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Ind.

NOUN
  1. a state in midwestern United States

How To Use Ind. In A Sentence

  • Defensive tackle is a bit more of a crapshoot, but the one thing they must make sure of is that whomever they take has a brilliant mind.
  • Most seeds are spread by the wind.
  • The servants disappeared as if they were whiffs of smoke blown away by the wind.
  • My fists clenched and unclenched as I tried to think of some comeback to scream at her but nothing came to mind.
  • As the bus turned into a new recognizable road, the pavements were filled with people, scarves blowing in the wind.
  • A window slammed shut in the wind.
  • I don't otherwise want to move: I have a large place in a convenient location with reasonable rent that allows pets, which isn't easy to find.
  • Hassan in frequently going to sleep in one town, to awake in another far distant, but without the benighted Oriental's surprise at the transfer, the afrit who performed this prodigy being a steam-engine, and the magician it obeyed the human mind. Lippincott's Magazine of Popular Literature and Science Volume 11, No. 23, February, 1873
  • To equate Tim McVeigh as a patriot is the mark of a sick and disturbed mind. Think Progress » Fox News host Julie Banderas
  • I believe it has its own atmosphere because it is built in what you call a caldera, but I may have picked that information up from like a Syfy TV movie about the Coming Global Superstorm, or invented it in my own mind. Television Without Pity
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