Sentence examples for preserve for example from inspiring English sources

Exact(3)

Will they preserve, for example, the stomach-stapling operation of Carnie Wilson, the pop singer, broadcast last year on AdoctorinyourHouse.com?

Naturally, no judge would order the respondents to cease using their computers, but an order to preserve, for example, backup tapes, deleted emails, old emails and any documents that have reached the end of their retention periods reaches at least some of our interests.

A small desk with a blank wall can be transformed into a butterfly preserve, for example, as seen here.

Similar(57)

There are examples still preserved, for example, in Campania.

All samples were slowly melted at room temperature within ∼6 h, and processed and preserved (for example, filtered, acidified) within ∼8 h after collection.

The good news is that thousands of historic sites and artefacts have been secured and preserved, for example the mosaics in Busra al-Sham in the south, where non-­jihadi groups are in control.

Among the former, special interest attaches to the early Palestinian Pentateuch Targum; it preserves, for example, messianic (referring to the expected anointed deliverer) exegesis of certain passages to which later rabbis gave a different interpretation because of the Christians' appeal to them.

Under unusual circumstances, however, fossils can be three-dimensionally preserved; for example, if a mineralized concretion formed around the remains of an organism soon after burial (Fig. 1).

More importantly the labor market access differences among groups are preserved, for example the NENAC group in the LFS survey still maintain a huge gap in the activity rate in comparison with CEEC group (20 percentage points).

It is obvious that the best fossil record is provided by groups with a mineralized skeleton; but, in rare instances, soft-bodied organisms can be preserved, for example in the famous Middle Cambrian Burgess Shale fauna of Canada or the more recently discovered Early Cambrian Chengjiang fauna of China (Shu et al. 1999).

The sperm whale is also known as the "cachalot", which is thought to derive from the archaic French for "tooth" or "big teeth", as preserved for example in in the Gascon dialect (a word of either Romance or Basque origin).

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