Synonym: 16th, one-sixteenth, sixteenth part. Similar words: sixteen, fifteenth, fourteenth, thirteenth, fourteenth amendment, seventeen, green thumb, private enterprise. Meaning: [‚sɪk'stɪːnθ] n. 1. position 16 in a countable series of things 2. one part in sixteen equal parts. adj. coming next after the fifteenth in position.
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31. In the sixteenth century, opposition to the religious implications of Copernican cosmology came initially from the Reformation.
32. The divisions amongst the Christians weakened their power of resistance and may have contributed to the Ottoman victories of the sixteenth century.
33. In the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries many criminals were subjected to that agonizing death.
34. It has a baronial castle which was rebuilt in the early sixteenth century after fire destruction.
35. Until well into the sixteenth century the royal court and its functionaries were peripatetic.
36. The last vestiges of serfdom had disappeared in the sixteenth century, and the peasants farmed the land as leaseholders or sharecroppers.
37. There is no sign that their number had decreased by the sixteenth century.
38. This may have been done in the Middle Ages, but many warrens seem to date from the sixteenth century onwards.
39. The city remained free until the early sixteenth century but was less wealthy.
40. The darkest day of my life dawned in western Arizona on November sixteenth.
41. Mathilde had planned a party for her, a party to celebrate her sixteenth birthday in a week's time.
42. In the late sixteenth century, the altarpiece was replaced by a Cigoli, and eventually sold.
43. One is founded on the triumphant rise of natural science since the sixteenth century.
44. Long Melford is one of the wool churches that commemorate the wealth of East Anglia in the fifteenth and sixteenth centuries.
45. The sixteenth offered little relief, it called for a wooden club for practically everybody.
46. Teresa of Avila became one of the great reformers of the sixteenth century.
47. To reach the sixteenth green from the championship tee required a full driver over a lake of 230 yards.
48. Three days after my sixteenth birthday, in August 1944, Butler's Education Act received the royal assent.
49. The professional miner seeking to achieve a higher standard of living through maximisation of earnings scarcely existed in the early sixteenth century.
50. Up to the sixteenth century or so,(sentencedict.com) most people in Britain lived in the countryside.
51. During the period of the Tudor monarchs in the sixteenth century, Parliament acquired enhanced status.
52. During most of the sixteenth century, condemnation of women who employed a wet-nurse to suckle their babies was minimal.
53. The remote origins of Emanuel School lay in the sixteenth century and a small charitable foundation for the elderly and the young.
54. By the late sixteenth and early seventeenth centuries, moral laxity in the administration of confession by the clergy was evident.
55. The strict interpretation of statute, an important feature of the sixteenth century, owed much to the invention of printing.
56. In the sixteenth and early seventeenth centuries this jurisdiction was abandoned by the Chancellor and passed to the Court of Star Chamber.
57. Pham Van Dong, perspiring as the heavyweights encircled him,(www.Sentencedict.com) now accepted a partition at the sixteenth parallel.
58. The earliest reversions to Exchequer offices were granted during the fifteenth century; they became frequent during the sixteenth.
59. The habit of giving reversions had become well established by the sixteenth century.
60. The city boasted a college of law, established in the sixteenth century, and a Jesuit college.
More similar words: sixteen, fifteenth, fourteenth, thirteenth, fourteenth amendment, seventeen, green thumb, private enterprise, read between the lines, teen, teens, canteen, fifteen, teenage, fourteen, preteen, nineteen, eighteen, thirteen, teenager, in the end, in the teeth of, extent, extention, to some extent, genteel, absentee, re-enter, to a lesser extent, absenteeism.