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Era in a sentence

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Sentence count:219+18Posted:2016-07-16Updated:2020-07-24
Synonym: ageepochperiodSimilar words: operatherapycameraoperateoverallmineralfuneraltherapistMeaning: ['ɪərə]  n. 1. a period marked by distinctive character or reckoned from a fixed point or event 2. a major division of geological time; an era is usually divided into two or more periods 3. (baseball) a measure of a pitcher's effectiveness; calculated as the average number of earned runs allowed by the pitcher for every nine innings pitched. 
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91. U2 are the world's most successful social democrats, the perfect spokesmen for the Live Aid era.
92. But, then as now, hope for a new era dies hard.
93. Those in steerage tend to be forgotten, said Whitcomb, as do most people without money in the Edwardian era.
94. Barry wrote a column about bad songs from the rock era and somehow managed to milk it into a book.
95. Others again, such as Christopher Hitchens, have been yet more cynical and critical when analysing the post-1945 era of co-operation.
96. The 1990s is an era in which schools operate with considerable financial autonomy.
97. The press learned to tread carefully on the subject of their leaders' health during the Soviet era.
98. It seemed like the end of an era for licensed dealers.
99. Glenn Ferguson - staying put A new era is dawning at Strabane cricket club.
100. The implications of this are chilling in an era marked by growing, destabilising imbalances among the world's largest industrial economies.
101. Philpot's retirement brought to a close an era in the life of the School.
102. This era was packed with architectural revivals including Italianate and baronial.
103. At least we are much nearer than we were in the era your rose-coloured glasses have alighted upon.
104. A final difference with the Marshall era is the lack of spare capacity in the developed world.
105. There is no doubt that quick recall of number facts is still an advantage even in the era of calculators and computers.
106. In the current period industrial relations is conducted in a very different climate from that of much of the post-war era.
107. But, befitting an era of tight budgets, only a little.
108. He refers back to the Fish era as if in awe, and introduces the other Marillionauts with grovelling reverence.
109. The Breadalbane and Lake Ontario expeditions have opened a new era in underwater archaeology, Nelson says.
110. As centres of commerce, finance and fashion their buildings reflect the sardonic elegance of a bygone era.
111. In singling out gay men, the offence bears the hallmarks of homophobic prejudice, and belongs to the less tolerant era.
112. Belle-Ile, however, seems to belong to a past era of modest and amateur tourism.
113. So we have three possible points for defining the beginning of the Edwardian Era.
114. The exact date of the beginning of our post-imperial era is, however, relatively unimportant.
115. Miss Piggy, Kermit and the rest now come across as symbols of a bygone era.
116. Those protests reflected popular desires for democracy, but Mr Gbagbo has proved a disappointment to those awaiting a new era.
117. He has to extend and define what the New Democrat agenda means in the post-Clinton era.
118. But aside from such trifling accomplishments, the superhero is also symbolic of an era of remarkable technological change.
118. Sentencedict.com is a online sentence dictionary, on which you can find good sentences for a large number of words.
119. Few cliches are used as improperly as the contention that a certain event marks the end of an era.
120. The Dark Era begins when space is dominated by tiny particles such as photons, electrons and positrons.
More similar words: operatherapycameraoperateoverallmineralfuneraltherapistoperatorafter allseveralliberalfederalcamerasveteranoperationcooperatecoveragetolerateinteractmoderategenerateoperatingdesperateliteraryliterallyin generaltoleranceAND operationaccelerate
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