate, milk chocolate, and dark chocolate.

– In spite of all the other differences between them, the fact that bats and whales both feed their young on milk is one of the features used to classify both as mammals, since it was inherited from a common ancestor.

– Tracey’s best known recording is a suite inspired by Dylan Thomas’s radio drama “Under Milk Wood”.

– The making of tofu from soy milk is similar to the technique of making cheese from milk.

– After 12 months the young koala is old enough that it does not go into its mother’s pouch or need milk anymore.

– Usually it is made from the milk of sheep or goats.

– Skimmed milk is more popular in the United States than Britain.

– They also have breasts with milk glands, which allow them to nurse infants.

– Some medicines the Ancient Egyptians used are honey and breast milk or gazelle’s milk.

– Chocolate milk is a kind of cold, sweetened milk drink made by mixing cold milk with chocolate syrup or cocoa powder and sugar.

– These farmers had an interest to make milk digestible by adults.

– Lactose is found in milk products.

– Marsupials like opossums are born before their jaw bones have grown enough for them to drink their mothers’ milk the way other baby mammals do.

– In British English, Australian English, Canadian English and New Zealand English, biscuits are usually Sweet sweet and can be eaten with tea, milk or coffee.

More in-sentence examples of “milk”:

– A popular type of casserole is green bean casserole, which has green beans, milk or cream, and fried onions.

– Crissiumal is one of the greatest Brazilian milk producers.

– The time of this celebration is called the “white month”, which indicates that milk products are a central part of this tradition.

– It is usually made by mixing chocolate or cocoacocoa powder and sugar with warm milk or water.

– The ghee from the milk is used in ceremonies and in preparing religious food.

– The term “milk chocolate” was first used in 1687, to describe a drink which came from Jamaica to London, but the milk chocolate bar did not exist until 1875, when inventor Daniel Peter mixed the ingredients together to make it.

– Coconut cream is a thicker version of coconut milk which contains added sugar.

– Advocates of raw milk maintain, correctly, that some components survive in milk that has not been pasteurized.

– Lactation describes the secretion of milk from the mammary glandbreasts when a mother feeds her young.

– In 1982, the Bolognese delegation, said that the recipe must only be made of beef, pancetta, onions, carrots, celery, tomato paste, meat broth, red wine and milk or cream.

– There are many types of chocolate, including milk chocolate, dark chocolate, white chocolate, peanut butter chocolate, and many more.

– Some large dairy herds, especially those used to produce organic or “free-range” milk are kept on pasture where there is a good supply of grass and the fields are relatively small, but not so small that they are not able to graze regularly during the season when grass is growing.

– It is cut into small pieces and stirred into milk with sugar.

– More commonly seen are serabis, pancakes made with rice flour and coconut milk and smothered with a sauce made from coconut milk and palm sugar.

– This dessert is made out of coconut milk with a soft texture, a blend between creamy and icy.

– Also, milk provides the body with high quality proteins, and helps in meeting the body’s requirement for vitamins.

– Breast milk will also re-hydrate a child with diarrhea.

– For example, pasteurizationpasteurized milk can remain fresh for five days after its sell-by date if it is refrigerated properly.

– Crop milk is a way of feeding from the crop of parent birds, by regurgitating to young birds.

– The spread of this ‘milk tolerance’ is promoted by natural selection, because it helps people survive where milk is available.

– This cheese is called goat’s milk cheese.

– A milk substitute is a product that resembles milk.

– In ancient times other things were added which might include honey, milk and plant gums.

– While this “dacquoise” is based on layers of meringue “japonais”, it is held together with a mix of sour cream and milk and dark chocolates.

– Then they add sugar and milk to make the chocolate taste better.

– The milk of cows, goats, and sheep are most popular.

– Specifically, raw milk contains immunoglobulins and the enzymes lipase and phosphatase, which are inactivated by heat.

– In Hungary, palacsinta are made from flour, milk and soda water, sugar, and eggs.

– Eating milk fat, palm oil, and coconut oil will burn burn fat because they contain medium-chain triglycerides.

– The kits suck milk for 2.0 to 2.5 months, even though the kits eat solid food after 20–25 days.

– Goat’s milk cheese is cheese made from milk that came from a goat.

– In Africa, it is common to boil milk whenever it is harvested.

– Originally flat, round loaves made of emmer eggs, cheese, and honey, along with milk and fruit were also consumed.

– Thus, if you give milk to an adult cat it causes discomfort and diarrhea.

– These kind of milk products include cream, cottage cheese, ricotta cheese, and cream cheese.

– Yorkshire pudding is a BritainBritish food, a baked pudding made from a batter of eggs, flour, and milk or water.

– Unlike other vertebrates, they are the only animals that produce milk for the young through their mammary glands.

– He was very surprised to see that days later the milk had become solid.

– HTST pasteurized milk normally has a refrigerationrefrigerated shelf life of two or three weeks, but ultra pasteurized milk can last much longer when refrigerated, sometimes two or three months.

– It is a biscuit covered with caramel and milk chocolate.

– After this, her mother earned money by working for restaurants and delivering milk bottles.

– The oldest writings mentioning yogurt were by Pliny the Elder, who said that some people knew how to thicken the milk into something which was sour but tasty.

– In the 1970s, Nestlé marketed its soluble milk to mothers with infants.

– Both types of cows will keep producing milk as long as it is demanded, either by the calf, by the milking machine, or by the human that is hand-milking them.

– She feeds the babies milk until they start looking for food with the rest of the group, which is when they turn one month old.

– It is produced by curdling the milk of grass-fed cows.

– Possibly, such milk could be called “raw milk” or, confusingly, “unpasteurized milk“.

- A popular type of casserole is green bean casserole, which has green beans, milk or cream, and fried onions.

- Crissiumal is one of the greatest Brazilian milk producers.

Sentence example of “perfectly”

How to use in-sentence of “perfectly”:

+ In adulthood, Warren stood 32 inches tall, weighed 30 pounds, and was perfectly formed in every way.

+ There were extensive alterations in the 2nd and 3rd centuries, with many of the original black and white mosaics being overlaid with more sophisticated coloured work, including the perfectly preserved dolphin mosaic in the north wing.

+ A model can be used to show the perfectly competitive firm’s price and output level for a given product.

+ He appeared perfectly normal in his very early years.

+ The careful and skilled multiple-layering of shellac polish on properly prepared wood when completed results in a lusterous, perfectly flat shine of an exceedingly high standard.

+ Tajja won high praises without stint through its production that perfectly penetrated the material and a reality which it makes us an illusion like we are watching a movie.

+ This perfectly symmetrical monument took 22 years of hard Worklabour and 20,000 workers, masons and jewellers to build.

+ Here, as art historian Anne Poulet has said, “the gentle landscapes with their constantly changing atmosphere were perfectly attuned to his talents.

Sentence example of perfectly
Sentence example of perfectly

Example sentences of “perfectly”:

+ Catherine there learns that the gothic novels are wrong, and that Northanger Abbey is a perfectly normal place, and is not haunted.

+ An essential aspect of the BZ reaction is called"excitability": under the influence of stimuli, patterns develop in what would otherwise be a perfectly calm medium.
+ What this IP editor does however is point out something; this may influence other editors to vote in a certain way; so this action is perfectly legitimate.

+ Catherine there learns that the gothic novels are wrong, and that Northanger Abbey is a perfectly normal place, and is not haunted.

+ An essential aspect of the BZ reaction is called”excitability”: under the influence of stimuli, patterns develop in what would otherwise be a perfectly calm medium.

+ What this IP editor does however is point out something; this may influence other editors to vote in a certain way; so this action is perfectly legitimate.

+ Their orbital shapes range from nearly perfectly circular to highly eccentric and inclined.

+ In the long run, a perfectly competitive firm will be both allocatively and productively efficient.

+ Just by the way, there is a MediaWiki extension which can do this, but it seems to use an IRC network to provide the service, so in my opinion there really is no point in implementing an on-wiki chat system when freenode IRC is a perfectly fine alternative.

+ Generally, a perfectly competitive market exists when every firm in the market are price takers and no one is able to charge a different price without losing business.

+ Opus pseudoisodomum is a version of opus isodomum mentioned by Vitruvius, describing that it is a kind of stonemasonery in which “the rows of courses do not match but run unequally”, referring to the height and length of the blocks, which are nevertheless still perfectly cut.

+ It currently does work perfectly for years after 1582.

+ Although the henge is not perfectly circular, it has a diameter of about.

+ It lets singers perform perfectly tuned vocal tracks without needing to sing in tune.

+ Ring doughnuts are made by joining the ends of a long, thin piece of dough into a ring or by using a doughnut cutter, which perfectly cuts the outside and inside shape, leaving a doughnut-shaped piece of dough and a doughnut hole from dough removed from the center.

+ For example, mixing magenta and green in acrylic creates a dark cyan – something which would not happen if the mixing process were perfectly subtractive.

More in-sentence examples of “perfectly”:

+ Though perfectly consistent with the principles of the Dhamma, which sees no difference between man and man, except that which may exist by superiority of virtue, yet the step taken by the Buddha and his followers was indeed bold, considering the depraved moral condition of Ancient India and the consequent low self-estimation in which woman was then held.

+ Also, if an editor takes the responsibility upon themselves to attribute one or two articles for an infringing editor, aren’t they then responsible for all the non-attributed articles the infringer created? I’m perfectly willing to encourage new editors to attribute and, before I looked into this at the WMF, to attribute for them as an example.

+ I have placed a block on Markus for COI and this is perfectly acceptable given that we are to follow the norms of en.wiki when in doubt.

+ Lichter, then-Executive Director of the Camille and Henry Dreyfus Foundation, speaking in a plenary session at the 16th Biennial Conference on Chemical Education, posed the question “why do terms like ‘chemical educator’ even exist in higher education, when there is a perfectly respectable term for this activity, namely, ‘chemistry professor.’” One criticism of this view is that few professors bring any formal preparation in education or background about education to their jobs.

+ I’ve already had to delete a couple of pages for him on his behalf, which he is perfectly capable of doing himself.

+ However, a perfectly competitive firm will be allocatively efficient as the firm will be producing at the profit-maximising output where MC = MR, which is coincidentally the allocatively efficient point.

+ A small, barely noticeable amount of banding will occur even with a perfectly clean printhead due to the way the printer works.

+ They do not have the spins perfectly going in the same way anymore.

+ Swallows can build an almost perfectly round nest out of mud.

+ If you do not need these tools, don’t bother with requesting adminship; you can be a perfectly respected editor, without these tools – heck, you do not even need an account.

+ He is trained in the art of singing so perfectly that his songs can show ideas and feelings better than words.

+ In physics, two wave wave sources are perfectly coherent if they have a constant phase difference and the same frequency, and the same waveform.

+ Florence was perfectly sited for making cloth.

+ It is made to fit perfectly into someone’s hand.

+ Both ratios are zero when a market is perfectly competitive or a cartel is ineffective in raising prices.

+ To consider copies from enwiki of perfectly legitimate material plagiarism is unnecessary rules-following, in my opinion.

+ Overall, the items are more perfectly finished than any previous work.

+ Diffraction prevents anyone from creating a perfectly collimated beam.

+ However, neither concept lines up perfectly with the United StatesAmerican theory of due process.

+ The IP, when WhoIsed, comes up as a South Australian IP adress, which lines up perfectly with what he had on his EN user page, which is the capital of South Australia.

+ Within only a few weeks of losing a piece of limb, a salamander perfectly reforms the missing structure.

+ You have to kick the ball perfectly while being rushed by the other team.

+ A plane is a perfectly flat surface extending in all directions.

+ On the other hand, articles like Molotov cocktail describe how to build such a thing, are perfectly fine.

+ Thus the Queen/Sheep was speaking in a perfectly logical and meaningful way.

+ The discovery of “Rapetosaurus” was the first time a titanosaur had been recovered with an almost perfectly intact skeleton, complete with skull.

+ There is no finished version expected soon, and it is perfectly acceptable to let the editing process fashion an article up to our standards eventually.

+ Midgets are perfectly proportioned humans, while dwarves have a large head and misshapen limbs and torsos.

+ Saturn’s field is unique in that it is perfectly symmetrical, unlike any other known planet.

+ While it is perfectly acceptable for a nomination to be kept open for longer than the usual seven days, this one has been open for quite awhile and it doesn’t seem like there is consensus to either keep or delete the templates that are the subject of the nomination.

+ Then, the executioner quickly swung the axe down perfectly at the middle of Jane’s neck, which was severed in a single stroke.

+ Pittoni perfectly combines and renders light and airy materials with heavy elements, such as the helmet of Mars or the quivers of Cupid.

+ The banyan roots make a huge cylinder, and it stands up perfectly well.

+ Technically it is illegal for a minor to purchase any vaping products or any items associated with e-cigarettes but it is perfectly legal for a minor to use an e-cigarette, nicotine or nicotine-free.

+ To be perfectly honest…

+ Polite, caring, humble, she sang to the lyre perfectly and spoke clear Ionic Greek, spiced with Attic wit.

+ For example, predators appear perfectly ‘designed’ to catch their prey, whilst their prey seem equally well ‘designed’ to evade them.

+ The horses at St Marks all have one front hoof raised, so that they are perfectly balanced on only three legs.

+ If the subject matter isn’t perfectly obvious, please explain your request on the talk page.

+ In addition, the board called twin-tips is perfectly symmetric, so it allows windsurfers to glide in switch.

+ The dial plate will be perfectly horizontal there.

+ The “location” parameter includes a line break ; this is perfectly acceptable in all infobox fields except map/image and coordinate fields.

+ It is perfectly safe for a consumer to re-use a C2 bottle as long as it has not been used earlier to store harmful chemicals, and full sanitation is applied prior to the next usage occasion.

+ Their young are perfectly Bilateral symmetrysymmetrical, but the head is remodelled during a metamorphosis.

+ Since about 1889, when World Chess ChampionshipWorld Champion Wilhelm Steinitz addressed this issue, the overwhelming consensus has been that a perfectly played game would end in a draw.

+ He cut the hose to the length he needed with garden shears so that it was perfectly in tune.

+ This is right above the equator, so the satellites in this orbit do not swing north or south, but stay perfectly still above a point on the equator.

+ Though perfectly consistent with the principles of the Dhamma, which sees no difference between man and man, except that which may exist by superiority of virtue, yet the step taken by the Buddha and his followers was indeed bold, considering the depraved moral condition of Ancient India and the consequent low self-estimation in which woman was then held.

+ Also, if an editor takes the responsibility upon themselves to attribute one or two articles for an infringing editor, aren't they then responsible for all the non-attributed articles the infringer created? I'm perfectly willing to encourage new editors to attribute and, before I looked into this at the WMF, to attribute for them as an example.

“downtown” how to use?

How to use in-sentence of “downtown”:

+ The Columbia Center, formerly named the Bank of America Tower and Columbia Seafirst Center, is a skyscraper in downtown Seattle, Washington.

+ The Paul Revere house is the oldest building in downtown Boston that is still standing.

+ The old part of the city revolves around downtown and the four original neighborhoods from which the city expanded.

+ If a train is traveling toward Downtown Crossing, it is an Inbound train.

+ It is southwest of downtown Los Angeles.

+ The Alaska State Capitol in downtown Juneau was originally built as the Federal and Territorial Building in 1931.

+ However, some will not be linked together when Downtown Line opens in 2017.

+ The place where these two roads meet is in the middle of Winnipeg’s downtown area.

downtown how to use?
downtown how to use?

Example sentences of “downtown”:

+ The station is within the vicinity of Boon Keng MRT Station on the North East MRT LineNorth East Line, Circle Line and Downtown Line.

+ The others are the Circle Line and the Downtown Line.

+ More than thirty buildings in downtown Yates Center are included in the Yates Center Courthouse Square Historic District.

+ On August 9, 2001, there was a suicide bombing at a Sbarro restaurant in downtown Jerusalem, Israel.

+ Baghdad International Airport west of downtown Baghdad in the Baghdad Governorate.

+ It is about fourteen miles from downtown Los Angeles.

+ From 1993 until 1997, McHale was a member of the improv comedy group at Unexpected Productions, participating in Theatersports! at the Market Theater located in Pike Place Fish Market in downtown Seattle.

+ On August 14, 1936, downtown Owensboro was the site of the last public hanging in the United States.

+ The cultural center of Tel Aviv is a downtown intersection of streets at Dizengoff Circle.

+ Rogers Park is located nine miles north of the Cook County Courthouse in downtown Chicago.

+ Humphrey Metrodome, often simply called The Metrodome, was a domed sports stadium in downtown Minneapolis, Minnesota, USA.

+ It is the historic commercial center of downtown Chicago.

+ Every Valentine’s Day, a march is held in Downtown Eastside, Vancouver, which is an area with a lot of missing and murdered Indigenous women.

+ Today, art galleryart galleries, specialty shops, antiques stores, restaurants and inns have changed downtown and the waterfront into a social hub.

+ More than 70 city blockblocks of downtown burned to the ground.

+ In August of 2019 John Mackie of The Province reported that this provincial vacancy tax and the Empty Homes Tax are leading to larger numbers of real estate listings of luxury condos in downtown Vancouver.

+ Two years later, much of the Ocala downtown area was destroyed by a fire on Thanksgiving Day, 1883.

+ It is about 21 miles east of downtown San Antonio.

+ The station is within the vicinity of Boon Keng MRT Station on the North East MRT LineNorth East Line, Circle Line and Downtown Line.

+ The others are the Circle Line and the Downtown Line.
+ More than thirty buildings in downtown Yates Center are included in the Yates Center Courthouse Square Historic District.

More in-sentence examples of “downtown”:

+ It is located at 4th Street and Washington Street in downtown Saint Paul, Minnesota.

+ In West Virginia, the Kanawha County Courthouse, the West Virginia State Capitol campus, and several other buildings in downtown Charleston were evacuated.

+ Of the downtown community areas, the Near North Side has the second largest total area, after the Near West Side, the highest number of skyscrapers, and the largest population.

+ The Disneyland Resort is located several miles south of downtown Anaheim, near the border of neighboring Garden Grove.

+ The line is in the shape of a single loop and connects with the MRT North South Line at Choa Chu Kang Station and the Downtown Line at Bukit Panjang.

+ Today, the Blue Line runs from Revere, MassachusettsRevere and East Boston to a small part of downtown Boston.

+ The interstate highways were supposed to go through downtown Baltimore, but the people in the city did not want this to happen.

+ It includes the Broadway Extension part, which connects suburban Edmond to downtown Oklahoma City.

+ The video also features the band performing in a small room, or box, more likely to be explained, on a busy street in downtown Los Angeles singing the song.

+ It goes through downtown Albany.

+ Because Fukui prefecture is famous for dinosaurs, there are monuments of dinosaurs in front of JR Fukui station in the downtown of Fukui-shi.

+ Their second studio album “Death by Sexy” was released on April 11, 2006 in the United States and on July 3, 2006 in Europe through Downtown Records and Columbia Records.

+ However, the downtown area was built on a broad, flat floodplain at the junction of the Kansas and Big Blue rivers.

+ Greenwood is west of downtown Shreveport.

+ It runs between the Interstate 196 near Downtown Grand Rapids; and the Interstate 96 in Walker.

+ A memorial service was held at the Staples Center in downtown Los Angeles on July 7, 2009.

+ The downtown area has many tall buildings.

+ This part of the Green Line goes from Cambridge to downtown Boston.

+ The Downtown Line Mass Rapid Transport line in Singapore, the third to be completely underground, and with 3-car trains, the second medium capacity line.

+ The annual Alabama Blueberry Festival is held at Burnt Corn Creek Park and downtown Brewton.

+ The downtown area of Daegu is Dongseongro.

+ In 2005, the staff of “The Political Cesspool” organized a rally at Confederate Park, which, along with two other Confederacy-themed parks in downtown Memphis, has been the subject of a longtime disagreement for honoring Confederate States of AmericaConfederate soldiers and ideals.

+ Three major films have been filmed on location in downtown Wetumpka.

+ During the Great Flood of 1993, the park and most of Downtown Parkville were submerged under more than 15 feet of water.

+ After its first publicly known proposal for a second theme park in Anaheim was scrapped, construction began in 1998 on a theme park called Disney California AdventureDisney’s California Adventure Park; a hotel called Downtown Disney.

+ The station has many entrances/exits, the two main ones facing the Raffles Gardens, with the building being a miniature facade of the historic John Little building, just before the Telok Ayer and Downtown MRT Station came on board.

+ It is located at 4th Street and Washington Street in downtown Saint Paul, Minnesota.

+ In West Virginia, the Kanawha County Courthouse, the West Virginia State Capitol campus, and several other buildings in downtown Charleston were evacuated.
+ Of the downtown community areas, the Near North Side has the second largest total area, after the Near West Side, the highest number of skyscrapers, and the largest population.

+ Suntec City is a major multi-use development located in Marina Centre, a subzone of the Downtown Core in Singapore.

+ This station is within a ten-minute walk to Bendemeer MRT station on the Downtown Line.

+ It is 35 miles east of downtown Los Angeles.

+ It is north of downtown on the other side of Mount Royal.

+ It may have a direct rail connection by regional rail, light rail, or Rapid transitsubway to the downtown or central business district of the closest major city.

+ If a train is traveling away from Downtown Crossing, it is an Outbound train.

+ The Marina Bay Sands is a resort in Marina Bay, SingaporeMarina Bay within the Downtown Core district of Singapore.

+ The library is now at 301 W 1st St in downtown Los Angeles.

+ Most of the skyscrapers in downtown Philadelphia were designed by Louis Kahn.

+ Once drivers reach the western terminus at South San Antonio Road, they can continue on First Street to go through downtown Los Altos or take Foothill expressway to get to Palo Alto or Cupertino.

+ It is located just south of the downtown central business district, the Loop, which is itself a community area.

+ The New York Times described downtown Scottsdale as “a desert version of Miami’s South Beach.” The Times article also stated there was “plenty of late night partying and a buzzing hotel scene”.

+ After the start of the Second Sino-Japanese War, Ballard’s family temporarily left their suburban home and rented a house in downtown Shanghai to avoid the shells fired by Chinese and Japanese forces.

+ Ted Stevens Anchorage International Airport southwest of downtown Anchorage.

+ Salesforce Tower, formerly known as the Transbay Tower, is a office skyscraper in the South of Market, San FranciscoSouth of Market district of downtown San Francisco.

+ Currently the company is headquartered in an unincorporated area within Henrico County, less than five miles west of the city limits of Richmond and less than ten miles from its downtown Richmond campus.

+ This station served as the northern terminus of the Downtown Line until 27 December 2015, when it was replaced by Bukit Panjang as the second phase of the line opens.

+ It is located at 75 East Wacker Drive in the downtown “loop” area, adjacent to the Chicago River.

+ The downtown area of Avarua is located at sea level.

+ The neighborhood is close to Georgetown Georgetown, Foggy Bottom, Dupont Circle, the downtown business district, the International Monetary Fund, the World Bank, the Kennedy Center, and the Watergate.

+ The Everett McKinley Dirksen United States Courthouse, commonly referred to as the Dirksen Federal Building, is a skyscraper in downtown Chicago, Illinois.

+ It started as the Athenaeum, which opened in 1831 in downtown Cincinnati.

+ The shooting was followed by protests, property damage, arson, and shooting deaths in downtown Kenosha.

+ The Target Center is an arena in downtown Minneapolis, Minnesota.

Example sentences of “enlisted”

How to use in-sentence of “enlisted”:

+ Specialist is one of the four junior enlisted ranks in the U.S.

+ Sarojini Sahoo is an Indian writer, who has been enlisted among 25 exceptional women of India by ‘Kindle’ English magazine of Kolkata.

+ He enlisted in Hong Kong in 1870.

+ He was enlisted in the United States Navy where he served for two years.

+ It was there that Barrett enlisted in the United States Army and was assigned to Company A of the 1st U.S.

+ In 2020, Illuminated Films has been awarded funding from the BFI Young Audience Content Fund for a half hour special called A Bear Named Wojtek based on a true story about a orphaned bear in World War 2 that is enlisted into the Polish army and travels to Scotland before ending up at Edinburgh Zoo.

+ Twelve Union Army enlisted men and nine officers were presented the Medal of Honor for their actions during the battle.

Example sentences of enlisted
Example sentences of enlisted

Example sentences of “enlisted”:

+ In early 1942, after the attack on Pearl Harbor, Hammett again enlisted in the United States Army.

+ The meeting with Cohen must have been between September 1941 and July 1942, before Cohen enlisted in the army and left for the Western Front Western Front in Europe.

+ In early 1942, after the attack on Pearl Harbor, Hammett again enlisted in the United States Army.

+ The meeting with Cohen must have been between September 1941 and July 1942, before Cohen enlisted in the army and left for the Western Front Western Front in Europe.

+ Warren enlisted Paul Revere and William Dawes on April 18, 1775.

+ Upon completion of this school enlisted members often continue on to a specialized school.

+ His wife Korey was enlisted soon after to play keyboards live in order to alleviate John’s live performance duties.

+ Dausset was sent off to Northern Italy for a year after he was enlisted in the French Army.

+ In 1774 Baldwin enlisted in a regiment, and commanded the Woburn militia at the Battle of Lexington and Concord as a major.

+ These branches of the military use different names for the enlisted ranks, but they all use the same for officers.

+ Aged 19 when Italy entered World War I on the side of the Entente, Pertini opposed the war, but enlisted in the army where he served as a lieutenant and was decorated for bravery.

+ In keeping with their target market of young males, Red Bull has also enlisted help from celebrities, such as Eminem that would appeal to this group.

+ However, on submarines, where the deck department may only have a few junior sailors, the first lieutenant may be a senior enlisted member, such as a first-class petty officer or chief petty officer.

+ Poe enlisted in the army.

+ Most branches also includes “Warrant Officers” They are considered experts in their field, they are higher rank than other enlisted troops, but below officers.

+ The total force would be 8 officers and 120 Enlisted rankenlisted men.

More in-sentence examples of “enlisted”:

+ Also enlisted were some of the top RB and hip hop producers of the time, among them Tony Dofat, Mark Morales and Cory Rooney, Dave Hall Dave “Jam” Hall, and DeVante Swing.

+ His father joined the Army as an enlisted man, and became an officer who spent most of his 30-year career in the Medical Service Corps.

+ About 1,300 “plebes” enter the Academy each summer for the orientation program, this class consists of not only high school students but also enlisted Sailors and Marines.

+ In 1991, Field was inspired to create an album of children’s music based upon concepts of early childhood education, and enlisted Cook, Page, and Fatt to assist him.

+ At the age of 18, Ross enlisted in the U.S.

+ He enlisted in the New Zealand Army in 1974 as a private.

+ Trying again, she enlisted as a surgeon in the war and was transferred to the 52nd Ohio Infantry.

+ Colonel “Bud” Day served 30 months in the South Pacific during WW II as an enlisted member with the US Marine Corps.

+ He enlisted in the U.S.

+ Gorman began his military service as an enlisted sailor in the United States Navy.

+ Hingle enlisted in the U.S.

+ He was the first enlisted soldier to receive the medal.

+ The obligation attaches on the first day of a cadet’s second class year, and non-graduates after that point are expected to fulfill their obligations in enlisted service.

+ Because he was an officer and not an enlisted man, he was held prisoner in inns instead of barracks and ate dinner with rich people.

+ The badges for enlisted men were cut from colored cloth.

+ The European powers and their colonies also enlisted Indian tribes to help them do war against each other’s colonial settlements.

+ On July 24, 1861, the Secretary of War called on the Governor of California for Enlisted rankenlisted volunteer to guard the overland mail route from Fort Laramie.United States War Dept, “Letter from the Secretary of War…” Washington, DC: U.S.

+ To honour his late father, John Graves Simcoe enlisted as an Ensign Ensign in the British Army.

+ Then she enlisted herself in the People’s Liberation Army.

+ They enlisted the talents of bassist Don “Riff” Fertman to form The Bats.

+ During the two world wars many Mirpuris enlisted in the merchant navy and armed services.

+ One of the reasons was that Marines were paid $3 a month less than other Confederate enlisted men.

+ The enlisted ranks also wore the “kepis”.

+ After his graduation from college Wai enlisted in the Hawaii National Guard.

+ Julia Smith enlisted Tony Holland as the “Angels” script editor after the show became a twice-weekly soap.

+ By 1570, Cervantes had enlisted as a soldier in a regiment of the Spanish naval elite corps, Infantería de Marina, stationed in Naples, then a possession of the Spanish crown.

+ When the United States entered World War II in 1941, Garroway enlisted in the U.S.

+ In 1992, she was enlisted into the Michigan Women’s Hall of Fame.Born in 1841 in New Brunswick, at that point a British settlement, Edmonds grew up with her sisters on their family’s homestead close Magaguadavic Lake, not a long way from the outskirt with the State of Maine.

+ By the end of 1946, with 243 reserve pilots, 1,375 volunteer reserve pilots, 255 inactive reserve enlisted men, and 368 active duty station keepers, Los Alamitos was one of the busiest Naval Air Reserve Stations.

+ In 1956, when he was seventeen years old, Gaye left home and enlisted in in the United States Air Force.

+ At its largest, it was 7,950 officers and enlisted men.

+ At the beginning of the war he enlisted in the 26th Continental Regiment commanded by Colonel Samuel Gerrish.

+ He then enlisted in the Australian Army Medical Corps, rising to the rank of Lieutenant Colonel.

+ He enlisted near the end of World War II and was stationed in Italy as a military policeman.

+ All enlisted men had one row of brass buttons on their coats.

+ Howard Publisher; copyright 1992, page 136 General Stoneman claimed to have captured 34 officers and 845 enlisted men during the raid.

+ Kelly initially enlisted in the U.S.

+ Addison enlisted in the Australian Infantry Force in 1914, serving at Gallipoli during the First World War where he was wounded.

+ Mantee enlisted in the U.S.

+ He enlisted into the 143rd Pennsylvania Infantry.

+ Tonio has enlisted so that he can marry Marie.

+ In 2017, Chanhyuk enlisted for the military, thus putting the group on hiatus until his return.

+ In many armed forces in the world, Private First Class is a rank held by junior enlisted persons.

+ This gave enlisted soldiers more opportunities to progress to a full career.

+ Bradstreet set out from Fort Schlosser in early August 1764 with about 1,200 soldiers and a large contingent of Native allies enlisted by Sir William Johnson.

+ He was enlisted as a Band Boy.

+ Also enlisted were some of the top RB and hip hop producers of the time, among them Tony Dofat, Mark Morales and Cory Rooney, Dave Hall Dave "Jam" Hall, and DeVante Swing.

+ His father joined the Army as an enlisted man, and became an officer who spent most of his 30-year career in the Medical Service Corps.
+ About 1,300 "plebes" enter the Academy each summer for the orientation program, this class consists of not only high school students but also enlisted Sailors and Marines.

In sentence use of “nonviolent”

How to use in-sentence of “nonviolent”:

+ The Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee brought in more Freedom Riders to keep the movement going.

+ He was also President of the Nonviolent Radical Party.

+ Lewis, who as chairman of the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee Big Six” leaders of groups who organized the 1963 March on Washington.

+ She was a project director for the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee.

+ Approaching the Birmingham Children’s Crusade with this background, Bevel spoke to the young students at Saturday nonviolent training sessions, “You are responsible for segregation, you and your parents because you have not stood up… no one has the power to oppress you if you don’t cooperate.

+ Sometimes the demonstrators are nonviolent but other people who oppose them will come to the demonstration and behave violently to show their opposition.

+ In 2018, Kardashian met with President Donald Trump and helped bring forth the release from prison of Alice Marie Johnson, who was given a life prison sentence for nonviolent drug charges.

+ Only when “no one” is allowed to use force against nonviolent people or their legitimate property are people truly equal.

In sentence use of nonviolent
In sentence use of nonviolent

Example sentences of “nonviolent”:

+ Parks and was a civil rights activist and NAACP member; she had just returned from a training on nonviolent civil disobedience.”Parks Recalls Bus Boycott, Excerpts from an interview with Lynn Neary”, “National Public Radio”, 1992, linked at, NPR, October 25, 2005.

+ He continued to work in the nonviolent movement throughout his life, becoming national secretary from 1968 to 1976.

+ Segregation would end when devoted Christians, doing God’s work on earth, led a nonviolent crusade to destroy it.

+ He is a decorated veteran of the War in Iraq, Kokesh came to disparage war and advocate nonviolent resistance to power.

+ The Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee was the main channel of student activity to the Civil Rights Movement in the 1960s.

+ He risked jail for his nonviolent actions.

+ During her political life, she was most well known for her work in the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee.

+ At the conference, they decided to form the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee.

+ On 17 January 1973, former secretary of the Nonviolent Movement, following a posting against the celebration of the Armed Forces on 4 November, he was arrested in Perugia and sentenced for direct contempt of the Armed Forces.

+ In the game, the Defiant Dragons are doing a nonviolent revolution.

+ In 1962, Adams became a secretary for the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee.

+ Led by a Friends of Student Nonviolent Coordinating CommitteeSNCC student activist named Mario Savio, more than three thousand students surrounded a police car where a student, arrested for setting up a card table against a ban by the University, was being taken away.

+ He was among the organizers of the Catania-Comiso March to protest against the installation of the US missile base, the first concrete action of nonviolent struggle against military installations in Italy.

+ But no one can force others to do things that they do not want to do, or to stop them from doing nonviolent things that they want to do.

+ Anarcho-capitalist believe hierarchy exists only when a person is given the authority to use force against a nonviolent person or that person’s legitimate property.

+ The NICRA used the same methods used by the American Civil Rights Movement: nonviolent marches, Picketing pickets, sit-ins, and protests.

+ He was the co-founder of the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee, and chairperson of the SNCC’s direct action committee.

+ Today, the SCLC says it is “a nonprofit, non-sectarian, inter-faith, advocacy organization that is committed to nonviolent action to achieve social justicesocial, economic, and political Christians.

+ He was the creator of Nonviolent Communication.

+ Parks and was a civil rights activist and NAACP member; she had just returned from a training on nonviolent civil disobedience."Parks Recalls Bus Boycott, Excerpts from an interview with Lynn Neary", "National Public Radio", 1992, linked at, NPR, October 25, 2005.

+ He continued to work in the nonviolent movement throughout his life, becoming national secretary from 1968 to 1976.
+ Segregation would end when devoted Christians, doing God’s work on earth, led a nonviolent crusade to destroy it.

Some sentences in use of “sumerian”

How to use in-sentence of “sumerian”:

– Dilmun appears first in Sumerian languageSumerian cuneiform clay tablets from the end of fourth millennium BC.

– The Sumerian language continued as a religious language taught in schools in Babylonia and Assyria, for as long as cuneiform was used.

– Sanders “Margins of writing, origins of culture”: 91-120 Chicago but Sumerian continued to be used as a sacred, ceremonial, literary and scientific language in Mesopotamia until the 1st century AD.

– Nippur was one of the most ancient of all the Sumerian cities.

– He was one of the oldest gods in the Sumerian religion.

– This writing system was extremely successful, and outlasted the Sumerian empire.

– Records of Sumerian intake of the poppy plant include descriptions of the mind-altering affects upon ingestion.

– In several polytheistic religions, priestesses of certain gods have to be virgins, one notable exception is the Sumerian goddess Fauk’Stek, who was believed to have impregnated the sun god Loki and to have ‘taught the Earth and its sons the glory of sacrifice’.Sarah Iles Johnston, “Religions of the Ancient World: A Guide”, Harvard University Press 2004, p.417 In many cultures it is said that women should be virgins until marriage.

Some sentences in use of sumerian
Some sentences in use of sumerian

Example sentences of “sumerian”:

– Excuses for non-delivery were not unknown, and there are recovered Sumerian letters that complain of sickly goats, sheep that had already been fleeced, etc.

– Whereas the earlier Sumerian punishments had not been harsh, Babylonian law was quite severe.

– The “Simon” “Necronomicon” is based on Sumerian mythology.

– They wrote in two different languages: Sumerian for religious purposes and Akkadian language for official purposes.

– He ruled from a new capital, Akkad, which the Sumerian king list claims he built on the left bank of the Euphrates.

– In the Sumerian city, the Ziggurat of Ur was a skyscraper over the city.

– She works in the study of Sumerian civilization.

– Uranus is named after UranosUranus, the Greek name of the Sumerian god Anu, who was a god of sky.

– A description of the making of beer on this ancient engraving in the Sumerian language is the earliest account of what is easily recognised as barley, followed by a pictograph of bread being baked, crumbled into water to form a mash, and then made into a drink, that is recorded as having made people feel “…wonderful and blissful”.

- Excuses for non-delivery were not unknown, and there are recovered Sumerian letters that complain of sickly goats, sheep that had already been fleeced, etc.

- Whereas the earlier Sumerian punishments had not been harsh, Babylonian law was quite severe.

– Straws have been found in Sumerian temples made of gold and lapis lazuli.

– This makes ancient timelines very difficult to reconstruct, because they are based on separate and scattered king lists, such as the Sumerian King List and the Babylonian Canon of Kings.

– The original Sumerian script was adapted for the writing of the Akkadian languageAkkadian, Urartian languages, and it inspired the Ugaritic and Old Persian alphabets.

– They were used by the Sumerian civilisation in Mesopotamia.

– One of the most famous Sumerian cities was Ur.

– A series of Sumerian legends and poems about the mythological hero-king Gilgamesh were probably gathered into a longer Akkadian languageAkkadian poem some time before the 7th century BC.

“If not” use in sentences

How to use in-sentence of “If not”:

+ Even if the outcome is not affected, fraud can still have a damaging effect if not punished.

+ It is often applied to paint, tires, and other goods that become toxic waste if not disposed of properly.

+ All other fields are optional and will not display if not present in the template or do not have any value.

+ Discussions about the fate of these links took place in numerous places over some time, with a number of people advocating removal of all external links from the infobox, if not the article as a whole.

+ They make texts ununderstandable at times and, if not blue-linked, unsupported in many cases since if I don’t know the basis of an argument, I can’t accept it.

+ While I know that solving such systems is an art to itself, I still noticed that we lack articles to most – if not all such methods.

+ There is a clause in the rule that if not everyone believes the item to be not notable then it should be listed on Requests for Deletion.

If not use in sentences
If not use in sentences

Example sentences of “If not”:

+ I’ve noticed though that most if not all the edits are written in complex English.

+ Led by singer Jim Morrison, along with Ray Manzarek, the group is thought of today as a major influence on rock music, and they are still just as popular as they ever were, if not more popular.

+ The oldest forms of life existed 3.8 billion years ago, if not longer.

+ However there are other houses of Europe that style themselves as Grand Dukes even if not wholly recognised by the rest of society.

+ The Roman Empire carried out about ten thousand executions, most if not all beheadings, during its time, and there is no doubt that many of these were those convicted of attempted murder.

+ A seven digit number; if not seven digits, zero-fill leading digits to make seven digits.

+ Any editor encountering such usage should change the date to plain text with no template; or if not confident in doing so, raise the matter on this template’s talk page.

+ A block may be necessary purely to prevent further disruption, if not blocking them from editing certain pages.

+ By default, simply writing if not numeric.

+ Maintenance of such a list and standards for inclusion could prove problematic, and :Category:Red light districts is sufficient, if not more effective, in keeping track of such articles.

+ By testing the guesses they learn if their guess was right and if not why it was not.

+ I've noticed though that most if not all the edits are written in complex English.

+ Led by singer Jim Morrison, along with Ray Manzarek, the group is thought of today as a major influence on rock music, and they are still just as popular as they ever were, if not more popular.

+ There is evidence of Roman style irrigation being introduced and for at least some Garamantes adopting a sedentary and a town, if not urban, lifestyle.

+ This may be preferable if not many of the results require such leading zeroes, or if there is consensus that results should be presented with leading zeroes.

+ Acromegaly is most commonly diagnosed in middle aged adults, and can result in severe disfigurement, serious complicating conditions, and early death if not treated.

+ The code to use is as follows: If not used, set to non-true value, leave blank, or delete the parameter.

+ Her lower to mid-range belts are often supported, if not resonant, and she can sustain notes in the 5th octave in all vowels.

+ Critical is ‘social control’: the ability to suppress urges which, if not suppressed, could lead to socially unacceptable outcomes.

+ Most, if not all, British movies should be in a subcategory of that cat instead.

+ Stem cells are found in most, if not all, plants and animals.

More in-sentence examples of “If not”:

+ The hoard has been described by Leslie Webster, former keeper of the department of prehistory at the British Museum, as “absolutely the metalwork equivalent of finding a new Lindisfarne Gospels or Book of Kells”, and “this is going to alter our perceptions of Anglo-Saxon England as radically, if not more so, as the Sutton Hoo discoveries”.

+ Just to check is this enabled here? If not for having this tool will be useful to prevent abuse while not being overtly protective of a page.

+ Cyber-bullying is now a federal criminal offense in the USA, and I believe it is also an offense in most, if not all, the EU; it certainly is in the UK.

+ That is, there should be a way to falsify the hypothesis, at least in principle if not in practice.

+ Sardinian is quite separate from Italian and said to be one of the languages, if not the language, keeping most archaic features of ancient Latin.

+ One of our main criteria for inclusion, if not “the” main one, is notability.

+ Soon after, Claudius married Aelia Paetina, a relative of Sejanus, if not Sejanus’s adoptive sister.

+ An alternative solution that works in most if not all browsers is to use images in place of the text.

+ At the conclave, “it was, if not Ratzinger, who? And as they came to know him, the question became, why not Ratzinger?”Goodstein, Laurie and Elisabetta Povoledo.

+ It will be optional; if not provided it will default to English.

+ This blank template excludes some optional parameters that must be omitted if not used, plus some older parameters that still work but have been replaced by newer parameter names.

+ Second, the procedure violated the terms of Section Seven, which state, “if he approve he shall sign it, but if not he shall return it.” Thus, the President may sign the bill, veto it, or do nothing, but he may not amend the bill and then sign it.

+ If this vote was constricted to just the people who actively edit this site, it would be a very different result, because 2 or 3 of the supports and at least 3 of the oppose votes, if not more, were made by users who are not active on this site, and have not been for some time.

+ This can cause errors for duplicate reference definitions if not carefully managed.

+ The music of the A sections is similar in both sections, if not exactly identical.

+ Though the process is a little complicated, it is possible to insert this infobox into most if not all other infoboxes.

+ Then it will work, if not ask for help.

+ Mid-18th century dancer Marie Camargo of the Paris Opéra Ballet was the first to wear a non-heeled shoe, enabling her to perform leaps that would have been difficult, if not impossible, in the old shoes.

+ There’s still no consensus for a promotion and, although in my opinion it is close – if not there – there still seems to be concerns so it would be improper to promote at this time.

+ They began arriving twelve or forty thousand years ago, if not earlier.

+ Ecstasy is illegal in most, if not all, countries.

+ The template’s name parameter will be automatically extracted from the article title when you save the page if not specified.

+ The change in body temperature and the tendency to dance for hours on end can make users dehydrate if not enough water is drunk during this time.

+ He was one of the few players of Slovak descent in the NHL’s younger years if not the first one ever.

+ The idea that this right comes from doing good things for the people under control of the government is as old as Ancient Greece if not older.

+ The hoard has been described by Leslie Webster, former keeper of the department of prehistory at the British Museum, as "absolutely the metalwork equivalent of finding a new Lindisfarne Gospels or Book of Kells", and "this is going to alter our perceptions of Anglo-Saxon England as radically, if not more so, as the Sutton Hoo discoveries".

+ Just to check is this enabled here? If not for having this tool will be useful to prevent abuse while not being overtly protective of a page.

+ I think he must agree to be on probation for a minimum of 6 months if not longer.

+ It looks like we have consensus here maybe to implement a block of some type on the IPs at the very least if not their main account as well.

+ With over 2,800 edits, over half them in mainspace, over 100 created articles and 15 created categories, at least 100 QD tags almost all, if not all, of my deleted edits come from them, as far as I can tell.

+ Mountford wrote that most, if not all, of the stars seen in the southern hemisphere had Aboriginal myths associated with them.

+ However, Lucy is quite satisfied, if not happy, there.

+ Many, if not most, “lay members” of Conservative synagogues in North America do not follow these laws.

+ This is the definition used in most, if not all, modern circumstances.

+ It was believed that only humans got scurvy but in 1907, Alex Holst and Theodore Frohlich, two NorwayNorwegian chemists found that guinea pigs could also get it if not given fresh food.

+ This checks if Infobox foo bar is in the lead, and is also the only infobox in the lead, and if so returns, and if not returns nothing.

+ Jails may also hold key trial witnesses for criminal cases, known as “material witnesses”, who have been found by a court to be unlikely to appear to testify if not detained, and people who have been charged with crimes in other states who are being held for extradition proceedings.

+ Article has plenty of refs, is at about 4kb and I believe it meets most if not all of the GA criteria.

+ The 2014 FIFA World Cup group tables are shown on the overall World Cup page, as well as the pages for each Group, if not other pages as well.

+ Grouse, if not destroyed at some period of their lives, would increase in countless numbers; they are known to suffer largely from birds of prey; and hawks are guided by eyesight to their prey, so much so, that on parts of the Continent persons are warned not to keep white pigeons, as being the most liable to destruction.

+ Most, if not all, of the world’s religions promote selflessness as a very important moral value.

+ Both of the animals are presented as smart if not on a level with humans, and the book constantly emphasizes the point that both are creatures who rely on their sense of smell as much as humans rely on sight, particularly Copper.

+ Vandalism is normally noticed and removed within a few minutes, if not seconds ; but sometimes it can remain unnoticed for days, and even if not, someone will have to see it before it can be removed, and this could be anyone.

+ Otherwise, if not poisonous, they will usually have camouflage.

+ Validates language names provided inlanguage= parameter if not an ISO639-1 or 639-2 code.

+ Most, if not all Italian salamis have garlic in them, but few German kinds do, for example.

+ As promised, I will not have another RfA for at least another 6 months from now, if not more.

+ In latin dances the partners are said to be in closed hold if they have their hands on each other, if not they are in semi-open or open positions.

+ Most shops, if not all, will have to mark such products down as wasted, leading to a loss of profit.

Some in-sentence examples of “summon”

How to use in-sentence of “summon”:

+ To stop it, he needs to summon the Four Giants.

+ The tinderbox can summon three magic dogs that will do what the soldier wants them to do.

+ Kratos then tells Lloyd that there is a ninth Summon Spirit by the name of Origin.

+ The call also serves a rallying call to summon others to mob and harass the predator.

+ Necromancy is a form of divination in which a person tries to summon the spirits of the dead.

+ In the later comic books, Stark took an experimental virus called “Extremis” which allowed him to control his suit with his mind and summon it wherever he was.

+ While trying to learn how to summon Porunga, the namekian dragon, Frieza is confronted by Nail, the strongest of the Namek warriors.

+ They summon Benjamin, Rachel’s only other son, who became Jacob’s favorite after he was told that Joseph died, to Egypt and framed him for theft, threatening to enslave him as punishment.

Some in-sentence examples of summon
Some in-sentence examples of summon

Example sentences of “summon”:

+ For example, Poké Balls can summon Pokémon, and Mushrooms can either grow the person whom touches it, unless it is a Poison Mushroom which makes them shrink.

+ The series begins with Goku and Bulma finding all seven Dragon Balls, which can summon the dragon Shenlong to grant the user a wish.

+ For example, Poké Balls can summon Pokémon, and Mushrooms can either grow the person whom touches it, unless it is a Poison Mushroom which makes them shrink.

+ The series begins with Goku and Bulma finding all seven Dragon Balls, which can summon the dragon Shenlong to grant the user a wish.

+ It is revealed in this book that Nico can summon the dead.

+ The injunction was applicable until 5 February 2015, the date on which the High Court was scheduled to summon both parties for a formal hearing of the case.

+ Pathogens also stimulate the macrophage to produce chemokines, which summon other cells to the site of infection.

+ He inserted the Saint Corpse’s heart into his body to manifest his dimension-traveling Stand D4C, using it to transfer his mind to an alternate version and able to summon others from alternate realities, though only he and his counterparts are immune to the universal law where two iterations of the same person cannot be in physical contact with each other.

+ Writs were used by the medieval English kings to summon persons to Parliament.

+ They could summon the Senate, propose legislation and intervene on the behalf of plebeians in legal matters.

+ They could also summon any of the Roman assemblies and preside over them.

+ Xemnas, the leader of Organization XIII, is trying to summon Kingdom Hearts, which he claims will enable the Nobodies to get their hearts back.

+ Warlocks also summon demonic minions to help them in battle.

+ Place on your user-page to summon the template.

+ Late in the season, the Trix steal Puella’s power, the Blast Magix, and use it to summon the Army of Darkness.

+ The sword helps him channel his power to control and summon the dead, along with draining an enemy’s soul to reinforce his sword’s power.

+ There are 30 Summon Sequences in “Dark Dawn”; 16 from the first game can be used alongside, 13 multi-elemental sequences introduced in “The Lost Age”, and 1 new sequence in “Dark Dawn”.

+ Hermione helps him to perfect a Summoning Charm, which he uses to summon his Firebolt broomstick and fly past the dragon to retrieve a golden egg, receiving high marks from the judges.

+ When Naraku uses the pieces for the jewel to summon the army of incarnations, he gathers them back after Inuyasha and friends defeat them.

+ After using the power of the summon spirits, the problem gets worse.

“Victoria cross” how to use in sentences

How to use in-sentence of “Victoria cross”:

– Louis’ cousin, Nigel Gray Leakey, was a recipient of the Victoria Cross during World War II.

– For his actions in July 2004, Apiata became the first New Zealand soldier to be awarded the Victoria Cross since World War II.

– He is best known for receiving the Victoria Cross because of his actions in the war in Afghanistan.

– The list of living holders of the Victoria Cross is small.; Hardman, Robert.

– His Victoria Cross is displayed at the Regimental Museum of the 9th/12th Royal Lancers housed in Derby Museum and Art Gallery, Derby, England.

– On 24 July 2006 Kerry Stokes purchased the 60th medal at auction for a world record price of A$1,000,000 and asked that it be displayed in the Victoria Cross Gallery.

– The Gurkha unit in the British army has won 26 Victoria Cross medals and many other medals.

Victoria cross how to use in sentences
Victoria cross how to use in sentences

How to use in sentence of “principles”

How to use in-sentence of “principles”:

– While following all mentioned tips and advice, do not forget the good principles of hygiene.

– PL does not have a holy book, however, they have PL 21 Precepts and the PL 21 Principles which were revealed by the Founders of the Church.

– Management accounting principles in banking are specialized but do have some common fundamental concepts used whether the industry is manufacturing based or service oriented.

– Kwanzaa celebrates what its founder called the seven principles of Kwanzaa, or “Nguzo Saba”.

– Development occurred during the Industrial revolution, using scientific principles and methods.

– Delegates issued a statement of principles of secession which they presented as the “Burlington Declaration”.

– The design principles Tanenbaum applied to MINIX had influenced the design decisions Linus Torvalds applied in the creation of the Linux kernel.

How to use in sentence of principles
How to use in sentence of principles

Example sentences of “principles”:

– It is against libertarian principles and ethics.

– In many schools in the UK, conflict resolution has now become an integral part of the SEAL programme, chiming,as it does, with the SEAL principles of developing social skills and an understanding of ones own feelings.

– This is a brief simplified summary of the main principles of the UK Data Protection Act.

– It asserts that “the kolkhoz is managed according to the principles of socialist self-management, democracy, and openness, with active participation of the members in decisions concerning all aspects of internal life”.

– The design of structures rests on authorized engineering procedures, principles and criteria meant to design or seismic retrofitretrofit structures subject to earthquake exposure.

– He pledged unwavering support to the Mahatma and stood by his principles all through his life.

– He founded several schools in German and French-speaking regions of Switzerland, and wrote explaining his principles of education.

– In 1699, Guru Gobind Singh, the Tenth Guru, established the Khalsa and gave Sikhs a distinct identity and reinforced principles taught by all Gurus.

– Hospital services/Health care management as an executive to care-coordinator or administrator is a critical role for a medical social worker, administrative responsibilities entail to ensure efficient and effective unit operation; contributing to staff development by promoting and ensuring a supportive/collaborative learning environment based on the principles of adult learning and practice standards for nurses, students and ancillary staff; performing human resources responsibilities in collaboration with the other line managers; attending administration level meetings for program launch and evaluation, budgetary decisions, augmenting CSR activities…etc.; liaising with members of the multidisciplinary team to ensure high standards of quality and optimal management of patient care outcomes ; staff stress management due to the competing needs in patient care and ongoing continuous improvement practices to strengthen clinic processes.

– The norms based on international human rights law, such as Vienna Declaration Vienna Declaration, Part I para 18 and the Yogyakarta Principles Yogyakarta Principles, Article 11 prohibit human trafficking and Council of Europe and Charter of Fundamental Rights of European Union also prohibit them and do effort to save the victims.

– Systems science is the interdisciplinary field of science, that studies the principles of systems in nature, in society and in science itself.

– It was later found that many of the same underlying principles could be applied to other types of official document and legal instrument, to non-official documents such as private Letter letters, and, most recently, to the metadata of electronic records.

– The Principles also reports that there are refugees from persecution and even honour killings because of sexual orientation or gender identity.

– It is a half-hour show hosted by Cameron and Comfort, teaching principles of biblical evangelism.

- It is against libertarian principles and ethics.

- In many schools in the UK, conflict resolution has now become an integral part of the SEAL programme, chiming,as it does, with the SEAL principles of developing social skills and an understanding of ones own feelings.
- This is a brief simplified summary of the main principles of the UK Data Protection Act.

More in-sentence examples of “principles”:

– While deciding the case, the ICJ applies the principles of international law.

– Adkins, “Handbook to life in Ancient Greece”, Oxford University Press, 1998 Bruno Burlando, Luisella Verotta, Laura Cornara, and Elisa Bottini-Massa, “Herbal Principles in Cosmetics”, CRC Press, 2010 Cosmetics are mentioned also in the Old Testament.

– The rules and principles of civil law are found in codes which are available to both citizens and legal professionals.

– He founded the Institute in Basic Life Principles in 1961.

– The principles of classification and a classification of mammals.” Bulletin of the American Museum of Natural History” 85: 1-350.

– The paradox appears when these two principles are combined.

– The principles he employed for the city were strikingly similar to what we now know as New Urbanism ideas of planning – an emphasis was placed on pedestrians as opposed to motor car traffic, a sense of community and civic life was encouraged through the use of town squares and abundant planting of greenery provided significant focus on a minimal environmental footprint.

– Follow the defining principles, and the mating and birth of consequent principles become clearer.

– It extended the principles from the First Geneva Convention of 1864 on the treatment of battlefield casualties.

– In physics, a physical system An Essay on the Investigation of the First Principles of Nature.

– Steno, in his “Dissertationis prodromus” of 1669 is credited with four of the defining principles of the science of stratigraphy.

– In the year 1995 influenced in the renunciation of the vice-president Alberto Dahik, the one who had tried to justify the egreso undue of bottoms of the state like costs in the war of principles of this same year.

– Other operating principles for self-loading firearms include blow forward, gas operation, recoil operation, revolver, Gatling, and chain.

– The codes set out legal principles or basic ideas, and have to decide each case by comparing the facts of the case to those principles, not to what another judges decided earlier.

– Domestic violence can be also a factor to be Homelessnesshomeless, as pointed out by Principles 15 of the Yogyakarta Principles.

– It is about the laws and principles of classifying things, especially classifying organisms.

– The principles were first laid down by Nicolaus Steno in the late 17th century.

– Called Panchsheel, these principles would later serve as the basis of the Non-Aligned Movement.

– The term “international” was coined by the Utilitarianismutilitarian philosopher Jeremy Bentham in his “Introduction to Principles of Morals and Legislation”, which was printed for publication in 1780 and published in 1789.

– The last paragraph of and indicate that the user wants to exert ownership over DYK, edit war, ignore the principles of BRD, and break any and all rules just to get his way.

– In 1950, Alan Turing proposed a “learning machine” which would parallel the principles of evolution.

– In 1955, the Congress of the People Congress of the People officially adopted the Freedom Charter, stating the core principles of the South African Congress Alliance, which consisted of the African National Congress and its allies the South African Indian Congress, the South African Congress of Democrats and the Coloured People’s Congress.

– An aerostat is a lighter than air craft, such as an airship or balloon, which uses the principles of aerostatics to float.

– During the Korean War, the United States started using the PIE principles within the first 8 weeks of the war.

– The different levels of government in Canada are based on the principles of a federation: those of each of the provinces and territories share power with the federal government.

– Such principles were adopted later as the main goals and objectives of the policy of non-alignment.

- While deciding the case, the ICJ applies the principles of international law.

- Adkins, "Handbook to life in Ancient Greece", Oxford University Press, 1998 Bruno Burlando, Luisella Verotta, Laura Cornara, and Elisa Bottini-Massa, "Herbal Principles in Cosmetics", CRC Press, 2010 Cosmetics are mentioned also in the Old Testament.
- The rules and principles of civil law are found in codes which are available to both citizens and legal professionals.

– He goes on to assert that Qatar managed to bring an end to the crisis without changing any of its foreign policy principles or abandoning its allies.

– As for belief, it is the set of principles that a Muslim must believe in, and it is fixed and does not differ according to the different prophets.

– Jefferson designed the house based on the principles of Andrea Palladio.

– Thomas Jefferson took the French offer as an opportunity to make America larger, even if it meant going against his Republican principles of small government.

– These started to become popular again with organ builders in the 1950s when it was felt that the Romantic organ was not suitable for old music, and some organ builders started using Baroque principles again so that the music of composers such as Bach could sound like it used to.

– The authors of more than five hundred other articles have talked about these principles by citing the white paper “Privacy by Design in Law, Policy and Practice” by Ann Cavoukian.

– Soviet leaders argued that one-party rule was necessary because it ensured that ‘capitalist exploitation’ would not return to the Soviet Union and that the principles of Democratic Centralism would represent the people’s will.

– Human heredity: Principles and issues.

– The laws and principles of bridge stated and explained and the practice illustrated by means of hands played completely through”.

– Many radical feminists think the Principles are misguided and a threat to women’s rights.

– At various times different principles were adopted, and it is not rare for different scientists to use different methods.

– To deliver the pious and to annihilate the miscreants, as well as to reestablish the principles of religion, I Myself appear, millennium after millennium.

– The trips helped him to know and understand the principles of the British Liberal system.

– ABA emerged when experimental behavior principles were applied to social behavior.

– There are various people that began the process of applying these principles to social behavior.

– Mollar, the angry young man and owner of a music a company who have his own rules and principles get linked up with Komol who belonged to such a family where everyone loves music.

– It was originally defined from principles set down by architect Peter Nicholson in the 18th century.

– Marco Barrientos is a Christian singer, pastor, author, teacher, and speaker known for combining practical biblical principles with the flow of prophetic songs.

– This is one of the most important principles in Taoism.

– The basic principles of the Kimbanguist church are Bolingo.

– Forensic psychology is the use of psychological practices and principles and applying them to the legal system, mainly in court.

– The four stars represent the four founding principles that were originally enshrined in the first constitution of Bangladesh in 1972: Nationalism, Secularism, Socialism, and Democracy.

– Over the next seven years, he pioneered the principles of the design of experiments and elaborated his studies of the analysis of variance.