Similar words: confounded, founder, surrounded, profound, funded, dumbfound, foundation, founding father. Meaning: [faʊnd] adj. having a basis; often used as combining terms.
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151. The privately held company, founded in 1989, is one of the fastest-growing technology startups.
152. The original town had been founded with a new market place in 1135-9 by the Benedictine abbey there.
153. In Gibbons the cause of action was founded on public nuisance.
154. This implies that there is a principle apart from morality on which morality itself can be founded.
155. Unwired Planet was founded in 1994 to offer an open platform for wireless Internet appliances.
156. These programmes were founded on a comprehensive Welfare State system complemented by the demand management of an expanding mixed economy.
157. His fortune is based on the scientific journals of Pergamon Press[sentencedict.com], which he founded in 1948.
158. Soon after it was founded, the College ran into financial difficulties because of an improper management of funds.
159. He founded a school, which he had to finance by writing journalism and giving exhausting lecture tours in the United States.
160. The Hussite Church, founded in 1920, was the second largest religious denomination in Czechoslovakia, with some 400,000 adherents.
161. In 1681 the Quaker William Penn founded the colony of Pennsylvania.
162. It was founded by Stan Barnet and Sid Dicker and in the early days met behind the grandstand on match days.
163. Founded in 1947, Merrydown maintains a tradition of cider making dating from Norman times.
164. Founded in 1979, the young community has only three other people buried in its cemetery.
165. Both founded monasteries, and both propounded rules for individual salvation.
166. St George's, founded in 973,[www.Sentencedict.com] was the first convent in Bohemia for Benedictine nuns.
167. All grandeur, all power, all discipline are founded on the soldier.
168. And so, founded on its sure infrastructure of heavy industries, free-flowing capital and cheap labour, the machine is off.
169. Louth Park Abbey was founded on the eastern edge of the town in 1139.
170. In this way a social contrivance appears to be founded on the natural order of things.
171. Founded in 1781, Exeter was well-endowed and well-connected, with a glorious pedigree.
172. He returned to Forli as a newly ordained priest and founded there a new monastery for his order.
173. In 1964 he founded the Glynn Research Laboratories, where he directed biochemical research until 1986.
174. Etak, which derives its name from the Polynesian word for navigation, was founded by Stan Honey.
175. The Lotus Fund, founded four years ago, counts a number of Republicans among its estimated 200 members.
176. Some had given radio talks and one had founded a society for people with his own impairment.
177. At No. 4/183 were the cloisters and church of the Czech Barnabite Order, founded in 1626.
178. After the war he founded the Disabled Society, lobbying the government to improve the quality of artificial limbs.
179. A formidable lady, she had founded the Atchison Institute, a private school for young ladies and gentlemen in Atchison.
180. It was founded to enable the public to identify qualified medical practitioners.
More similar words: confounded, founder, surrounded, profound, funded, dumbfound, foundation, founding father, round and round, minded, extended, suspended, undivided, reprimanded, apprehended, bound, wound, round, sound, under, around, ground, compound, all round, expound, round off, round up, sound off, undergo, underway.