Use "the ravages of time" in a sentence

1. Her looks had not survived the ravages of time.

2. But the ravages of time have not been kind.

3. I had to make up for the ravages of time.

4. Quarterback John Elway, continues to defy the ravages of time.

5. The same can not withstand the ravages of time, emotion, to the time it will cool.

6. 12 Quarterback John Elway, continues to defy the ravages of time.

7. For a long time now, he has appeared indifferent to the ravages of his problem.

8. The play is a rueful, wry observation about the way we are all subject to the ravages of time.

9. Perhaps an organism as complex as a man could never be wholly impervious to the ravages of time.

10. Benedict was near thirty, and yet his face and form had withstood the ravages of time and circumstance.

11. The ravages of time, sun, and desert sand have not completely faded the striking colors that adorn the columns that surround the pool.

12. Bureaucracy was also a necessary evil to cope with the ravages of war.

13. This destruction is, perhaps, the least reparable of the ecological ravages which distinguish our age.

14. Brett Favre places himself in a rehab center for repairs from the ravages of painkillers.

15. New sensible Bahama beige is ideal for concealing the ravages of muddy boots.

16. The resulting explosion destroys Mount Arreat, ravages much of the countryside , and decimates Baal's army.

17. The casings are also designed to resist the ravages of sunlight and temperature changes.

18. I have witnessed at close quarters the ravages of economic exploitation resulting from colonialism.

19. In toppling the unbaked mud-brick walls, they buried certain buildings up to a height of 15 feet [5 m] in some places, thus preserving them from the ravages of time.

20. In it humans lived happy lives, free from toil, pain, and the ravages of old age.

21. The area has escaped the ravages of war and forest clearance which have devastated most of the region.

22. The alpine rose often escapes the ravages of the wind by growing in crevices among the rocks.

23. Doubtless photography is making the same ravages on this side of the Channel as it is with us.

24. Jesus’ tender feelings when resurrecting Lazarus reflected his intense desire to undo the ravages of death

25. Here they remain, protected from winter's ravages by their natural thatch.

26. Keep your precious homebrew safe from the ravages of oxygen and pests with this wide assortment of stoppers and Airlocks

27. Instead, they can have a grand, sustaining hope for relief from the ravages of old age and death.

28. 8 Today, Jehovah does not guarantee us protection from the ravages of death, crime, famine, or natural disaster.

29. 30 Its dreamlike construction of our sceptred isle as an ethnically purified one provides a special comfort against the ravages of decline.

30. The Communist ideals of justice, equality, solidarity, and peaceful amity appealed to those who were worn out by the ravages of war.

31. If Eumenes was able to keep Pergamon free from the ravages of the Gauls, it was probably because he paid them tribute.

32. The idea is that you do your best not to subject those around you to the many ravages of your little disease.

33. It would be wrong to assume that rich countries will always be able to insulate themselves with drugs against the ravages of new diseases.

34. It ensures the protection of mineral supports such as concrete , bricks, and natural stone against the ravages of chemicals (acid rain), water, frost, micro-organisms, and graffiti .

35. Surviving Autocracy is an inventory of ravages and a call to account but also a beacon to recovery—and to the hope of what comes next

36. A lethal pandemic known as the "Gray Death" ravages the world's population, especially within the United States, and has no cure.

37. 21 It would be wrong to assume that rich countries will always be able to insulate themselves with drugs against the ravages of new diseases.

38. In parts of the marine park in the south close to shore that avoided the ravages of previous Bleachings, ocean temperatures were 3.6 to 5.4 degrees above average.

39. Babel Revisited is a clever contemporary riff on Brueghel the Elder's tower, skyscrapers rising out from the ravages of industrial wasteland to form the tower in place of the single doomed structure.

40. Buffered, or defined outcome, ETFs, which aim to protect investors from the worst stock market ravages, do not own any underlying shares

41. View in context The poor savages saw with dismay the ravages of a malady, loathsome and agonizing in its details, and which set the skill and experience of their Conjurors and

42. 1642 England – English Civil War begins (see Timeline of the English Civil War) 1652 England – Tea arrives in Britain 1666 England – The Great Fire of London ravages the city, 2–5 September.

43. Also provided is a safe and effective method to protect poultry against the ravages of Escherichia coli Bacillosis infection and disease in which a live mutant aroA- gene deleted E

44. Benighted or Bedazed by the March of Time, Time, time

45. ‘The physical Attractiveness of the young performers makes the ravages of the disease—gaping sores weeping blood—all the more terrible to behold.’ ‘There was a subtle Attractiveness to her, and I think that that was the one thing that made me fall for her.’

46. ‘The physical Attractiveness of the young performers makes the ravages of the disease—gaping sores weeping blood—all the more terrible to behold.’ ‘There was a subtle Attractiveness to her, and I think that that was the one thing that made me fall for her.’

47. Of All time; unsurpassed up to the present time

48. means acclimatised to the local time of the departure time zone,

49. Some of the stars black out from time to time.

50. time of departure (actual off-block time, take-off time);

51. The Archai are the angelic beings who hold the blueprint of the river of time and work with the cycles of time and the creation of time itself

52. The time of the grape harvest at the end of summer was a time of great rejoicing.

53. From time to time, virtually all of us experience the pangs of conscience.

54. Some stars of the constellation black out from time to time.

55. Borrowed time synonyms, Borrowed time pronunciation, Borrowed time translation, English dictionary definition of Borrowed time

56. There's a time to plan and there's a time to opine about the future of the universe. But most of the time is a good time for getting things done.

57. Because of the time slippage.

58. Extravagant estimates of the height of elephants have , from time to time , been recorded .

59. accelerating: 26,9 % of the time;

60. The invention of time travel.

61. the onward march of time.

62. When he spoke of the time of distress, the prophet Daniel also introduced a time element.

63. The termination time of gastrointestinal decompression is not completely consistent with the exsufflation time of anus.

64. From time to time these glad tidings were sounded in the ears of men in different ages of the world down to the time of Messiah’s coming.

65. By the time expresses that the end-point of one activity (with duration) is the point-of-time for viewing the timing of another activity, “not later than the time” [possibly before and up to X point of time]

66. Time after time the doc set out in search of another croc.

67. The enuretic boys Awoke only 8.5% of the time while the non-bedwetters Awoke 39.6% of the time

68. In the Cerements of time.” “In the Cerements of time.” His voice crackled with the dryness of his throat

69. Time and time again in the history of aviation, " the impossible " has been done.

70. The first early attempts to settle Barbuda (by both the British and French) were failures, and it wasn't until 1666 that the British established a colony strong enough to survive the ravages of both nature and the Amerindians originally from South America, attempting to keep the Europeans off their islands.

71. Timing is the time when something happens or the spacing of events in time.

72. The psalmist refers to “a time of goodwill,” using the expression “an acceptable time.”

73. From the date of resumption time shall begin to run afresh for the purposes of the time limits.

74. The weather forecast at the time of going to press was good for this time of the year.

75. The 100 greatest guitarists of All time; The 50 greatest solos of All time: 50-41 50

76. 21 You can fool some of the people all the time,(www.Sentencedict.com) and all of the people some of the time; but you can't fool all of the people all the time. 

77. Learn the definition of 'Abridgment of time'

78. The first rule of time travel is you don't talk about time travel!

79. 9 You can fool some of the people all the time,[www.Sentencedict.com] and all of the people some of the time; but you can't fool all of the people all the time. 

80. Prince of Persia: The Sands of Time.