Sentence examples similar to which got the name from inspiring English sources

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In addition, potatoes are grown in the mountains and submontane valleys, traditionally using a number of cultivars including the "Batata de Trás-os-Montes" which got the attribution of the geographical name Protected Geographical Indication.

She, too, found the process incompetent: "When I received the feedback letter, which even got the name of the city wrong and was turning us down with two paragraphs which made little sense, I felt insulted".

It was founded as a Russian fort in 1718, 11 miles (18 km) downstream from the present site, near the ruins of a Buddhist monastery consisting of seven buildings, from which it got the name Semipalatinsk, meaning "seven-halled".

It was founded as a Russian fort in 1718, 11 miles (18 km) downstream from the present site, near the ruins of a Buddhist monastery consisting of seven buildings, from which it got the name Semipalatinsk, meaning "seven-halled". It was moved to its present site in 1778 to escape regular flooding in the spring.

The rose cut, which got its name because the facets resemble the flower's spiraling petals, originated in the 1600s in Golconda, India.

The town, which got its name from the French traders who founded it and the salty mineral deposits that attracted wildlife, was a lawless hangout for a generation of politicians, entertainers, sports idols and gangsters.

The tenor of the hearings, which got their name from Ferdinand Pecora, the feisty former New York prosecutor brought in late in the proceedings as counsel to the Senate Banking Committee, were memorialized in one of the most famous photos of the age: that of a stunned J.P. Morgan Jr. holding a Ringling Brothers circus midget in his lap.

Which is why they got the name".

She lives with her husband, Patrick, a Ugandan-born actor and performer, in a renovated chocolate factory in the Ironbound, which got its name from the rail lines that encircle it.

He pointed out that Raymond Chandler, Joyce Carol Oates, William Faulkner and Bradbury all wrote for the pulps, which got their name from the cheap wood pulp paper on which they were printed.

The name "alphabet plug" comes from the first lure of this type, Cotton Cordell's Big O, which got its name from the athletic nickname of the brother of the lure's inventor.

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