annals

[ UK /ˈænəlz/ ]
[ US /ˈænəɫz/ ]
NOUN
  1. reports of the work of a society or learned body etc
  2. a chronological account of events in successive years
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How To Use annals In A Sentence

  • The Pleiades are mentioned in Chinese annals in 2357 B.C. A Field Book of the Stars
  • To them it was a ‘red letter day’ that will remain in the annals of their history for generations to come.
  • In time folk memory faded and with the passing of those who had lived through the events of 1903 the Gordon Bennett Race became an almost forgotten note in the annals of Irish motoring history.
  • Some disputes are better left undecided in the annals of history.
  • Carved on the lobstick of the Landing were many names famous in the annals of this region, Pike, Maltern, McKinley, Munn, Tyrrel among them. The Arctic Prairies : a Canoe-Journey of 2,000 Miles in Search of the Caribou; Being the Account of a Voyage to the Region North of Aylemer Lake
  • From the annals of Indian history, it can be discerned that the role of women in the society is no less than men.
  • His life story was already entering the annals of tabloid folklore. Times, Sunday Times
  • The experimental technique has entered the annals of science under the name of "stochastic cooling. Simon van der Meer, Nobel laureate in physics, dies at 85
  • In the annals of innovation, new ideas are only part of the equation. Execution is just as important. Steve Jobs 
  • Almost all come from monastic or mendicant milieux, and are passages in annals or chronicles of the writer's abbey. A Tender Age: Cultural Anxieties over the Child in the Twelfth and Thirteenth Centuries
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