Sentence examples for a row of points from inspiring English sources

Suggestions(1)

The phrase "a row of points" is correct and usable in written English.
It can be used to describe a linear arrangement of points, often in a mathematical or graphical context.
Example: "The graph displayed a row of points that indicated the trend over the past year."
Alternatives: "a line of dots" or "a series of points".

Exact(1)

The teacher made a point on the blackboard, then erased it and said, 'That doesn't exist.' She made a row of points, and said, 'That's a line, and it doesn't exist, either.' She made a number of parallel lines and put them together to form a plane, and said it didn't exist.

Similar(57)

This means that a request to insert a single new control point will cause a row of control points to appear across the NURBS patch, a global refinement of control.

Doyle pinged through a row of reward points and then, hitting a little cul-de-sac in the maze, he paused.

To investigate further, cognitive neuroscientist Michael Coles at the Danders Centre for Cognitive Neuroimaging in the Netherlands and colleagues invented a task in which one volunteer sat at a computer screen and punched a button for "left" or "right" depending on which direction the middle arrow in a row of arrows pointed.

The last time the debt ceiling was debated, in the summer of 2011, the Dow Jones industrial average saw several days in a row of 400-plus point swings.

He suggests using a level while doing this to make sure each row of points is even.

Cézanne's prickly, defensive "Man With Crossed Arms" (1899) is guarded by a row of helmets, some with sharply pointed visors.

Murakami led me through his village, past the surf shop on the main street, past a row of fishermen's houses (he pointed out a traditional "fishermen's shrine" in one of the yards).

Book it: 01326 555555; classic.co.uk, from £672 a week Station Officer's House, East Prawle, Devon This, the most southerly house in Devon, is perched at the end of a row of coastguard cottages at Prawle Point with sea views from most rooms.

"You have a row of dominoes set up," Eisenhower pointed out in April 1954, "you knock over the first one, and what will happen to the last one is the certainty that it will go over very quickly.

Of Mick Hucknall, bursting out of the exit behind the back of a satellite town theatre, assessing a row of mums in mini-dresses, pointing to them all in turn and saying, "I'll have that one and that one.

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