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place of origin

NOUN
  1. where something originated or was nurtured in its early existence
    the birthplace of civilization

How To Use place of origin In A Sentence

  • No direct evidence reveals either its date or place of origin, which can only be suggested on grounds of style, iconography, and paleography.
  • The testifiers are identified by year of birth and place of origin.
  • Chests are classified into Persian and Indian, depending on the place of origin.
  • As the word arras had entered English vocabularies centuries before, gobelins became a synonym for tapestry hanging, regardless of the place of origin. The Creation of Color in Eighteenth-Century Europe
  • Switching between English, pidgin English, Yoruba and Nigerian slang as they rhyme and sing, they have realised that success depends on ensuring that their music reflects its place of origin and that it resonates, in as authentic a way as possible, with their audience. Music news, reviews, comment and features | guardian.co.uk
  • The samples were all labelled with a date and place of origin.
  • Mary's marking sampler, with six alphabets worked in black in the Quaker block style, names Alexandria as its place of origin.
  • Dogmatic constraints, tactical stereotypes, schematism in place of originality, and the boring repetition of truisms are contributing factors in creative infecundity.
  • Indeed, common place of origin is often connected with genos, one's origins by common descent and parentage.
  • Indeed, common place of origin is often connected with genos, one's origins by common descent and parentage.
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