Sentence examples for inhabit. from inspiring English sources

Dictionary

inhabit.

verb

To live or reside in.

  • The Inuit inhabit the Arctic.

Exact(60)

BillyMills again: It's interesting that the Spanish chapter, which is not at all about flying, is the climax of the book; his experience of war seems to have moved his position a bit away from the solitary and towards the communal, and that is evidenced by the sheer number of other people who inhabit, indeed dominate, that chapter.

The two races seemed to inhabit separate but parallel universes.

The rich may own them, but not inhabit them.

Beatriz Huertas Castillo works out of Lima and (along with José Carlos dos Reis Meirelles in Brazil) is one of the people who knows most about the subject, having spent much of her life travelling in, researching, documenting and writing about the very remote areas these peoples inhabit.

Samantha Cameron may reluctantly inhabit the Westminster bubble in a literal sense, but intellectually she is very far removed from it.

Perhaps the frighteningly vivid imagination that he can crawl into and inhabit so completely for such long periods originates here.

Related: Industrial relations: once the cranks' obsession, now the government's business | Tim Lyons The idea that employment is a purely voluntary contract is much loved by the posh boys and parasites who inhabit rightwing thinktanks.

The Neville brothers, Giggs, Scholes and Butt have not commented on the third-party ownership element of Lim's activities but are thought to consider it irrelevant because of the TPO ban here and because Salford City, in northern English semi-professional football, inhabit a different world from Mendes and Valencia.

Not only does Canadian newcomer Maslany perform a kind of acting heptathlon to inhabit all the roles, but Orphan Black hurdles multiple telly genres too.

Of her honour, Meredith Hooper said: "We Australians in the UK inhabit two hemispheres.

We inhabit a post-pastoral terrain, full of modification and compromise, and for this reason my glossaries began to fill up with "unnatural" language: terms from coastal sea defences (pillbox, bulwark, rock-armour), or soft estate, the Highways Agency term for those natural habitats that have developed along the verges of motorways and trunk roads.

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