Sentences with Towns, Sentences about Towns

Sentences with Towns, Sentences about Towns

1. This is a decent town.

2. The townspeople cheered.

3. Steve lives in a port town.

4. The whole town has cable TV.

5. Is there a museum in this town?

6. The town is accessible by rail.

7. He came from a tiny mountain town.

8. The storm destroyed the whole town.

9. The whole town knew she was innocent.

10. The boy was wandering about the town.

11. Towns sprang up all along the railroad.

12. This town has undergone a rapid change.

13. One town has excellent sports facilities.

14. Bulldozers will knock down that shantytown.

15. My father was born in a small town in Spain.

16. Steve announced he’s coming to town tomorrow.

17. The town where I was born is on the west coast.

18. Rodger is not moving anywhere outside the town.

19. This store has the best selection of hats in town.

20. After dinner, they took a spin around town in my car.

21. After they pass the town, they must turn to the left.

22. We have this morning dropped anchor, just off Williamstown.

23. My databases show no record of this Crazytown of which you speak.

24. 11.If they were out of town next week, your parent would/ could visit them.

25. Tomas fell ill suddenly and therefore his family gave up on going out of town.

26. Our attitude is that we want to cross over. You can’t go on making records just for your own hometown.

27. Back then there were only four other restaurants in our tiny town that could accommodate that many people.

28. I’m astounded by people who want to ‘know’ the universe when it’s hard enough to find your way around Chinatown.

29. Sam screamed the fun scream, and there it was. Downtown lights on buildings and everything that makes you wonder.

30. Downtown. Lights on buildings and everything that makes you wonder. And in that moment, I swear we were infinite.

31. I saw a banner hanging next to city hall in downtown Philadelphia that read, “Kill them all, and let God sort them out.”

32. I grew up in this town, my poetry was born between the hill and the river, it took its voice from the rain, and like the timber, it steeped itself in the forests.

33. We didn’t have movies in this little mining town. When I was 12 my mom took me to New York and I saw Bye Bye Birdie, with people singing and dancing, and that was it.

34. An association of men who will not quarrel with one another is a thing which has never yet existed, from the greatest confederacy of nations down to a town meeting or a vestry.

35. The newspaper is a marvelous medium. It is extraordinarily convenient and cheap. Let’s see. This one cost 75 cents. Now that’s a little high. I bought it when I was downtown this morning.

36. The townspeople outside the reservations had a very superior attitude toward Indians, which was kind of funny, because they weren’t very wealthy they were on the fringes of society themselves.

37. I grew up in Marcy Projects in Brooklyn, and my mom and pop had an extensive record collection, so Michael Jackson and Stevie Wonder and all of those sounds and souls of Motown filled the house.

38. I was proud to share the stories of my friends at Georgetown Law who have suffered dire medical consequences because our student insurance does not cover contraception for the purpose of preventing pregnancy.

39. I lived in small town out in the desert and my friend used to steal his mom’s car in the middle of the night. He’d drive over to my house, I’d sneak out and we’d go out to the desert and just burn things down.

40. I was born and raised in the high desert of Nevada in a tiny town called Searchlight. My dad was a hard rock miner. My mom took in wash. I grew up around people of strong values – even if they rarely talked about them.

41. Though everything else may appear shallow and repulsive, even the smallest task in music is so absorbing, and carries us so far away from town, country, earth, and all worldly things, that it is truly a blessed gift of God.

42. I showed my mom the movie then I told her the movie got bought and that it was gonna be shown in theatres and be on video. Everyone was really psyched about it. Everyone in my little town of hounds started to call me movie star.

43. Learn from me, if not by my precepts, then by my example, how dangerous is the pursuit of knowledge and how much happier is that man who believes his native town to be the world than he who aspires to be greater than his nature will allow.

44. The present moment is nice but it does not last. Living in it is like waiting in a junction town for the morning limited the junction may be interesting but some day you will have to leave it and you do not know where the limited will take you.

45. I’m kind of lucky that we’ve finished shooting ‘Cougar Town,’ so I’m able to kind of just enjoy my pregnancy and be a stay-at-home mom and go to prenatal Pilates and do all that fun stuff that, if I were working, would be almost impossible to do.

46. If one of us, any of us, any American is traveling in a town somewhere in America and a medical crisis hits them, for someone who is diabetic or perhaps has heart disease or some other problems, where do we get the records to determine what to do?

47. It used to happen in villages and towns in China that they would have – I guess you’d call them beauty contests – where all of the women of a particular village or town would be seated behind these screens or curtains with only their feet showing.

48. I had daydreams and fantasies when I was growing up. I always wanted to live in a log cabin at the foot of a mountain. I would ride my horse to town and pick up provisions. Then return to the cabin, with a big open fire, a record player and peace.

49. On ‘Van Halen,’ I was a young punk, and everything revolved around the fastest kid in town, gunslinger attitude. But I’d say that at the time of ‘Fair Warning,’ I started concentrating more on songwriting. But I guess in most people’s minds I’m just a gunslinger.

50. Then you’ve got Georgetown, and I really just like everything about them. When I went down there with my mom, it really opened my eyes to what they were all about. I have to factor in what a school like that can do for me, even away from being a basketball player.

51. I would like it to be known that I have decided not to marry Group Capt. Peter Townsend. Mindful of the church’s teaching that Christian marriage is indissoluble, and conscious of my duty to the Commonwealth, I have resolved to put these considerations before any others.

52. I was brought up by a single mom in a poor town in Arkansas and while some aspects of small-town life were really positive – like the fact that everyone there is really sweet and hospitable – there is also this close-minded mentality, and that naturally made me want to rebel.

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