Sentence examples for a favoured form from inspiring English sources

Exact(4)

It is still a favoured form of health care in large parts of the Eastern world, especially in India, where a large percentage of the population use this system exclusively or combined with modern medicine.

What accounts for the growing popularity of pizza Pizza has long been a favoured form of inexpensive fast food in Italy, where people started putting tomato on flatbread sometime in the 18th century.

This type, along with the rondeau (song for solo voice with choral refrain) and the similar virelai (an analogue of the Italian ballata), was destined to become a favoured form employed by composers of polyphony such as Guillaume de Machaut, the universally acknowledged master of French music of the Ars Nova period.

The paper adds that cutting the telegraph wires was a "favoured form of nationalist protest" in India during the time of the colonial rule and was "invaluable" to the British during the Indian uprising of 1857.

Similar(56)

It noted that although they were few in number, such figures were "influential enough to be part of the reason why the ideal of a constitutional democracy as the favoured form of government for a future South Africa continued to burn brightly throughout the darkness of the apartheid era".

But his later utterances spoke more directly to a narrative that worsened after an encouraging start: Hatton, slain by a body shot – once his own favoured form of execution – knew he had no more to give and what he did bring was not enough.

Here, in the day since, it seems a form of delirious humour has become our favoured form of defence.

Certainly, the cash register features a printed five-letter word rhyming with 'runty', Belcher's favoured form of address to both friends and strangers.

Outside the state firms, the fiddly conglomerate is the favoured form of organisation.

But no, his favoured form of words describing near misses remains: "He gets the slightest touch on that, and it's a goal".

These innovations accompanied the use of the cabriole, or reverse curve, which, about 1725, became the favoured form for legs of chairs, tables, cabinets, and stands.

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