Use "rampart|ramparts" in a sentence

1. Why would nothing grow on the ramparts?

2. The rampart was destroyed totally.

3. Afterward, a rampart and trench were constructed.

4. If you run the test with an earlier version of Axis2/Rampart, you probably won't see any problems — because Rampart had the same bug up until the Rampart 5 release.

5. A mole can undermine the strongest rampart.

6. " The ramparts of the fort were still a mile away.

7. There is guard toing - and - froing along the rampart.

8. Yes, an iron rampart, " he repeated, relishing his phrase.

9. And I will station myself on the rampart.

10. Which is the longest rampart in the world?

11. Northside Rampart Mid Girls' Waterproof Hiking Boots Reg

12. At last, break down green rampart of international trade.

13. Complete with crenellations, ramparts and parapets , the stronghold of nescience reigns supreme.

14. To our right rose the high rampart of the dunes.

15. Lake Rampart would become the largest reservoir in the world.

16. Parapet applies to any low fortification, typically a wall atop a rampart.

17. 9 Riven stood alone on the eerily deserted ramparts, and chafed with impatience.

18. In the meantime, still many political rampart bondage the foreign - funded banks.

19. Even the trench behind the rampart would be brimming with oozing earth.

20. Perhaps the tower is part of the rampart of the city.

21. Ramparts in each corner are sloping and provide access to the upper level structures.

22. Behind its huge ramparts, there were accommodations for soldiers, their families, and other civilians.

23. Patented technology, remarkable rampart, protection by law, more reliable forgery prevention.

24. When he was finished, Rampart Dam lay pretty much in ruins.

25. Beyond it is a rampart of volcanoes rising to 000 feet.

26. Bulwark definition is - a solid wall-like structure raised for defense : rampart

27. They had time to fortify their position with a rampart and ditch.

28. Were we in a tin cup on top of a busted rampart.

29. EAR the grass-covered rampart which encircles Copenhagen lies a great red house.

30. Synonyms for Crenellations include battlements, barbicans, bastions, breastworks, bulwarks, fortification, parapets, ramparts, walls and barricades

31. Ramparts create Fountains of Fortune to imbue its defenders with amazing luck.

32. Near the grass-covered rampart which encircles Copenhagen lies a great red house.

33. They had been the great rampart of the colony on the North.

34. 19 synonyms for Battlement: rampart, wall, defence, fence, fort, barricade, stronghold, barbican

35. Bulwark definition, a wall of earth or other material built for defense; rampart

36. The Americans were amazed at his bravery and carried him behind the rampart.

37. Erosion continues along the Mackenzie River above The Ramparts but some aggradation occurs below it.

38. Avignon's 4.3km (2 2/3 miles) of ramparts embrace one of Europe's culture centers

39. Callinicos' Marxism has been repelled from the ramparts of pluralism for being ... well, Marxist.

40. Walkway on the Bellevue rampart, vue sur St-Vincent Abbey and its church.

41. There Antiochus III ‘threw up a siege rampart,’ taking that Phoenician seaport in 198 B.C.E.

42. Synonyms for Breastworks include ramparts, bastions, bulwarks, earthworks, embankments, fortification, parapets, defence, barbicans and barricades

43. Rampart Dam, however, was an ecological disaster probably with-out precedent in the world.

44. Synonyms for Bartizans include battlements, barbicans, bastions, breastworks, bulwarks, crenellations, fortification, parapets, ramparts and walls

45. Cobalt joined the coast road and they roared along the ramparts of the ancient town.

46. Johnston did stand like an iron rampart in the mountains above Dalton, one hundred miles away.

47. Synonyms for Breastwork include rampart, bastion, bulwark, earthwork, embankment, fortification, parapet, defence, barbican and barricade

48. Synonyms for Bartizan include battlement, barbican, bastion, breastwork, bulwark, crenellation, fortification, parapet, rampart and wall

49. At the very bottom of the rampart, and totally sealed by it, was a small hearth.

50. While roaming on the Abbey ramparts with Wugger, Blinny saw two Marlfoxes on the path below

51. Despite the difficult ground, Valens reached Adrianople where the Roman army fortified its camp with ditch and rampart.

52. Aurelian Wall, rampart of imperial Rome, first constructed in the second half of the 3rd century ad

53. It usually just consisted of a low rampart with a Breastwork that protected its defending infantry

54. Beaune is a stunning, walled city known for its cobbled streets, battlements, ramparts and extensive old town

55. All our rooms feature views of the waterfront, the ramparts of the walled city, or the marina.

56. He enjoys climbing and exploring the walls and ramparts of the castle; he is also dutiful and tough-minded.

57. The “Barbacans [sic]” recall to him the ramparts of Elsinore and the ghost of Hamlet’s father in “sable silvered” (3.272, 281)

58. The arrest of Perez, along with Gaines's death would cause investigations that would lead to the Rampart Scandal.

59. Beaune Hôtel is located in the historic town of Beaune in Burgundy, 1,000 feet from the old ramparts

60. The ramparts, with their mural towers, enclose a rectangular town which was built to house both maritime and fluvial ports.

61. The ramparts, the port, the dance of the Cawing seagulls, the immense beach, the perfume of the sea air? tourismus-in-marokko.de

62. The rampart shook under our weight and the ice all over the bog cracked and broke on both sides.

63. Ramparts was an open mic for Castroism and helped author the myth of Saint Che by secretly obtaining and publishing the Guevara diaries

64. Synonyms: Bulwark, barricade, breastwork, earthwork, rampart, bastion, parapet These nouns refer literally to structures used as a defense against attack

65. Barricade: [noun] an obstruction or rampart thrown up across a way or passage to check the advance of the enemy

66. 15 “And the king of the north will come and throw up a siege rampart and capture a fortified city.

67. Raised volcanic ramparts and plunging dark-shadowed chasms abut terraced green hills and flowering meadows that bake under the scorching Aegean sun.

68. The citadel's rough, sheer pale-brown outer walls and ramparts resemble a giant sandcastle built on the edge of the sea.

69. 12 The ramparts, with their mural towers, enclose a rectangular town which was built to house both maritime and fluvial ports.

70. Bastion definition, a projecting portion of a rampart or fortification that forms an irregular pentagon attached at the base to the main work

71. Campeche is a historical fairyland, its walled city center a tight enclave of restored pastel buildings, narrow cobblestone streets, fortified ramparts and well-preserved mansions.

72. The defences comprise a stone rampart, ditch and Counterscarp bank built across the neck of the headland, with almost sheer cliffs

73. The Brownnose Brigade are Trump’s elite troops willing to charge headlong into the strongest rampart of truth to defend Trump’s lies

74. She plucks the withered leaf from the balsam, and looks at the grass-covered rampart, on which many children are playing.

75. At this stage we were not aware of the full significance of the movement of the spoil to form the rampart.

76. Beaune was a Gallic sanctuary, then a Roman town; some of its ramparts are still intact and you can even walk on them

77. Now near loomed the great rampart of Cirith Gorgor, and the Black Gate Amidmost, and the Two Towers of the Teeth tall and dark

78. I reach the ramparts and the shadowy gates / whence first I issued, backward through the night / my studied steps retracing. Horror waits / around; the very silence breeds affright.

79. A short drive south of the capital city of Burgundy, Dijon, is Beaune – an ancient town encircled by medieval ramparts, famed for its significant production of Burgundian wines.

80. One of the Earth’s great natural features, the Andes form an unbroken rampart over some 5,500 miles—from the southern tip of South America to …