Referred
in sentence
446 examples of Referred in a sentence
They are often just
referred
to as G, C, A and T. But it's remarkable that all the diversity of life is the result of four genetic letters.
And in the sex trade, the customer is
referred
to as a John.
The first time someone
referred
to me as a man, it stopped me in my tracks.
This idea was jokingly
referred
to at the time as the "Big Bang," but as the evidence piled up, the notion and the name actually stuck.
Each of these five, while generally
referred
to as oceans in and of themselves, are really and truly a part of a single, massive body of water, one ocean, which defines the very face of planet Earth.
At first, the dance was practiced only by females and commonly
referred
to as Onna-Kabuki.
This means that speeds only have meaning when they are
referred
to a reference frame.
The city became so concerned about this that they recently constructed a new drinking water intake structure that they
referred
to as the "Third Straw" to pull water out of the greater depths of the lake.
Also in the room were three leaders of the Human Genome Project, including the co-discoverer of DNA himself, James Watson, who had submitted a brief to the court, where he
referred
to gene patenting as "lunacy."
This type of kick, often
referred
to as a banana kick, is attempted regularly, and it is one of the elements that makes the beautiful game beautiful.
They are commonly
referred
to as refugees.
I cringe, though, when I'm
referred
to as a "finger painter."
Over a three-year period, the barbers measured thousands of blood pressures resulting in hundreds of black men being
referred
to doctors for medical care of their high blood pressure.
What words to use? Sperm donors are often
referred
to as "biological fathers," but should we really be using the word "father?"
And if you looked at the formula, you needed to know where on the screen it
referred
to.
If you have a heart attack, you get emergency services, and you get
referred
to care.
It's the device you use when your heart goes into cardiac arrest to shock it back into a normal rhythm, or, as one of the guys I was teaching a class to
referred
to it as: "The shocky-hearty-box thing."
This decrease in sea ice is sometimes
referred
to as an increase in the open water season.
Personal seed capital, a publicly established baby trust, what my colleague William Darity at Duke University and I have
referred
to as baby bonds, a term that was coined by the late historian from Columbia University, Manning Marable.
This feeling is commonly
referred
to as the "overview effect."
And it's this work that is not even
referred
to as real work.
It's
referred
to as "help."
Initially, I was hesitant to join a group
referred
to around the yard as "hug-a-thug."
So to understand the evidence for dark energy, we need to discuss something that Stephen Hawking
referred
to in the previous session.
I was once told that an attorney who worked there
referred
to the defendants as "the scum of the earth" and then had to represent them.
But we do know that in the last days before the Brexit vote, the official "Vote Leave" campaign laundered nearly three quarters of a million pounds through another campaign entity that our electoral commission has ruled was illegal, and it's
referred
it to the police.
It broke British electoral laws and British data laws, and it's also being
referred
to the police.
And in a completely separate case, he's being
referred
to our National Crime Agency, our equivalent of the FBI, because our electoral commission has concluded they don't know where his money came from.
So for a long time, psychologists have
referred
to these as cognitive distortions or even irrational beliefs.
I was no longer
referred
to as Teresa Njoroge.
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