How To Use Time immemorial In A Sentence

  • From time immemorial, countries have competed with each other.
  • From time immemorial we have been passing through many, many species of life.
  • Since time immemorial man has caught fish and whales, but in the past three decades a rum situation has emerged.
  • But as it has been the custom from time immemorial for rewards to be offered for shedders of human blood, and many men whose respectability cannot be questioned have received rewards for services so rendered, I think that I shall pocket my share, and consider all three of you very weak and spleeny not to do the same. The Gold Hunters' Adventures Or, Life in Australia
  • Rome and the Campagna have been afflicted, from time immemorial, by two plagues, mendicity and brigandage, which after having infected the district with more or less violence for nearly twenty centuries, have been finally thoroughly extirpated by the Italian national government, and relegated to a place among the legends of the past.
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  • Water wheels of various forms for this purpose have been used from time immemorial in Europe, Asia and Egypt, where the record gives examples of wheels of the noria class from 30 to 90 feet in diameter; the term Scientific American Supplement, No. 799, April 25, 1891
  • It is legendary in its use as a magical cure-all and has been used as food or a remedy since time immemorial.
  • Her family had farmed that land since time immemorial.
  • Pliny, in his third book, says that from time immemorial the people of the southern coasts of Spain believed that the sea had forced a passage between Calpe and Abila: “Indigenæ columnas Herculis vocant, creduntque per fossas exclusa antea admisisse maria, et rerum naturæ mutasse faciem.” A Philosophical Dictionary
  • Whether or not Witchcraft was handed down in an unbroken line from time immemorial or whether there was ever a golden age of matriarchy is totally irrelevant.
  • An awl is an iron instrument used for piercing leather, but the word has been in punning use since time immemorial.
  • Jewellery in the form of bracelet, rings, pins and earrings have been used universally since time immemorial.
  • Elementary teachers from time immemorial have used themes in their teaching.
  • time immemorial
  • From time immemorial there have been friendly migrations and unfriendly onslaughts on the Kerala society, mostly through the sea.
  • The archidiaconal residence rises on an area tied since time immemorial to church activities.
  • It has remained virtually unchanged since time immemorial.
  • False bottoms and bear market rallies have trapped investors since time immemorial.
  • From time immemorial the tribe have buried their dead here.
  • The Barton family have lived in this village since time immemorial.
  • For the most part, life here is lived much as it has been since time immemorial: decadently, stylishly and glitzily, all under bliss-inducing, cloudless skies.
  • Since time immemorial the arms trade has operated on the morality of the cheque book. A NASTY DOSE OF DEATH
  • And it is a symbol of eternity, time immemorial.
  • This ceremony hath been observed from time immemorial in order to encourage agriculture, the profession of which is deemed very honourable in China, and there are annual rewards proposed to such as excell in it. Hau Kiou Choaan
  • And to extract humour from annoyances and irritations is what comedians have always done since time immemorial.
  • His rights cannot be established by possession from time immemorial, nor by innumerable and regular acquittances; he must produce the act of enfeoffment which is many centuries old, the lease which has never, perhaps, been written out, the primitive title already rare in 1720, [2229] and since stolen or burnt in the recent jacqueries: otherwise he is despoiled without indemnity. The French Revolution - Volume 1
  • They've come south to graze their cattle and trade in the dry season from time immemorial.
  • Different minerals have special properties, that's why men have chosen to wear them since time immemorial. HOPE TO DIE
  • From time immemorial despots have imprisoned their opponents under particularly cruel conditions; they have tortured them, dishonored them, debased and executed them.
  • Her family had farmed that land since time immemorial.
  • But, now, in regard to the exactly similar error respecting the nature of man, the situation is reversed; for this blunder, unlike the other one, is not merely hypothetical; we have seen that it was actually committed and has been actually persisted in from time immemorial; not merely for years or for decades or for centuries but for _centuries_ of Manhood of Humanity.
  • Pliny, in his third book, says that from time immemorial the people of the southern coasts of Spain believed that the sea had forced a passage between Calpe and Abila: “Indigenæ columnas Herculis vocant, creduntque per fossas exclusa antea admisisse maria, et rerum naturæ mutasse faciem.” A Philosophical Dictionary
  • The distinctive human problem from time immemorial has been the need to spiritualize human life, to lift it onto a special immortal plane, beyond the cycles of life and death that characterize all other organisms. La insistencia de Jürgen Fauth
  • Our woodcut is taken from the improved model produced by Mr. Stokey; no doubt Mr. Rarey took the idea of his gag-bit from the wooden gag, which has been in use among country farriers from time immemorial, to keep a horse's mouth while they are performing the cruel and useless operation of firing for lampas. A New Illustrated Edition of J. S. Rarey's Art of Taming Horses With the Substance of the Lectures at the Round House, and Additional Chapters on Horsemanship and Hunting, for the Young and Timid
  • Like many men since time immemorial, he is living more in hope than expectation.
  • Sustainability is an old term that has appeared in many guises from time immemorial.
  • From time immemorial our human race has been called a race of wanderers and wayfarers, a restless people forever setting forth in pursuit of a better life.
  • They have been in possession of the island for time immemorial.
  • From time immemorial, in hot and rainy lands, a hypaethral court, either round or square, surrounded by a covered portico, was used for the double purpose of church and mart, — a place where God and Mammon were worshipped turn by turn. Personal Narrative of a Pilgrimage to Al-Madinah and Meccah
  • Though far remote from the ivy chaplet on Wisdom's glorious brow, yet his stump of withered birch inculcates a lesson of virtue, by reminding us, that we should take heed to our steps in our journeyings through the wilderness of life; and, so far as in him lies, he helps us to do so, and by the exercise of a very catholic faith, looks for his reward to the value he supposes us to entertain for that virtue which, from time immemorial, has been in popular parlance classed as next to godliness. Chambers's Edinburgh Journal, No. 437 Volume 17, New Series, May 15, 1852
  • No one actually knows when sledging started, but since time immemorial disparaging remarks have been part of the sport in general - and cricket in particular.
  • He's actually turned down groups we've been contributing to from time immemorial. MISS MELVILLE REGRETS
  • The Government must consider giving financial aid to rural traditional medicine centres which have been operating in the State since time immemorial.
  • All religions are created by man, including the concept of God, since time immemorial. Dr T.P.Chia 
  • From time immemorial despots have imprisoned their opponents under particularly cruel conditions; they have tortured them, dishonored them, debased and executed them.
  • That the Japanese, in thrall to China from time immemorial, should try to subjugate their vast neighbor seemed an inversion of the cosmic order.
  • Wall-gilliflower, has been cultivated in this country almost from time immemorial, for its fragrance and bright colouring. Herbal Simples Approved for Modern Uses of Cure
  • From time immemorial our human race has been called a race of wanderers and wayfarers, a restless people forever setting forth in pursuit of a better life.
  • Croi from time immemorial had been renowned for its devout and strict observance of papistic rites and ceremonies; the Counts of Nassau had gone over to the new sect -- sufficient reasons why Philip of Croi, Duke of Arschot, should prefer a party which placed him the most decidedly in opposition to the Prince of Orange. History of the Revolt of the Netherlands — Volume 02
  • The drug- induced paradise of ecstasy and hallucination has enslaved the humankind since time immemorial, and more and more people are falling victim to the psychedelic pills. Dr T.P.Chia 
  • From time immemorial slaves have manifested a desire to escape their bondage.
  • From time immemorial, war has gone along with fiscal irresponsibility.
  • After his arrival, man's everlasting desire for not departing and staying forever in this world is his perpetual passion from time immemorial.
  • Jujutsu can trace its origins back to the ancient age of the kami and time immemorial as a unique Japanese martial art.
  • Her family had farmed that land since time immemorial.
  • From time immemorial, Tongas have viewed cattle rearing as their only source of wealth and in the past it was difficult for them to imagine that their valuable domestic animal would vanish through uncontrolled circumstances.
  • The origin of the living entities' bondage in matter goes back to time immemorial.
  • It is true that he hints at marshes near Cotrone, and, indeed, large tracts of south Italy are described as marshy by the ancients; they may well have harboured the anopheles mosquito from time immemorial, but it does not follow that they were malarious. Old Calabria
  • Having retained its aura of mystique and history since time immemorial, it has become a restful corner in our hectic world.
  • Foes say farmers have done agricultural research without patents since time immemorial, creating the germ plasm used in laboratories today. The Scientist
  • He had come a long way with the Elder, as had his family from time immemorial.
  • All religions are created by man, including the concept of God, since time immemorial. Dr T.P.Chia 
  • From time immemorial, or at least since the '50s, teens have been assembling scrapbooks and collections to celebrate their pop icons.

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