Yellowstone

[ US /ˈjɛɫoʊˌstoʊn/ ]
NOUN
  1. a tributary of the Missouri River that flows through the Yellowstone National Park
Linguix Browser extension
Fix your writing
on millions of websites
Get Started For Free Linguix pencil

How To Use Yellowstone In A Sentence

  • Putting Cape Wind in Nantucket Sound is like putting a refinery in Yellowstone. The Volokh Conspiracy » Cape Wind Approved
  • Towering convective clouds rained down a hailstorm of ash, and firebrands even spanned the Grand Canyon of the Yellowstone.
  • The Sedimentary Subalpine Zone ecoregion is found southeast of Yellowstone National Park, in the overthrust belt, and in the northwest corner of the Bighorn Mountains in areas underlain by faulted and folded Mesozoic and Paleozoic sedimentary rocks (limestone, dolomite, shale, and sandstone). Ecoregions of Wyoming (EPA)
  • R.B. Smith and A.R. Lowry, 2009, Density and lithospheric strength models of the Yellowstone-Snake River Plain volcanic system from gravity and heat flow data, J.Vol. Geotherm. Scientific Articles on Yellowstone
  • One hotly debated alternative proposes plowing the road from West Yellowstone to Old Faithful for mass-transit vehicles, and closing it to snowmobiles.
  • By the 1980s Yellowstone's snowmobile boosterism would come to haunt park managers.
  • At this critical point, rumors circulated that Sitting Bull had recrossed the Canadian line bound for the Yellowstone hunting grounds.
  • The fifth hole has so many beehive bunkers on it, it looks as if it was built through a geyser field in Yellowstone National Park.
  • Jackson Hole may seem an odd place to hold a press junket when the usual locations are New York and L.A. However, Yellowstone National Park, which is located near Jackson Hole, is a major setting in 2012. Before the World Ends, Matt Heads to Wyoming for 2012 and Interviews the Cast – Collider.com
  • Katrina R. DeNosaquo, Robert B. Smith, Anthony R. Lowry, 2009, Density and lithospheric strength models of the Yellowstone-Snake River Plain volcanic system from gravity and heat flow data Scientific Articles on Yellowstone
View all
This website uses cookies to make Linguix work for you. By using this site, you agree to our cookie policy