Home
Idioms
Top 1000 Words
Top 5000 Words


Example sentences for "when taken"

  • When taken out of the water, wipe it quite dry, then rub it thoroughly with salt, and throw a handful over it besides.

  • Mix with an equal quantity of new milk, when taken, twice a day.

  • Eggs very little boiled or poached, when taken in small quantities, convey much nourishment.

  • When taken up for the winter, they should be rolled round a carpet roller, and care taken not to crack the paint by turning in the edges too suddenly.

  • When taken in time, all diseases which depend upon particulate contagia for their origin can be stamped out by isolation and disinfection.

  • Its effect on the skin, when taken in large quantities, under normal or abnormal circumstances, is a matter of daily experience.

  • Philadelphia was an independent neutral city, under the influence of the Latin Knights of Rhodes, when taken in .

  • When taken in British waters anchovies are either thrown away or sent to the market fresh with the sprats.

  • Further, the traces of it in Polycarp 6 and Ignatius 7 when taken together, are highly probable; and it is even widely admitted that the resemblance of Acts xiii.

  • Commands "Java" when taken by the "Constitution," ii.

  • When taken in an overdose it is poisonous.

  • When taken internally, even in very minute quantities, tellurium imparts to the breath an offensively powerful odour of garlic.

  • In combination with other foods, its nutritive qualities are greatly increased; but from its having little stimulating power, it is apt, when taken in large quantities alone, to lie long on the stomach.

  • When taken out, it should again be rinsed, first in clean hot water, and then in abundance of cold water slightly tinged with fig-blue, and again wrung dry.

  • This is not only one of the most elegantly-formed, but one of the most beautifully-coloured fishes, when taken out of the sea, that we have.

  • The word which also, when taken in its discriminative sense (i.

  • The dative case, or oblique object, which they governed as Saxon verbs, becomes their proper object, when taken as English prepositions; and in this also they appear to be alike.

  • The Imperfect Participle, when simple, or when taken as one of the four principal terms constituting the verb or springing from it, ends always in ing.

  • There can be no doubt that roasted chicory must, when taken largely, have a tendency to excite diarrh[oe]a.

  • When taken as a condiment, especially when rich and old, it powerfully promotes the secretion of the saliva and gastric juice, and thereby aids the stomach in performing its proper functions.

  • The latter, in fact, is itself an emetic, when taken in quantity.

  • The salt, when taken out, and freed by scraping from any adhering ochreous or other impurities, is ready for the market, being sold in hollow spherical masses.

  • When taken out, and pulled asunder, two transparent guts will be observed, of a yellow green colour, as thick as a small straw, bent double.

  • When taken out, they are beat level and smooth on a cast-iron block, after which they appear mottled blue and white, if the scaling has been thoroughly done.

  • But though the laws of number and space are important elements in the ascertainment of uniformities of succession, they can do nothing toward it when taken by themselves.

  • When taken young, and properly dressed, they form an excellent substitute for turnips, especially in dry seasons, when a crop of the latter may fail or become of inferior quality.

  • When taken up, the roots should be divested of the numerous bulbs formed on their crowns, and then stored up for use in a cool, dry place, but secure from frost.

  • The root has reputed important medicinal properties; and, when taken internally, acts as a violent emetic.

  • The smell of the fresh plant is extremely fetid, and, when taken, it will purge, or provoke vomiting.

  • Their note is generally harsh and unmusical, and although they are readily tamed when taken young, becoming familiar, and in some species showing remarkable intelligence, their powers of vocal imitation are usually limited.

  • These, salted and dried, are exported to all parts of the world, and form, when taken in connexion with the enormous quantity of fresh cod consumed, a valuable addition to the food resources of the human race.

  • When taken by the mouth, cod-liver oil shares with other liver-oils the property of ready absorption.

  • Opium, when taken as a luxury, not as a medicine, is as pernicious as alcohol; as Baron de Tott relates in his account of the opium-eaters in Turkey.


  • The above list will hopefully provide you with a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "when taken" 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:
    back street; never wrote; when alone; when brought; when cold; when considered; when dissolved; when dying; when either; when employed; when full; when informed; when not; when one; when placed; when planted; when pursued; when questioned; when ratified; when soft; when some; when they were seated; when touched; when turned; when what; when you