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Example sentences for "early date"

  • Advertisements of it frequently appear in the Boston News Letter and other New England newspapers of early date.

  • The New Haven colony passed a law at an early date to force the destruction of a "great stinking poisonous weed," which is said to have been the Datura stramonium, a medicinal herb.

  • At an early date iron-foundries were established throughout New England, with, however, varying success.

  • Here he tells us that, at an early date in the development of the history project, he realized the difficulty of gaining data on Mormon history, an obstacle apparently so great as to be insuperable.

  • Schools were founded at an early date, the first being taught by Rev.

  • The manager of the Berlin theatre, Kustner, quite took me by surprise when he announced the first performance of the Fliegender Hollander for an early date.

  • One day Luttichau proposed to have my Lohengrin performed at an early date.

  • At the Euphrates marshes it arrives early in August and reaches India in October (early date, Nepal, September 7).

  • An early date of fall arrival is indicated by a specimen from the mouth of the Amur River, southwestern Russia, taken on August 8, while a late date of fall departure is October 8, at Hakodadi, Japan.

  • Copper mines, which are known to have been worked at an early date, exist south of Trebizonde, near Erzeroum, in Armenia and at Diarbekir in the upper valley of the Tigris; ancient tin workings have been found further east in Khorazan.

  • These capitularies make provisions of a most varied nature; it was therefore found necessary at quite an early date to classify them into chapters according to the subject.

  • Other indications point to the festival having assumed a military character at an early date, as might have been expected among the warlike Dorians, although some scholars deny this.

  • It does appear, however, in the cathedral of Aversa near Naples[426], where the heaviness of the ribs would seem to denote an early date.

  • But even if this method were known at an early date it was not until the Byzantine era that it obtained a wide-spread and extensive usage.

  • I think the latter part of 1592 the most likely time for the writing of some scenes in All's Well that Ends Well and Twelfth Night that show marks of early date.

  • Style and metre require an early date for i.

  • This hurry accounts, in some degree, for the weakness of the play, which induces so many critics to insist on an early date for it as a whole.

  • Of the slightly attested view that John was martyred at an early date, Dr.

  • The question of date cannot be said to be absolutely settled, but the tendency of criticism as illustrated by Harnack is to the acceptance of an early date, as well as to that of the Lukan authorship of the entire book.

  • As a rule, his information is as accurate as could be expected at such an early date, and he rarely tells marvellous stories, or if he does, he points out himself their untrustworthiness.

  • This region of the earth's surface is distinguished by a number of large islands in the eastern hemisphere, most of which were discovered at an early date.

  • But at an early date, as we know from the Bible, caravan routes were established between Egypt, Syria, and Mesopotamia, and later on these were extended into Farther Asia.

  • It would seem as if the two hills, Aillinn, or Knock Aillinn as it is now called, and Allen got confounded, and at an early date too.

  • It seems, not like Glendaloch, Monasterboice, and many other places that were abandoned at an early date, to have had a church or monastery on it until the beginning of the seventeenth century.

  • This is the question we have to decide; and we will first consider the Egyptian references in the Pentateuch, and then its Laws, both of which are very strongly in favour of an early date.

  • Moreover, some of the other laws, though applicable to Canaan, are of such a character as to be strongly in favour of an early date.

  • On the other hand, the language contains several signs of early date, though most of these can only be understood by a Hebrew scholar, which the present writer does not profess to be.

  • Lastly, an early date is implied by the passage, where St. Paul tells his friends near Ephesus, that they would not see him again.

  • Known from an early date to the Romans as vagrant marauders, the Franks had been heavily chastised by most of the soldier emperors from Probus to Julian.

  • It would have been better for the Italians if either the Ostrogoths or the Lombards had triumphed decisively and at an early date.

  • Boniface had been elected to the command without the sanction of the Pope; and from an early date was in league with Philip to turn the Crusade against Constantinople.

  • The probability is that none are of an early date, and they are certainly not conspicuous as works of art.

  • On the Continent, lengthy eulogies of ancestors are common, and they commence at an early date.

  • Vertue's love of studying all kinds of antiquities brought him, at an early date, into contact with Lord Oxford, who proved one of his warmest patrons.

  • Attempts were made, however, and that too from an early date, to establish among them a hierarchy like that which existed among the great ones of the earth.

  • The process of fusion commenced at such an early date, that nothing has really come down to us from the time when the two races were strangers to each other.

  • The process was known from an early date in Egypt, but was rarely employed there in the decoration of buildings, while in Chaldæa the use of such enamelled plaques was common.


  • The above list will hopefully provide you with a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "early date" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this group of words.


    Some common collocations, pairs and triplets of words:
    always remember; both horse and foot; early and sending them; early crop; early hour; early life; early maps; early marriages; early morning; early nineteenth; early period; early religion; early rising; early spring; early stages; early summer; early symptom; early work; early writers; full sight; immediate command; immediate intuition; literary life; queer thing; said they; shall never