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Example sentences for "thus forming"

  • The opening is large and arched, and directly in front, within the nest, there is a partition, which reaches nearly to the roof, thus forming a passage or antechamber to the true nest.

  • They all present one character; numerous willows and a few other trees are bound together by a great variety of creeping plants, thus forming a thick jungle.

  • The houses in many parts fell outwards; thus forming in the middle of the streets little hillocks of brickwork and rubbish.

  • This consisted of a block opening on a hinge, thus forming a false breech against which the cartridge rested.

  • Defn: A substance which dissolves in water, thus forming a lather, and is used as a cleansing agent.

  • Defn: An element which is combined with a metal, thus forming an ore.

  • Draw straight lines passing through these points connecting opposite edges, thus forming a five-inch square in the center.

  • Draw straight lines passing through these points connecting opposite sides, thus forming an eight-and-a-half inch square in the center.

  • Then shape into the coil by sewing through the center, thus forming the "button" as in the illustration.

  • Pass the needle down through the cloth at the point where it came out, but on the other side of the loop, thus forming a second loop at the end of the petal to hold it in place, and return the needle again to the center of the flower.

  • After which two opposite sides should be firmly stitched [Page 249] together, thus forming a bottomless bag, if we may be allowed to use the expression.

  • To attach this piece to the main board, two small wire staples may be used, one being inserted into the bottom end of the piece and the other being hooked through it, and afterward tacked to the bottom of the trap, thus forming a loop hinge.

  • To make success more certain a log may be laid on each side of the trap, thus forming an avenue in which the animal will be sure to run before throwing itself on the slope.

  • When it overflows its banks, the Mississippi inundates the country on both sides, for an extent of from forty-five to fifty miles, thus forming an immense lake.

  • The river runs for a distance of four or five miles in a southern direction; here it suddenly takes an eastern course, which it pursues for the space of two miles, thus forming a semicircular bend.

  • Sometimes we get two of those triangles crossing each other, one with the point upwards, the other with the point downwards, thus forming a six-rayed star.

  • Bend these pieces of brass over a piece of hatpin wire, thus forming two V-shaped pieces.

  • The striking and pressure expel the air between the quarter and the wood, thus forming a vacuum sufficient to hold the coin.

  • Fasten this leg on the second cross-piece, thus forming a support for the two front legs, Fig.

  • The river carries a vast amount of silt, which it deposits at its mouth, thus forming a delta which stretches a series of long, narrow, tentacle-like arms seaward.

  • If an adjacent stratum of air be cooler, it will on coming in contact with the warmer air expand and pour into space occupied by the latter, thus forming a current.

  • When a sufficient quantity is collected, it is put in water, thus forming an ink.

  • The body was then taken to a small uninhabited hut and placed upon a bench, or table, made by driving sticks of bamboo into the ground, across the top of which others are fastened, and interlaid, thus forming a table about two feet high.

  • These fine pseudopodia often interlace and fuse when they touch each other, thus forming a sort of protoplasmic network outside of the shell.

  • The entire structure with the contained eggs and sperm-cells as it passes off from the body becomes closed at both ends, thus forming a horny capsule which lies in the earth until the young worms emerge.

  • The adductor ridge is very short, and is united to the bottom of the articular ridge, thus forming a small, nearly cylindrical tube, which runs up to near the apex of the valve.

  • I presume after a certain age) almost rectangularly inwards, thus forming a rather wide, flat, calcareous rim round the central basal membrane.

  • Each succeeding pair of haemal arches becomes larger than the one in front, each arch finally meeting its fellow below the caudal vein, thus forming a completely closed haemal canal.

  • Each growth is directed inwards, and the two eventually meet and unite, thus forming a complete ventral wall for the gut.

  • On these poles, skins are laid, at the height of twelve or fifteen feet, thus forming a spacious court, or tent.

  • Other small saplings or branches were tied firmly to these in a horizontal position about 2 feet apart, thus forming a rigid frame, over which was spread the covering of mats and sheets of bark, the latter serving as the roof.

  • Outside this frame split posts were set close together, having one end braced against the bottom of the bank and the other end leaning against the beams, thus forming a wall of timber.

  • Capillitium of numerous convergent ribs, which extend from base to apex, and are united by fine transverse fibers, thus forming a network of rectangular meshes.

  • Capillitium of slender threads, branching and anastomosing, thus forming a more or less evident network.


  • The above list will hopefully provide you with a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "thus forming" 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:
    active work; betel leaf; dual personality; free and; many banks; save only; telephone service; though well; thus began; thus defined; thus expresses; thus formed; thus given; thus made; thus recorded; thus referred; thus refers; thus seen; thus spake; thus stated; thus translated; thus treated; thus will; two days after the; usually propagated; year course