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names Examples

EN[neɪmz] [-eɪmz]
US

    Examples of names in a Sentence

  • Examples of name
    1. Again, as he was a mere student without any letters after his name, he got scant attention, and I never heard that he gained over a single supporter. - Sir Arthur Conan Doyle - The Stark Munro Letters - Page 16
    2. I can name the tribe every moccasin belongs to by the make of it.
    3. Three weeks later an equal sum, under the name of manbote, was paid to the lord, as a compensation for the loss of his vassal. — John Lingard, A History of England, 1688.
    4. The favourite abode of this Manitou is still shown. It is a great rock or cliff on the loneliest part of the mountains, and, … is known by the name of the Garden Rock.
    5. With me they said,' Oh, she's got a little bit of that Marilyn Monroe quality.' I've learned when they attach' sex symbol' to your name, suddenly your credibility as an actress is in the toilet."
    6. to mark clothing with one's name
    7. Susie used a marker to write her name on the wall. ‎
  • Examples of names
    1. The initial letter of names is usually printed with a capital letter. ‎
    2. Names of vessels, as the Kearsarge or the Alabama, are frequently put in italic.
    3. For example, although the ‘vowel killer’ diacritic may be called a ‘pulli’ in Tamil, it is still referred to by the Unicode character names as a ‘virama’. — http://www.w3.org/2002/Talks/09-ri-indic/indic-paper.html
    4. However, common nouns occurring after the names of two or more organizations are lowercased.
    5. “John”, “Paul”, and “Jake” are masculine names.
    6. Thank you for publishing “The Roster of the Dead ” (Jan. 1) — pictures of the third thousand United States service members killed in Iraq — putting names and faces on what are otherwise nonembodied statistics.
    7. The company even sent me a photograph of Spykes surrounded by other tiny liquor bottles with names like Blue 100 and 99 Bananas Schnapps to suggest just how thoroughly noninnovative this particular product is.
    8. To some degree this business about titles supplanting last names also applies to nonroyal peers, such as your run-of-the-mill dukes.
    9. Consider, for example, the symbolically overfreighted names she has chosen for her central characters.
    10. Pursuing its preposterous, overplotted premise, Time merrily confuses myth with fact--Romeo and Juliet and Arthur never lived, or they did so under other names.
  • Examples of named
    1. As main ingredient we introduce a new algorithm, named Similarity-First-Search (SFS), which extends Lexicographic Breadth-First Search (Lex-BFS) to weighted graphs and which we use in a multisweep algorithm to recognize Robinsonian matrices.
    2. In “Triana” (named after the Gypsy quarter in Seville), Albéniz conjures guitars and castanets and the dance forms pasodoble and Sevillana with music so evocative that you feel as if you’d just wandered into a fragrant Andalucian courtyard.
    3. He also had a son named Dave who thought milking a pretty tough job, and who imagined he was getting weak-handed and on the way to milker's paralysis.
    4. They came out of the village accompanied by the one of the notables of the village, named Hadji Constantinou, and by one Moslem tchaous (gendarme) who was armed.
    5. The best-characterized yeast prionogenic proteins are Sup35 and Ure2p, which, in their aggregated state, form two cytosolic inheritable elements named PSI+ and URE3, respectively.
    6. These hyphal coils develop into pre-fruiting bodies named protoperithecia within 5 days.
    7. Isolates with indistinguishable profiles were attributed with a pulsotype named by a capital letter (A to H).
  • Examples of naming
    1. 1989: ‘By God, you speak our British language, as we must now call it since the new naming of our kingdom, with a fine accent and fluminous smoothness,’ Dick Burbage said. — Anthony Burgess, The Devil's Mode
    2. According to anthropology, there are six basic patterns of kinship terminology (i.e., "kin naming systems"): Sudanese, Hawaiian, Eskimo, Crow, Omaha, and Iroquois.
    3. Wikipedia article on the naming of organic compounds.
    4. Wikipedia article on the naming of inorganic compounds.
    5. “I have 60 different lachenalias, 10 different freesias, 25 moraeas,” Mr. Canning said, naming a few of his beauties, which, mixed in with big pots of camellias, will bloom from now through March.
    6. naming the problem ‎
    7. The Red Book is the standard reference book for those naming inorganic chemical compounds.
    8. To alleviate the problem of naming genes, reannotation of genes and proteins using a set of common, controlled vocabulary to describe a gene or protein is necessary.
Related Links:
  1. en namesake
  2. en namest
  3. en namesaked
  4. en namesakes
  5. en namespace
Source: Wiktionary
Difficultness: Level 1
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Definiteness: Level 1
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Definite    ➨     Versatile