Perishable Sentence Examples

perishable
  • The sap-wood is more perishable,, but it is useful for fences, casks and a variety of other purposes;.

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  • In 1879, at Kilburn, the competition was of railway waggons to convey perishable goods long distances at low temperatures.

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  • The texts of the older authors which have come down to us were written for the most part not on stone but on papyrus, parchment or other perishable material.

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  • If they are perishable, it still helps to have wrapping supplies ahead of time, at a discount.

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  • The water is so cold that in the hottest summer perishable articles can be preserved by merely securing them in a closed vessel and allowing the water to drip upon it.

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  • Land navigation is a skill that is highly perishable.

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  • The larch, from its lofty straight trunk and the high quality of its wood, is one of the most important of coniferous trees; its growth is extremely rapid, the stem attaining a large size in from sixty to eighty years, while the tree yields good useful timber at forty or fifty; it forms firm heartwood at an early age, and the sapwood is less perishable than that of the firs, rendering it more valuable in the young state.

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  • But please remember these presents are very perishable so will not keep very long.

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  • The religion of Yahweh was no longer to rest upon the narrow perishable basis of locality and national sacra, but on the broad adamantine foundations of a universal divine sovereignty over all mankind and of righteousness as the essential element in the character of Yahweh and in his claims on man.

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  • Deficient in resin, the wood is more perishable than that of the spruce fir when exposed to the air, though it is said to stand well under water.

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  • Most unfortunately for posterity, the Greeks wrote mainly on perishable materials, and hence the chief records even of their later civilization have vanished.

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  • This is a misconception, however, as many companies will ship perishable foods, such as meat and cheesecake.

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  • A good rule of thumb is that most edible decorations can be kept for up to two weeks; less for those that have perishable ingredients.

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  • Whereas Diamond Organic sells fresh fruits and vegetables, Shop Organic focuses on products that are less perishable, such as nut butters, chips, and crackers.

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  • There are small stands going up all over that sell perishable foods and do not follow food safety regulations.

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  • Do not send perishable items that could ruin other items in the package.

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  • In the Orphic mysteries " the soul was regarded as a part of the divine, a particula aurae divinae, for which the body in its limited and perishable condition was no fit organ, but a grave or prison(ro a4 pa).

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  • Because they're not perishable they're transported by sea or land rather than air.

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  • The sap-wood is lighter and much more perishable, but is of value for many purposes of rural economy.

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  • Unlike milk or bread, dry pills don't come to mind as a perishable product, but they can lose some potency over time, especially if stored in warm temperatures.

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  • Since there are fragile and perishable parts, it's imperative that you take good care of the game.

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  • Blood is perishable and it cannot be stored for any extended length of time - it's either used or it's disposed of.

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  • Many gluten-free breads are highly perishable due to the use of non-wheat flours and therefore, are typically found in the frozen foods section of the grocery store.

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  • If you need perishable items for recipes you are making the day you shop or the next day, consider getting the discounted perishable items.

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  • When you plan your meals, make dishes that require using perishable items shortly after you go grocery shopping.

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  • This factor is the Record of the Past, which grows and develops by laws other than those affecting the perishable bodies of successive generations of mankind, and exerts an incomparable influence upon the educable brain, so that man, by the interaction of the Record and his educability, is removed to a large extent from the status of the organic world and placed in a new and unique position, subject to new laws and new methods of development unlike those by which the rest of the living world is governed.

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  • The yellow pine is one of the most important timber trees of the genus; the heart-wood being very durable is largely employed in ship-building and for house timber, being nearly equal to that of P. sylvestris; large quantities are exported to Britain under the name of " New York yellow pine "; the sapwood is perishable.

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  • Accordingly his ethics also were thoroughly dualistic. By the " works of the Demiurge," which the Christian is to flee, he meant the whole " service of the perishable."

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  • Gender bias in agricultural market liberalization Women usually occupy particular niches in agricultural markets, as small-scale, retail traders in perishable foodstuffs.

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  • He begins by stating that flesh and blood cannot inherit the kingdom of God, nor does the perishable inherit the imperishable.

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  • The policy of encouraging the provision of ample cold-storage accommodation has been developed still further by the Cold Storage Act of the Dominion parliament passed in 1907, under which subsidies are granted in part payment of the cost of erecting and equipping cold-storage warehouses in Canada for the preservation of perishable foodproducts.

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  • The script also recurs on walls in the shape of graffiti, and on vases, sometimes ink-written; and from the number of seals originally attached to perishable documents it is probable that parchment or some similar material was also used.

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  • In England the cluster-pine has been largely planted on sandy districts near the sea, and has become naturalized in Purbeck and other wild tracts in the southern counties, but the summer heat is too small to permit of its resinous products acquiring any value; the soft coarse wood, though perishable in the natural state, has been used for railway sleepers after saturation with creosote or preservative solutions.

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  • The cooling of residential and public buildings in hot countries, though attempted in a few cases in the United States and elsewhere, is yet practically untouched, the manufacture of ice and the preservation of perishable foods (apart from the frozen and chilled meat trades) have in many countries hardly received serious consideration, but in breweries, dairies, margarine works and many other industries there is a large and increasing field for refrigerating and ice-making machinery.

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  • He distinguished between an outward word of God and an inward, the former being the Scriptures and perishable, the latter the divine spirit and eternal.

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  • Into their human, fleshly and perishable nature imperishable life is thereby engrafted; it has become deified, and death has been changed into immortality.

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  • All yield a soft, easily-worked timber, which, though very perishable when exposed to weather, possesses sufficient durability when kept dry to give the trees a certain economic value.

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  • The cotton-wood timber, though soft and perishable, is of value in its prairie habitats, where it is frequently the only available wood either for carpentry or fuel; it has been planted to a considerable extent in some parts of Europe, but in England a form of this species known as P. monilifera is generally preferred from its larger and more rapid growth.

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  • Let him patiently bear hard words, let him not insult anybody, let him not become any one's enemy for the sake of this perishable body..

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  • Before 1405 the mortar used in Venice was made of lime from Istria, which possessed no hydraulic qualities and was consequently very perishable, a fact which to a large extent accounts for the fall of the Campanile of San Marco.

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  • Man's primary religious feeling seeks to bring him into association with the events and persons of his race, and that which in the Old Testament appears most perishable, most defective, and which suffers most under critical inquiry, was necessary in order to adapt new teaching to the commonly accepted beliefs of a bygone and primitive people.'

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