Sentences with origin
or·i·gin
O o - ...theories about the origin of life.
- Thomas has not forgotten his humble origins.
- Her ethnic origins are French.
- The outbreak seems to be viral in origin supported in one area by specimen results.
- Shipment from origin
- To follow a stream to its origin.
- The Foundation has been incorporated in Boston, where America acquired its very first charity - also Scottish in origin - in the late 1600s.
- I, myself, am Trinidadian in origin, and much prefer the Greek root of my name, ‘Nikolaos,’ meaning victory of the people.
- The origin of a word.
- The origin of Quakerism in America.
- Let u and v denote two positions on a chromosome, measured in a scale in morgan units with the coordinate origin at the target locus.
- The islands are volcanic in origin, having arisen from a mantle hotspot, and they have never been connected to the mainland.
- To be of Scottish origin.
- Given ABC, we may assume its vertices lie on a circle centered at the origin of a Cartesian coordinate system.
- We also discriminate based on other peoples' race, religion, ethnic origin, gender or social class among ourselves.
- So many collectors fall into the trap of buying a ‘Louis XV’ piece that is clearly 19th century in origin and concept.
- A simple fascicle of the biceps inserting into the origin of the pronator teres Macalister has seen three times.
- The insertion of gastrocnemius is discussed following the description of the origin of the soleus muscle.
- It is usually placed on a level above and behind the condyloid origin of flexor carpi ulnaris.
- The forces for global change are economic in origin, but they operate within particular political systems and deeply rooted cultures that will modify and condition their effect.
- It then exits the cubital tunnel by passing between the two heads of the origin of the flexor carpi ulnaris muscle.
- It's obviously late fifties/early sixties, American in origin without any shadow of a doubt and closer to Phil Spector than Motown in feel, arrangement and production.
- Furthermore, it is an immediate consequence of Newton's Laws that the center of gravity of the two bodies can serve as the origin of an inertial coordinate system.
- Origin is applied to that from which a person or thing has its very beginning [the origin of a word]; source is applied to the point or place from which something arises, comes, or develops [the sun is our source of energy]; beginning is the basic term for a starting point or place [the beginning of a quarrel]; inception is specif. applied to the beginning of an undertaking, organization, etc. [Smith headed the business from its inception]; root1 suggests an origin so deep and basic as to be the ultimate cause from which something stems [the root of the matter]