No national monument is a more perfect expression of the spirit of a great people.
This cliff has a story to tell of such unique interest that the United States Government has acquired the mesa of which it is a spur for a National Monument.
In several parts of the Petrified Forest (a large portion of which is now, by the way, a National Monument), are the ruins of many small prehistoric Indian villages.
These contributions have been duly deposited for safe keeping towards the Freedmen's National Monument to Mr. Lincoln.
Casa Grande is essentially a national monument, but had the status of a national park until 1918.
Another distinction which should be made is the difference between a national park and a national monument.
Gould, of the University of Michigan, was the first to recognize the geologic and scenic values of the Arches area in eastern Utah and to urge its creation as a national monument.
Of course this vandalism ceased abruptly when in 1906 President Roosevelt issued the proclamation which made this Reservation a National Monument.
These pictures are indeed marvellous--more marvellous than beautiful, like so many Byzantine productions; their value is such that the parchment has now been declared a "national monument.
Of cynical insouciance; for although this is a "national monument," nothing whatever is done in the way of repairs.
The structure has now rightly been declared a "national monument.
The above list will hopefully provide you with a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "national monument" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this group of words.