Use "jut|juts" in a sentence

1. The pier juts into the sea.

2. The land juts out into the bay.

3. Bulge definition is - to jut out : swell

4. A long peninsula juts out into the sea.

5. The balcony juts out over the street.

6. The balcony juts out over the garden.

7. The rafters that jut out rot first.

8. Don't allow your chin to jut out.

9. His chin juts out rather a lot.

10. The wall juts out here to allow room for the rubbish channel.

11. His teeth tend to jut out a little.

12. Sharp movements, too pale a skin, the jut of corsets: she rejected them.

13. The probability of the Bigram occurring P(Bigram) is jut the quotient of those

14. Forward, her Neanderthal brow juts out, spiked with lights and cameras.

15. The grey concrete of Sergel Square juts out into the auditorium.

16. The wall juts out here to allow room for the chimney.

17. She was spared the watching of the branches jut out beyond the point of balance.

18. The environmental Problems jut out , especially refuse problem is most difficult to solve.

19. 4 Forward, her Neanderthal brow juts out,(www.Sentencedict.com) spiked with lights and cameras.

20. A Barbed tail juts out of its backside, making up about 70 percent of its length

21. Rocky slopes flank its shores, and to the north, majestic Mount Hermon juts into the sky.

22. The northern end of the island juts out like a long, thin finger into the sea.

23. Here and there, a buried sliver of wood juts up, like a bayonet from a battlefield.

24. Mr. Pettazzi's extraordinary flourish was the concrete wings that jut out a total of more than 90 feet.

25. An alligator head in profile juts up at the top, its darting red tongue thrusting out sideways.

26. 29 Here and there, a buried sliver of wood juts up, like a bayonet from a battlefield.

27. They stand tall, jut their chins out, call no one Sir and can lick any man in the house.

28. 17 The theology was complicated, despite the jut - jawed charm and aquiline intensity with which it was expressed.

29. The newly formed RNA molecules jut out at right angles before breaking away in search of ribosomes, where they instruct protein manufacture.

30. Unusually tall columns, flying buttresses, towering spires, and narrow windows, all create vertical lines that appear to jut out perpendicular to the surface of the Earth.

31. 26 Football-shaped pods —striped in yellow and green and orange and brown —jut out from the trunks and branches of the cacao trees.

32. A Branch is a protruding part of a tree, something that juts out from a main part, or a division of a group or organization

33. When the crystals do not mesh properly, the occasional atom will jut out where it should not, creating a defect to which a phage can stick.

34. The term Canted is short for “cantilevered.” Canted Amish hutches have a very distinctive shape, as the middle section juts out, and the side sections seem to recede

35. As for the Aymara-speaking population, they inhabit the numerous communities and villages along the shores and on the peninsulas that jut into the lake.

36. The San Qing Pavilion, which jut out from the steep cliff wall, were built in the Yuan Dynasty as part of a summer resort for the royal family.

37. Aretes, simply vertical sharp edges that jut out from a cliff face, are not only beautiful rock features but also make stellar climbs that are usually exposed and technical

38. Unlike Sportacus, Mr. Scheving does not have a thin black mustache that juts out as if he had recently been electrocuted . He does not reside in a dirigible in the sky.

39. 1590s, "liable to make answer or defense, accountable," from Anglo-French Amenable, from Old French amener "bring, take, conduct, lead" (to the law), from "to" (see ad-) + mener "to lead," from Latin minare "to drive (cattle) with shouts," variant of minari "to threaten," also "to jut, project" (from PIE root *men- …

40. 1600, from Medieval Latin Adjacentia, abstract noun from Latin adiacens "lying at," present participle of adiacere "lie at, border upon, lie near," from ad "to" (see ad-) + iacēre "to lie, rest," related to iacere "to throw; lay ('cast (oneself) down')," from PIE root *ye- "to throw, impel." Related entries & more jut (v.1)

41. Batfishes are small fishes (to 25 cm) that have a strongly flattened, somewhat disc-like, body; head pointed to rounded when viewed from above; a piston-like fishing rod apparatus on the snout in a cavity just above the mouth, a lumpy bait at the end of the rod; roof of the fishing-rod cavity juts out as a rostrum; gill openings small, behind upper base of pectoral fin; dorsal and anal fins