Similar words: manual, actuary, estuary, february, obituary, mortuary, sanctuary, sumptuary. Meaning: ['dʒænjʊərɪ] n. the first month of the year; begins 10 days after the winter solstice.
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(151) In January 1877, Congress set up an electoral commission to decide the dispute.
(152) Early that January a bitter wind blowing off the far Urals seized East Anglia in a grip of ice.
(153) Not many people chose to take a ride on such a bumpy, gloomy road after dark in the month of January.
(154) Foley, a former Colchester player, was caretaker for three months before Wallace's arrival last January.
(155) The government appointed in January 1938 remained in office for the rest of the war.
(156) He withdrew from active life and retired to Kenilworth where on the 4 January 1927 he died at the age of seventy-seven.
(157) The list was given wider circulation by the monthly art newspaper Kunstavisen in its January/February 1992 number.
(158) Since convening in January 1995, the House has voted for amendments that required a balanced federal budget and forbade flag desecration.
(159) Appointments to the Cabinet to replace other departing ministers were announced in the first week of January.
(160) She says her dismissal followed the arrival of Peter Hughes, who became high commissioner in January 1998.
(161) That first December 1904 issue featured begonias(sentencedict.com), as does the January 1996 issue.
(162) These observations defined the structure of the cell cycle experiments, as carried out in January and February of 1995.
(163) Open January 1. Leading brand names up to 40 percent off.
(164) Falcon Holidays is predicting a bumper January and has already sold almost 40 % of its summer programme for 2001.
(165) The arrangement ended on 1 January when the Soviet Union ceased trading with its former allies on a convertible rouble basis.
(166) From January 1999, all legal advisors to justices are required to be qualified as solicitors or barristers.
(167) He had denied committing the offences involving children between the ages of four and 14 between January 1989 and June 1992.
(168) In January it revealed that its orders were down from a year ago; analysts think its earnings will follow.
(169) It aroused much local opposition but the directives came into force, technically at least, from I January this year.
(170) When they took office in January 1993 the Dow Jones industrial average stood at 3,242.
(171) Last winter, NordicTrack blamed disappointing sales on balmy weather,(www.Sentencedict.com) which encouraged al fresco jogging in January.
(172) We first brought it to your attention in January last year and we were delighted with your response.
(173) A redesigned format was launched in January 1993 with the dual aim of making the journal more attractive to readers and advertisers.
(174) It is Bessie who puts Jane on to the coach which takes her to Lowood on a cold January morning.
(175) By January 1994, several thigh creams were being sold, some with the inventors' blessings and some without.
(176) And it hit the streets in that colour from its launch in 1894 until changing over to white paper in January 1917.
(177) My wife, Julie, and I were born on January 28, 1961.
(178) In December and January, she collected numerous honors as the top woman athlete and top track and field athlete of 2000.
(179) Yakovlev, the head of Agitprop and one of the chief architects of the cut-back in provincial newspapers in January.
(180) In January, the teams finally ended their drawn-out discussions with a map that clearly marks the boundary.
More similar words: manual, actuary, estuary, february, obituary, mortuary, sanctuary, sumptuary, janitor, anus, annual, nuance, peanut, uranus, manure, anuria, annually, clean up, granule, hanukkah, continual, insinuate, attenuate, extenuate, a number of, continually, semiannual, in a nutshell, manuscript, superannuated.