Appearance
Use device theme  
Dark theme
Light theme

How to use refers to in a sentence

Looking for sentences with "refers to"? Here are some examples.

Sentence Examples
Dennis Wyness enjoys playing for Steve Paterson, the manager he invariably refers to by his nickname.
There is indeed much evidence of design in nature and God's Word frequently refers to it.
Aliasing refers to an effect that causes different continuous signals to become indistinguishable when sampled.
It therefore refers to what is aleatory, temporal and in course of development.
There is a paragraph in the appellant's submissions that refers to the unacceptability of simply allowing a person to languish in detention.
There are one or two ladies he refers to with special tenderness, but he remains unmarried.
Fukuyama refers to high rates of crime and juvenile delinquency as a result of the lack of trust associated with social capital.
The first of these is that the simple form of the verb without any markers refers to whatever time is in focus.
The author refers to a conflict of which he either has little understanding, or knowingly distorts the truth.
The alias default refers to the first sound device and is used in all of the examples in this article.
Did you think the word underclass refers to those left out of most privileges afforded by society?
Could it be that the Hebrew word simply refers to any partially digested food?
However, she refers to the muster for a boat called Queen, 74 guns, with a ship's complement just of 300 men.
Mandibular length refers to the distance between the posterior ramus and the inner mentum.
He refers to her suffering from frequent and recurrent nightmares precipitated by abuse.
In conventional wisdom, the family refers to those to whom we are related by blood kinship.
Though Robertson refers to the Yanktons and Santees throughout the book as Lakotas, they are, in fact, Dakota people.
Sometimes prisoners never seem to get free of the prison system and they become what society now refers to as recidivists.
The Malay term for government, kerajaan, refers to the raja who ruled from the precolonial courts.
The film's title refers to a wish list that two terminally ill men try to fulfill before each kicks the bucket.
Show More Sentences
Find more words!
Use * for blank tiles (max 2) Advanced Search Advanced Search
Use * for blank spaces Advanced Search
Advanced Word Finder

See Also

Nearby Words
Find Sentences
go
Word Tools Finders & Helpers Apps More Synonyms
Copyright WordHippo © 2024