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1930s in a sentence

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Sentence count:242+4Posted:2016-07-29Updated:2020-07-24
Similar words: 10000101105110115125130135Meaning: n. the decade from 1930 to 1939. 
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(181) Nevertheless, several of the experimental novelists mentioned above actually began their careers in the 1930s.
(182) Through the 1930s such quirky turns were more and more discouraged in holiday venues.
(183) Our understanding of development is at a stage reminiscent of genetics in the 1930s.
(184) But his greatest legacy is his now largely forgotten work as an actor-manager inthe 1930s and 40s.
(185) Germany's military buildup in the 1930s gave it a huge start on Britain and France.
(186) In the past I have lived in a large Victorian house and a 1930s semi-detached.
(187) This season we cross America from Broadway to Hollywood where dance legends Fred Astaire and Ginger Rogers created the Hollywood film musical in the 1930s.
(188) During the 1930s the British ship ferried passengers and cargo across Lake Albert—until it sank, or was scuttled,[sentencedict.com] after Uganda gained independence from Britain in 1962.
(189) Maginot Line, Elaborate defensive Barrier in northeastern France Built in the 1930s. Named after its principal creator, Andre Maginot.
(190) He is an admirer of the anarchists who fought alongside the Republicans against Gen. Francisco Franco during the Spanish Civil War in the 1930s.
(191) Many major American cultural movements, such as the Harlem Renaissance of the 1920s and 1930s, began in New York.
(192) The hole was carved in the 1930s. The carcass of a giant sequoia, the former Wawona Tree, which once had a similar tunnel cut through it, is lying on the ground in Yosemite National Park.
(193) Yet its real precedent is Tempelhof Airport in Berlin, a monument to air travel conceived by Albert Speer in the 1930s as a gateway to a new Europe.
(194) This compound molecule is then administered with an adjuvant mixture consisting of an oil-in-water emulsion, MPL and QS21, a plant derivative used since the 1930s in veterinary medicine.
(195) Moniz and Freemen are usually credited with inventing the lobotomy in the 1930s, though in truth their work was based on many other people's research going back to the mid-19th century.
(196) Using data on national banks from the 1920s and 1930s, we show that branch banking increases competition and forces weak banks to exit the banking system.
(197) In the 1930s and 1940s, however, London was more polluted than any of these cities are today.
(197) Sentencedict.com try its best to collect and create good sentences.
(198) Fender was working alongside the earliest electric guitar designers throughout the 1930s and 1940s, even applying for his own patent on his 1944 Hawaiian guitar design.
(199) Qian was immediately suspected of being a communist sympathiser, with claims being made that his name had appeared on Communist party documents as early as the late 1930s.
(200) At the end of the 1930s, she entered the Moscow Music and Dance Institute and fortunately performed in the same play with G. Ulanova, the world-famous ballerina.
(201) You hear it in old Hollywood films from the 1930s and 1940s. It is the accent of Cary Grant, Katherine Hepburn and (at least in some films) God.
(202) In fact, Britain in the early 1930s outperformed the US, under the more orthodox policies of the Chancellor, Neville Chamberlain.
(203) Some of these weapons were deployed; for example, in Abyssinia in the 1930s, in China in World War II, in Yemen in 1963, and in the Iran-Iraq war of the 1980s.
(204) IN THE 1930s the Japanese economist Kaname Akamatsu proposed a theory of how the economies of Asia could take wing.
(205) Historically, it is argued that deficit financing in the 1930s did not turn around the Great Depression, and the argument is correct.
(206) "Euro Customs" to my semifeudal and semicolonial period, the 1930s, construction compromise.
(207) Productivity growth continued to be the major factor for the rest of the 1930s, accounting for about three-quarters of the growth in real per capita output that occurred between 1932 and 1939.
(208) He, too, prefers the 10-year price-to-earnings ratio, he said, but he didn't think that it necessarily had to fall to the same bargain-basement levels it reached in the 1930s and 1970s.
(209) But Jim Crow was so accepted in the land that when Benny Goodman, during the 1930s, brought Teddy Wilson, and then Lionel Hampton, into his trio and quartets, it was briefly big national news.
(210) It was only after entering public life as a Congressman in the 1930s that LBJ, a man from humble origins, started amassing considerable assets.
More similar words: 1000010110511011512513013514414515516 pf16016517017518018th1901950sabyssas isbagsballsbathscropscubsdownsdropsas
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