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Example sentences for "entrant"

Lexicographically close words:
entranced; entrances; entranceway; entrancing; entrancingly; entrants; entrap; entrapped; entrapping; entrar
  1. Every entrant must have been raised by the exhibitor.

  2. The hinterland folk had fought shy of Glure since the dog show wherein he had sought to win the capital prize by formulating a set of conditions that could be filled by no entrant except a newly imported champion Merle of his own.

  3. Neither does the only other local entrant that the first two rules have left in the competition.

  4. For twelve hours a day--for four consecutive days--every entrant must be there.

  5. In fact, they goose-egg your chances if another entrant can go the round without so much coaching.

  6. Company K suffered heavy casualties from the re-entrant strongpoint on the left.

  7. Engineers with satchel charges and Bangalore torpedoes helped neutralize several inland Japanese positions, but the strongpoints along the re-entrant were still as dangerous as hornets’ nests.

  8. Note the disabled LVTs in the water at left, seaward of the re-entrant strongpoints.

  9. The Japanese strongpoint in the re-entrant between the two beaches played havoc among troops trying to scramble over the sides of their beached or stalled LVTs.

  10. Although the Japanese strongpoints at the re-entrant were being hotly besieged by Hays’ 1/8, the defenders still held mastery over the approaches to Red Beaches One and Two.

  11. Shoup’s 2d Marines, with 1/8 still attached, would continue to reduce the re-entrant strongpoints.

  12. What answers to the current of water is the air, and if the equilibrium is kept up, the re-entrant current balances your retiring current, and the latter carries out the smoke entangled in itself.

  13. By the objection, say, of a child, there ought to be a re-entrant column of smoke, which there is not.

  14. Slightly south-east from Athies a large re-entrant ran south from the river; in the mouth of this re-entrant was the village of Feuchy.

  15. The extent and position of the re-entrant is shown by the course of the moraine in Plate II.

  16. Here the edge of the ice, as shown by the position of the moraine, was affected by a re-entrant curve, the two ends of which rested against the quartzite ridge.

  17. Acting as a wedge, it caused a re-entrant in the advancing margin of the glacier.

  18. The marginal lobes of ice occupying the valleys would be separated by re-entrant angles marking the sites of hills and ridges.

  19. Finally, the Hamel re-entrant had for two months been, as I have already explained, a source of annoyance and anxiety to me.

  20. Here the river winds in two salient loops towards the north, with a re-entrant loop between them, and there is a slight break in the heights on the left bank.

  21. Early on January 20 Clery with one brigade and artillery advanced up the re-entrant which springs from the river towards the east end of the Rangeworthy Heights, and posted his guns half way up the valley on Three Tree Hill.

  22. Tamaulipas reveals that the depth of the re-entrant angle of M1 is extremely variable, from almost absent in some individuals to deep (as in angustapalata) in others.

  23. Altamira, however, has a baculum of the same shape as in angustapalata (this same specimen is one of the three from there in which the re-entrant angle of the M1 is deep).

  24. It may be remarked generally that there are at most three infinite branches, and that there may besides be a re-entrant branch or oval.

  25. Sporangium oblong, the apex re-entrant and confluent with the summit of the columella, the base obtuse or slightly umbilicate, stipitate, cernuous.

  26. If you break the line at I, you will have a non-re-entrant solution starting from any I square.

  27. The best re-entrant attempt is shown, in which each knight has to trespass twice on other parts.

  28. Illustration] It will be seen in the illustration how a chessboard may be divided into four parts, each of the same size and shape, so that a complete re-entrant knight's tour may be made on each portion.

  29. I think this is the best result that has ever been obtained (either re-entrant or not), and nobody can yet say whether a perfect solution is possible or impossible.

  30. In other words, the smallest rectangular board on which a re-entrant tour is possible is one that is 6 by 5.

  31. The puzzle is to cut the board differently into four parts, each of the same size and shape, so that a re-entrant knight's tour may be made on each part.

  32. Illustration] This is difficult, because of the condition as to the flag-buoy, and because it is a re-entrant tour.

  33. But we can have a non-re-entrant path over the whole board in fourteen moves, starting from any given square.

  34. It was surmounted by cupolas which thronged around a second story supporting a kind of rotunda, from which sprang a cone with a re-entrant curve and terminating in a ball on the summit.

  35. Carthage might hold out for a long time; her broad walls presented a series of re-entrant and projecting angles, an advantageous arrangement for repelling assaults.

  36. The Guides moved on the village, and up the main re-entrant itself.

  37. The attack on such a place was further complicated by the fact that the same re-entrant contained another village called Gat, which had to be occupied at the same time.

  38. The village lay in a re-entrant of the hills, from which two long spurs projected like the piers of a harbour.

  39. It stood in a broad re-entrant of the mountains, and amid ground so tangled and broken, that to move over it is difficult, and to describe it impossible.

  40. In several specimens, however, the re-entrant fold is absent from the lingual surface of M1.

  41. Judging from the published illustrations, Macrognathomys seems to be structurally ancestral to the Mid Pliocene Pliozapus solus Wilson; the labial re-entrant folds are wider and shorter and on m2 and m3 fewer.

  42. The experimental values of the coefficient of discharge for a re-entrant mouthpiece are 0.

  43. Suppose the liquid issues by a horizontal mouthpiece, which is re-entrant and of the greatest length which permits the jet to spring clear from the inner end of the orifice, without adhering to its sides.

  44. The fossette is all that remains of the lateral re-entrant fold that characterized the preceding U-pattern of the earlier stages of wear.

  45. The two primary lophs of the tooth are now joined near both sides, having shallow lingual and labial re-entrant angles on the sides and the enamel island in the center.

  46. M3 tends to remain at least incompletely bilophodont by reason of retaining a permanent labial re-entrant fold in most species (with exceptions in Pappogeomys bulleri and some old adults of P.

  47. Lateral union occurs in the lower teeth because the vertical depth of the labial re-entrant angle is less than the depth of the lingual re-entrant fold.

  48. Also, the re-entrant folds, rather than having parallel sides, diverge broadly to the sides.

  49. Also, in late Pliocene and early Pleistocene species, the re-entrant folds diverge laterally and form "open" angles.

  50. In most species the posterior loph supports two lateral plates, the outer one always bordering the labial re-entrant fold.

  51. The premolar also has an enamel plate on the anterior surface and another on the posterior surface, and in addition both re-entrant angles are protected by a V-shaped investment of enamel.

  52. In Eriphia gonagra the entrant orifices of the respiratory cavity serving for aerial respiration are situated, not, as in the Grapsoidae, above, but behind the last pair of feet at the sides of the abdomen.

  53. Whilst the hinder part of the carapace rises and the above-mentioned fissure is formed, the anterior part seems to sink, and to narrow or entirely close the anterior entrant orifice.

  54. I have already mentioned that, as indeed is required by Darwin's theory, this entrant orifice is produced in different manners in the different families.

  55. In the position of posterior entrant orifice and the accompanying peculiarities of the third and fourth pairs of feet, two other non-aquatic species of the same family, which I have had the opportunity of examining, agree with Ocypoda.

  56. First, I heard that we are to throw out a new front-line trench to bridge the re-entrant south of Petticoat Lane.

  57. That means a big re-entrant in the line, of course, and a part where our front runs almost at right angles to Fritz's, instead of parallel with it.

  58. HOEK A re-entrant in a range of hills; literally corner; also used for pass and ravine.

  59. Old: Cusps worn smooth; not more than one re-entrant angle per tooth discernible, frequently none.

  60. The teeth in this female are greatly worn; re-entrant angles are not visible in any teeth.

  61. In 1806, Napoleon had also the double base of the Rhine and Main, forming almost a right re-entrant angle.

  62. It goes north to avoid a prominent spur in the range and a re-entrant angle at the further side.

  63. For that re-entrant curve, it must be remembered, would be worse going, and wetter, than even the short excursion to the north of the crest.

  64. A little eastward of us, on the way we had to go, the range of hills throws out one of those spurs with a re-entrant curve upon the far side, which we had previously discovered in Surrey above Red Hill and Bletchingly.

  65. The Road goes just north of the crest, in order to avoid the long circuit of a jutting-out spur with its re-entrant curve.

  66. Had the road followed round the outer side of the hill it would have been much easier to trace, but crossing as it does to the north of the summit, in order to avoid the re-entrant angle of Arthur's Seat, it has disappeared.


  67. The above list will hopefully give you a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "entrant" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this word.
    Other words:
    apprentice; arrival; baby; beginner; boot; candidate; catechumen; comer; competitor; contender; contestant; entrant; entry; field; fledgling; freshman; greenhorn; greeny; ignoramus; immigrant; infant; initiate; intruder; learner; neophyte; nestling; newcomer; novice; player; postulant; probationer; recruit; rival; rookie; settler; tenderfoot; trainee; tyro; visitor