[
US
/ˈnaɪnˈtin/
]
[ UK /naɪntˈiːn/ ]
[ UK /naɪntˈiːn/ ]
ADJECTIVE
- being one more than eighteen
NOUN
- the cardinal number that is the sum of eighteen and one
How To Use nineteen In A Sentence
- It was a simple rectangle of crudely mounded basalt rocks, a distinctive arrangement reminiscent of the way Samoans and other Polynesians marked their dead in the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries.
- A second wave of emigrations of Ashkenazic Jews from Eastern Europe at the end of the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries brought larger numbers of Yiddish-speaking, traditional Orthodox Jews into the Seattle community. Weaving Women's Words: Seattle Stories
- It should also be noted that there are no contact-period materials from the Johnson site and that the only historic materials recovered date to the nineteenth century and did not occur in the provenances associated with the figurines.
- In one of his books he reviewed the early nineteenth-century development of catastrophism and uniformitarianism and made this revealing comment.
- Nineteen people have submitted stool samples that tested positive for diarrhea-causing agents: Campylobacter (14), norovirus (3), salmonella (1) and Giardia (1).
- Or “incurve,” a term commonly used as the nineteenth century became the twentieth. The Neyer/James Guide To Pitchers
- From the late nineteenth century Britain and other European powers began to gain control of parts of the Ottoman Empire.
- The story - probably apocryphal - is that William Webb Ellis at Rugby School in the nineteenth century picked up the ball during a soccer match and ran with it, inventing rugby.
- What exactly the government did mean by freedom was hard to discern in the nineteen legislative Acts which together constituted the emancipation.
- At the beginning of the nineteenth century, the building was extended by addition of east and west wings linked to the centre by colonnades tracing the path of the old road.