Sentence examples for wide chunks from inspiring English sources

Exact(1)

Yes we praise the revolutionists, admire movie stars, and remember history in wide chunks.

Similar(59)

Surprisingly, there's no standard, user-friendly turntable marketed to the wide chunk of consumers in the middle.

A transmitter used the entire allocated range of frequencies for a channel to send a wide chunk of data.

Cut the pears into quarters, peeling them if their skins are coarse, then remove their cores and slice each piece into 1cm-wide chunks.

The explosion – which Poompanmuang said was a pipe bomb – was large enough to throw a metre-wide chunk of metal to a third-floor balcony on the other side of the street, about 50 metres away.

The explosion was large enough to throw a metre-wide chunk of metal to a third-floor balcony on the other side of the street, about 50 metres away.

Yet when most nonpurists refer to Ditmas Park, they are talking about a wider chunk of Victorian Flatbush — stretching north to Beverley Road, west to Coney Island Avenue and east to Ocean Avenue — that includes the subsections Ditmas Park West, Beverley Square East and Beverley Square West.

It would have been much better, he argues, to invest in proven technologies such as electrical interconnectors (linking Britain and Norway, for example) and support research into new kinds of solar power, such as films that can be applied to any outside surface and technologies that use a wider chunk of the spectrum.Bits of the green-energy world are wilting under the impact of low oil prices.

The $80 million project, called the Sloan Digital Sky Survey, will gather images of perhaps 200 million celestial objects and map the precise positions of a million galaxies in a 1.5-billion-light-year-wide chunk of the universe.

A 5-meter-wide chunk of carbonate minerals embedded in a seaside cliff in northern New Zealand has yielded fossils of a shelled microorganism that may have thrived only around the small, isolated, and far-flung sites where hydrocarbons such as methane or natural asphalt seep through the ocean floor, researchers say.

Researchers led by Neil Landman, an invertebrate paleontologist at the American Museum of Natural History in New York City, studied fossils embedded in a 13-meter-high, 20-meter-wide chunk of limestone that formed almost 75 million years ago, when South Dakota lay at the bottom of a shallow inland sea.

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