Fayetteville Sentence Examples

fayetteville
  • In the hilly city of Fayetteville, that was a threat during any heavy rain.

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  • Fayetteville is long distance, but I'll be glad to pay you for the call as soon as I get my things.

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  • It's a long way to drive from Fayetteville, and then they'd have to bring you back in the morning.

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  • You said you lived in Fayetteville...

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  • It was something her parents never understood... which was probably why they moved to Fayetteville.

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  • The trip to Fayetteville wasn't as unpleasant as she had anticipated.

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  • It would take her as long to drive to Fayetteville as it would for him to fly there from Tulsa.

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  • My sister is supposed to fly into Fayetteville later today.

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  • Do you know that topless bar in Fayetteville?

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  • Surely it couldn't be coincidence that he had been traveling to Fayetteville from California and then turned up out here in the boonies.

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  • Why not take a drive into Fayetteville and do a little shopping?

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  • Now it would be a trip to Fayetteville so the rental agency could verify the cause of damage - and then a call to her auto insurance company.

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  • The trip to Fayetteville didn't seem as long - maybe because this time she was expecting a long journey.

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  • She explained why she was in Fayetteville and mentioned that Keaton had braved the storm to be with her.

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  • The Roanoke river is navigable to Weldon and the Cape Fear river to Fayetteville; the Neuse is navigable for small vessels only to Newbern.

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  • A second convention met at Fayetteville in November 1789 and the constitution was speedily ratified (on the 13th) by a vote of 195 to 77.

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  • Fayetteville has two hospitals (each with a training school for nurses), and is the seat of a state coloured normal school and of the Donaldson military school.

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  • Several creeks and the upper Cape Fear river furnish considerable waterpower, and in or near Fayetteville are manufactories of cotton goods, silk, lumber, wooden-ware, turpentine, carriages, wagons, ploughs, edge tools and flour.

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  • In the earlier half of the 19th century Fayetteville was a great inland market for the western part of the state, for eastern Tennessee and for south-western Virginia.

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  • There is a large vineyard in the vicinity; truckgardening is an important industry in the surrounding country; and Fayetteville is a shipping centre for small fruits and vegetables, especially lettuce, melons and berries.

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  • The vicinity was settled between 1729 and 1747 by Highlanders, the settlement called Cross Creek lying within the present limits of Fayetteville.

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  • In 1762, by an act of the assembly, a town was laid out including Cross Creek, and was named Campbelltown (or "Campbeltown"); but in 1784, when Lafayette visited the town, its name was changed in his honour to Fayetteville, though the name Cross Creek continued to be used locally for many years.

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  • The general assembly of the state met at Fayetteville in 1787, 1788 and 1789 (Newbern, Tarboro, Hillsboro and Fayetteville all being rivals at this time for the honour of becoming the permanent capital); and in 1789 the Federal constitution was here ratified for North Carolina.

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  • At the outbreak of the Civil War, the state authorities seized the United States Arsenal at Fayetteville, which contained 37,000 muskets and a complete equipment for a battery of light artillery.

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  • Fayetteville was chartered as a city in 1893.

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  • Fayetteville is served by the St Louis & San Francisco railway.

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  • In Fayetteville there are a National cemetery with 1236 soldiers' graves (782 "unknown") and a Confederate cemetery with 725 graves and a memorial monument.

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  • In the vicinity of Fayetteville there are deposits of coal; and the city is in a fine fruit-growing region, apples being the principal crop. Much of the surrounding country is still covered with timber.

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  • The first settlement on the site of what is now Fayetteville was made between 1820 and 1825; when Washington county was created in 1828 the place became the county-seat, and it was called Washington Court-house until 1829, when it received its present name.

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  • The citizens of Fayetteville were mainly Confederate sympathizers; Fayetteville was raided by Federal cavalry on the 14th of July 1862, and was permanently occupied by Federal troops in the autumn of the same year.

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  • Fayetteville was incorporated as a town in 1841, and in 1859 received a city charter, which was abolished by act of the Legislature in 1867; under a general law of 1869 the town was re-incorporated; and in 1906 it became a city of the first class.

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  • The family removed to Fayetteville, N.Y., and afterwards to Clinton, N.Y.

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  • In 1900 a dozen other towns had a population exceeding 2500, the most important being Hot Springs (9973), Helena (5550), Texarkana (4914), Jonesboro (4508), Fayetteville (4061), Eureka Springs (3572), Mena (3423) and Paragould (3324).

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  • The University of Arkansas was opened at Fayetteville in 187 2.

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  • A branch 'normal school, established 1873-1875 at Pine Bluff, provides for coloured students, who enjoy the same opportunities for work, and are accorded the same degrees, as the students at Fayetteville; they are about a fourth as numerous.

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  • In 1905-1906 there were 497 students in the college of liberal arts, sciences and engineering, 548 in the preparatory school and 26 in the conservatory of music and arts, all in Fayetteville; 171 in the medical school and 46 in the law school in Little Rock; and 240 in the branch normal college at Pine Bluff.

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  • Fayetteville was where her family had decided she would go to college – close to them and safe, but she longed for those layered mountain ranges where wildlife abounded.

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  • The opportunity to explore the building presented itself several days latter when Sarah was making a shopping list in preparation for her trip to Fayetteville and asked Lisa if she wanted to go along.

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  • When the commuter plane touched down at NXA airport, Megan called for the shuttle van to her hotel in Fayetteville and decided to wait outside.

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  • The Piedmont is home to major cities Raleigh, Durham, Greensboro, and Fayetteville.

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  • The family-owned business has 28 locations and has been in operation since 1994 when the first store was opened in Fayetteville, NC.

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  • Sandra Diaz-Twine - Sandra is 35, from Fayetteville, North Carolina.

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  • Diaz-Twine seemed like an unlikely Survivor contestant, but this Fayetteville, NC, bank teller has won the game not once but twice - the only contestant ever to do so.

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