Use "subsist|subsisted|subsisting|subsists" in a sentence

1. It is requested that I be authorized to subsist separately and receive a Commuted ration allowance instead of being subsisted in the dining facility

2. When she died the joint tenancy still subsisted.

3. A club cannot subsist without members.

4. Old systems still subsist in the country.

5. She has to get a casual work to subsist.

6. We are unable to subsist without air and water.

7. Spleen can subsist on any kind of food.

8. Whoever has no such necessary activities will not subsist.

9. Our family subsisted by cultivating and selling yam, cassava, and kola nuts.

10. They subsist on eggs and beans most of the time.

11. The living things on the earth could not subsist on Mars.

12. There was no moon, only the perpetual chemical twilight that subsists in suburbs by night.

13. Many of the soldiers had to subsist on insects and roots.

14. Everything on earth wants to subsist, and should respect each other.

15. The workers are expected to subsist on a dollar a day.

16. The Plaintiff and the Defendant do not buy any communal estates while their spousal relationship subsists.

17. Until 31 December 1995 entitlement to family allowances subsisted until the child reached the age of 16 years.

18. People in the far north subsist chiefly ( mainly ) on fish and meat.

19. Many people in the world have to subsist on $ 1 a day.

20. How will the new-built maintenance company subsist and develop facing market?

21. Synonyms for Breathes include is, exists, lives, survives, subsists, stands, has existence, has life, draws breath and has being

22. 18 God does not suggest that his people subsist on some austere food regimen.

23. The Masai subsist on cattle blood and meat and milk and little else.

24. Earol, who selflessly subsisted on half rations during two months of heavy fighting, headed the defense.

25. Newspapers, commercial radio and television companies could not subsist without this source of revenue.

26. Only we might congratulate us they went well, because problems will subsist after the elections.

27. They must subsist, he said, on one small portion of government-rationed meat per week.

28. In developing countries, some 1.2 billion people subsist on a dollar (U.S.) a day or less.

29. This also permits them to subsist on food with lower nutritive value than smaller animals.

30. I was very sorry to tell him that the little I had would not subsist.

31. Ashcraft survived 41 days Adrift in the Pacific, subsisting on peanut butter and willpower, before she approached Hilo, Hawaii and was picked up by …

32. Gannet - To subsist by the wings of his virtue and merit, having little land to rest upon.

33. If I can subsist on mussels in place of meat, why not these greens in place of lettuce?

34. All species are herbivorous, and mostly grazers, with simpler digestive systems than ruminants, but able to subsist on lower-quality vegetation.

35. Breatharian definition: a person who believes that it is possible to subsist healthily on air alone Meaning, pronunciation, translations and examples

36. Boniest •assist, cist, coexist, consist, cyst, desist, enlist, exist, fist, gist, grist, hist, insist, list, Liszt, mist, persist, resist, schist, subsist, tryst

37. Historically, the area has subsisted on lumber and agrarian products; the growth of strawberry fields in Marysville led to the city being nicknamed the "Strawberry City" in the 1920s.

38. From 100 million to 150 million surplus rural workers are adrift between the villages and the cities, many subsisting through part-time, low-paying jobs.

39. The flavobacterium is still a heterotroph as it needs reduced carbon compounds to live and cannot subsist on only light and CO2.

40. The Shuto is a symbol of a transport hierarchy in which cars cruise among the rooftops while pedestrians subsist in the shadows.

41. It is hardy and wiry haired, adapted to rough terrain and weather, and able to subsist and breed on its own without human intervention.

42. N a person who believes that it is possible to subsist healthily on air alone adj of or relating to a Breatharian: a Breatharian purification programme.

43. N a person who believes that it is possible to subsist healthily on air alone adj of or relating to a Breatharian: a Breatharian purification programme.

44. It cannot, like the agouti, subsist on thegravelly and desert plains of Patagonia, but prefers a Clayey orsandy soil, which produces a different and more abundantvegetation.

45. I believe that the world was created and approved by love, that it subsists, Coheres, and endures by love, and that, insofar as it is redeemable, it can be redeemed only by love

46. We subsist on a visual and voiceful world. We are not suit to emptiness. So we do feel better when we have decorations or dolls full in our room.

47. Typical of the Plains Indians in many aspects of their culture, the Blackfoot, also known as Blackfeet, were nomadic hunter-gatherers, living in teepees and subsisting primarily on buffalo and gathered vegetable foods

48. The Aardwolf (Proteles cristata) is an African carnivore of the family Hyaenidae.The smallest member of that family, the Aardwolf differs immediately from its bone-crushing, carrion-eating relatives by subsisting on a diet of termites.

49. They should always subsist on a plain, simple, unstimulating, vegetable, and water diet; and care should be taken that they do not eat too fast, and are not excessive, in quantity.

50. Cancer is the result of suffocation of the cells due to too much mucous present such that the cells cannot feed upon the sugar and oxygen that they require to subsist nor detoxify of their wastes.

51. Based on marks left on the teeth two specimens found in Malapa caves in southern Africa, it appears that Australopithecus sediba, subsisted almost entirely on a diet of leaves, fruits, wood and bark, a finding that contrasted sharply with the known diet of

52. Comes down from his heaven and appears before a Brahminee (the monk Brahma,deva’s mother), who was a Brahmā devotee, admonishing her on the futility of her offerings, since brahmās do not partake of earthly offerings, but subsist on dhyanic joy

53. As a result of the 1993 amendments to the Civil Code, married women have obtained the right to administer not only property which belonged to them before marriage (paraphernal property) but also to administer, jointly with the husband, the patrimony acquired by both spouses during marriage when the community of acquests subsists between the spouses.

54. Please explain this sentence to me: " the soul, though form of the body and moving principle of the body, is also much more than this, and can subsist by itself, being hoc Aliquid, though as a hoc Aliquid which is partly passive and mutable it must have in it spiritual matter.Omidinist 05:01, 24 November 2007 (UTC)

55. In the meantime it were to be wished that our people who are so Bugbeared with words, and terrified with the name of French, French power, French greatness, and the like, as if England could not subsist, and the queen of England was not able to keep upon her throne any longer than the king of France pleased, and that her majesty was going to be

56. 4 And it came to pass that when they had prepared all manner of afood, that thereby they might subsist upon the water, and also food for their flocks and herds, and bwhatsoever beast or animal or fowl that they should carry with them—and it came to pass that when they had done all these things they got aboard of their vessels or barges, and set forth into the sea, commending themselves unto the Lord their God.

57. The call for the congress included these remarks: To discuss, in the light of science and modern conscience, the general relations subsisting between the peoples of the West and those of the East, between the so-called "white" and the so-called "colored" peoples, with a view to encouraging between them a fuller understanding, the most friendly feelings, and the heartier co-operation.... The interchange of material and other wealth between the races of mankind has of late years assumed such dimensions that the old attitude of distrust and aloofness is giving way to a genuine desire for a closer acquaintanceship.