Similar words: gemmed, femme fatale, caste system, rimmed, dimmed, crammed, skimmed, trimmed. Meaning: [stem] adj. 1. having a stem or stems or having a stem as specified; often used in combination 2. (of plants) producing a well-developed stem above ground 3. having the stem removed.
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1. The strawberries should be stemmed before they are tinned.
2. His headaches stemmed from vision problems.
3. Their disagreement stemmed from a misunderstanding.
4. Most of the companies' losses stemmed from redundancy costs.
5. He knew their bitterness stemmed from the fact that he was in charge.
6. The rain has stemmed.
7. The changes stemmed largely from the generation gap.
8. From this stemmed the rise in illegitimacy.
9. Church had effectively stemmed the flood of artists.
10. A related concern stemmed from predictions about the direction of health care funding.
11. Its cohesion stemmed entirely from the almost feudal loyalty the troops accorded the Emperor.
12. Rose stemmed the flow, encouraged the ebb, and he allowed it to be that way.
13. Part of Malthus's pessimism stemmed from the conviction that when population increased the price of labor would drop.
14. His initial reluctance stemmed partly from a statement he had made in November 1991 vowing never to accept the post.
15. Crucially, though, failure has stemmed from the harsh way in which some of the more valuable players have been treated.
16. Another element in the development of unreasonable expectations stemmed from the high commitment of the area training staff to the training program.
17. Much of the friction stemmed from a debate about which technology to use.
18. Nearly all have stemmed from this small, poor village one mile outside the frontier town of Peshawar.
19. Part of its appeal stemmed from the Tom Bass fountain inset into its wall, a long thin crack in the stone.
20. This stemmed from a need to give the regular cast holidays during the otherwise punishing year-long recording schedule.
21. These early Acts stemmed very largely from sanitary powers, and did not provide any financial assistance beyond powers of borrowing money.
22. From that area stemmed the earliest version of the Assumpnon of Mary, and the first liturgy and hymns in her honour.
23. This stemmed largely from a lack of political analysis and clarity in relation to nationalism and feminism on the part of Southern feminists.
24. Some of the changes stemmed directly from the wartime period, others from the greater material prosperity of the 1920s.
25. Blow-off vision of the rain, so that you are left with a brilliant rainbow.Shuttle time in my fingers, without any regrets, open stemmed bloom ripples. Blunt rolling thick liquid eternal, but you and I, were dispersed in which period of Acacia leaves.
26. Its brevity, awkward composition and lukewarm style of its writing stemmed from the Committee's revisions.
27. Much of his hatred and contempt of Bella must have stemmed from her involvement in Johnny's fall from grace.
28. By no means all the conflict within the Frankish kingdom stemmed from the centre.
28. Sentencedict.com try its best to gather and build good sentences.
29. What I did not know at the time was that his drinking problem stemmed from his drug problem.
30. Perhaps Caro's declaration that her stepbrother was very likeable had not just stemmed from partiality.
More similar words: gemmed, femme fatale, caste system, rimmed, dimmed, crammed, skimmed, trimmed, undimmed, immediate, immediacy, immediately, skimmed milk, stem, system, steamed, esteemed, stem cell, subsystem, distemper, episteme, brain stem, epistemic, ecosystem, abstemious, wage system, systematic, open system, solar system, river system.