[
US
/ˈseɪbɪn/
]
[ UK /sˈæbɪn/ ]
[ UK /sˈæbɪn/ ]
NOUN
- United States microbiologist (born in Poland) who developed the Sabin vaccine that is taken orally against poliomyelitis (born 1906)
How To Use Sabin In A Sentence
- Sabin paced along the wall walk and paused by the next crenel. The Falcons of Montabard
- Heb. ` arar, (Jer. 17: 6; 48: 6), a species of juniper called by the Arabs by the same name (` arar), the Juniperus sabina or savin. Easton's Bible Dictionary
- If not for Sabine, Deborah would easily have had a caesarian birth as were 32 percent of births in this country in 2007 - up 53 percent from 1996. Dana H. Glazer: My Experience With a Doula During Childbirth
- Only a sense of uxorial duty to his position stopped Hadrian from sending Sabina into exile.34 Caesars’ Wives
- Arnie has just presented his business plan to Sabine, a venture capitalist.
- Later emperors carried it further and in the second century AD empresses such as Sabina (wife of the emperor Trajan) were depicted as embodying, for example, pietas (family feeling).
- As played by Mercedes Cechetto, Sabine has an undeniable brashness, but her adventures feel scripted rather than natural and her sullen pout gets old very fast.
- I know that Sabin does not think of my stepmother as nithing. The Falcons of Montabard
- Once again Sabine had the curious sensation that time had stopped and run back.
- Mario Sabino's Salvadoran appetizer sampler (tamal, pupusa, chicharrones, casamiento, curtido, yucca) $9 Queso con chorizo $9 Brisket enchiladas $10 Guiso de puerco $11 Pollo con hongos $12 Dallas Observer | Complete Issue