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56 Sentences With "cramming into"

How to use cramming into in a sentence? Find typical usage patterns (collocations)/phrases/context for "cramming into" and check conjugation/comparative form for "cramming into". Mastering all the usages of "cramming into" from sentence examples published by news publications.

Houses were overrun, with people cramming into buildings and sleeping in shifts.
Diseases spread, with upward of 200 people cramming into dozens of tents.
The refugees are cramming into squalid camps of improvised shelters that lack basic sanitation.
Most of the displaced are cramming into pockets of territory near the Turkish border.
Who is cramming into the long, low room, with its booths tucked into nooks along its sides?
Why it matters: People are cramming into cities around the globe, leading to congestion and denser development.
But that did not stop them from cramming into the intersection of La Fortaleza and Cristo Streets.
But that did not stop them from cramming into the intersection of La Fortaleza and Cristo Streets.
Imagine the entire population of the United States picking up and cramming into trains over the course of a month.
Determined smokers figure they will spend even more time cramming into outdoor smoking shelters and parks dotted around the city.
People were cramming into cities, the drying grounds and hedges were receding, and clotheslines criss-crossed like cats' cradles between slum windows.
And, as any Brooklynite will tell you, staying over the river in Williamsburg is so much better than cramming into Times Square.
The bedraggled men, women and children of a caravan of mostly Hondurans began cramming into the complex in Tijuana about three weeks ago.
And now a whole new year to catch up on all the TV series you've been cramming into your frontal lobes in bunches.
This happens too often: After cramming into your airplane seat, you shut your eyes to relax and a baby starts screaming behind you.
It's a whole city's worth of people cramming into a 2.5 mile oval for a celebration of speed, power, noise—and, since 2012, EDM.
India is forecast to overtake China by 2024 as the world's most populous country, with tens of millions of citizens cramming into already crowded cities.
The United Nations warned of a humanitarian crisis along the border with Senegal, where many are cramming into hosts' homes, and food is running low.
Despite the distinctly Minnesota weather, supporters turned out by the thousands on Sunday, cramming into a riverfront park wearing snow pants, ski goggles and parkas.
"It's not ideal - we're 15 people cramming into his home and into an out-house - but it's better than being in the cold, crowded camps," Waddah said.
For example, as luggage-toting guests boarded Norwegian's Breakaway ship in New York recently, cramming into a handful of elevators, there was ample room in one bank.
His team has studied how people move through airports and planes, and he recommends changing procedures to keep people spread out on their way to cramming into their seats.
"If you are going to be cramming into a small space, you better do it with good friends and not someone you recently met," said Yorke, of Oceanic Capital Management.
The problem is especially severe in India, which is forecast to overtake China by 2024 as the world's most populous country, with tens of millions cramming into already crowded cities.
Then there are the new background characters, from sardines in suits cramming into a bus around BoJack to a squid in the hotel bar signing autographs with his own ink.
For decades now, American veterans have forged bonds on battlefields, sleeping in sand-blown tents, swallowing fear in concrete bunkers, or cramming into the bowels of tanks for a dozen hours.
When the 17 friends began piling into the limousine and cramming into its tan leather seats under its mirrored roof, they never fathomed that the sunny afternoon would be their last.
Getting from one place to another can feel like an expensive hell of cramming into a tiny seat and paying fees for luggage that we didn't have to pay in the past.
The downsides are worrisome: crowds cramming into not quite enough benches; mountains of to-go packaging; deafening acoustics, especially weekdays after work, when beer and Roberta's Bee Sting pizzas win the day.
People who were likely familiar with her trailblazing work in the '21985s were there, alongside millennials, cramming into the theater in a way I had never seen in seven years of patronizing the place.
The subsequent hearing attracted national attention, with reporters cramming into the Brattleboro town hall, and, in the opinion of most, the jokey, convivial local fellow came off far better than the stuffy, irascible Englishman.
This "30 for 30" installment travels back to 1990s New York, where hordes of people were cramming into high school gymnasiums for the chance to see a teenage Felipe Lopez, a Dominican basketball phenom, play.
Rather, most people are cramming into the informal settlements that are continually sprouting on the edge of Cairo and other cities, where villages are being transformed into dormitory towns and farmland is being swallowed by uncontrolled development.
Some of the people cramming into the first two rows of the American Airlines Center in Dallas to get closer to the court had probably heard the news already: Steph Curry was out with a strained hamstring.
The infotainment technology that automakers are cramming into the dashboard of new vehicles is making drivers take their eyes off the road and hands off the wheel for dangerously long periods of time, an AAA study says.
Yet here they were, both 37, moving to a corner of town pocked by empty lots, cramming into an apartment above Ms. Sabir's mother, in the very duplex that Ms. Sabir's grandparents had bought six decades earlier.
The good doc joined us on "TMZ Live" Monday with a very important message for cheaters continuing affairs, college kids on spring break, and religious folks cramming into churches despite the looming threat of the coronavirus pandemic.
More Indians are cramming into smog-shrouded cities, which means more people who need housing, more people buying and driving vehicles with few pollution controls, and more people making fires in the city to cook and keep warm.
In space-starved Mumbai, which has some of the priciest real estate in the world, the shortage is even more critical, with hundreds of migrants from rural areas cramming into the city every day to seek better prospects.
On an increasingly over burdened subway system, with millions of riders cramming into its aging cars daily and constant delays upending people's lives, offering a seat to another passenger is the last thing on most people's minds, he said.
WASHINGTON (AP) — The infotainment technology that automakers are cramming into the dashboard of new vehicles is making drivers take their eyes off the road and hands off the wheel for dangerously long periods of time, an AAA study says.
As you know, typically, a few of us try cramming into the Equity podcast dungeon, including the nimble Alex Wilhelm, the scholarly Danny Crichton and, when we can lasso her, the razor-sharp Kate Clark, plus a guest from the investment world.
With close to a million Spaniards and foreign revelers now cramming into the northern Spanish town of Pamplona every year for the nine-day event, Colas says he can no longer distinguish the vibrations caused by the bulls and those by the crowd.
In those days, some 2,000 to 4,000 people would board a single ship — first steamers and later ocean liners — for the weekslong voyage to the United States or Halifax, Nova Scotia, with poorer émigrés cramming into steerage and the wealthier passengers banqueting in first class.
That previous exodus was a tale told through images: migrants wading across the Suchiate River, which marks the border between Guatemala and Mexico; masses of people filling country roads and cramming into pickup trucks; and the central squares of provincial Mexican cities transformed into cluttered campsites.
Here are some of the hardware changes Google is cramming into its camera stack: To be very, very clear: I have only taken a few dozen photos with these phones, and I was using preproduction software, so it is way too early for me to render any kind of judgement.
"People cant pronounce 'paczki,' and they don't really know what it is, but they know they want it bad, they don't mind waiting in line, and they're clapping their hands and partying while they wait and when they leave," Bakic says of the crowds cramming into her shop Tuesday morning.
I've adjusted to its absence, but cramming into a ground-floor apartment at the far end of Bushwick on a block with three rambunctious new hipster bars, paper-thin walls, and a constant stream of local traffic is no life for a girl who grew up with only whispering pines and whistling whippoorwills to break the stillness.
Crazy Ex-Girlfriend addicts fell in love with main character Rebecca Bunch pretty much the moment they saw actress Rachel Bloom perform, with no apparent embarrassment or reticence, perform "The Sexy Getting Ready Song," an ode to the truly disgusting things that go into looking hot as hell for a first date (think: cramming into Spanx, bleaching one's mustache, etc.).
KILAUEA LAVA DESTROYS HUNDREDS OF HOMES AS EXPLOSION  Damage has escalated in recent days and thousands have been forced to flee – the lucky ones get to stay with friends and family but far too many others have no other option than popping up tents in muddy parking lots or cramming into packed shelters as life as they know it changes forever.
Researchers at Bond University in Australia surveyed the scientific literature available and found that The 56 studies in the Cornell survey, published in the Journal of the Association for Consumer Research, looked at all kinds of foods, including ice cream, cereal, rice, fruit, vegetables, popcorn, and other miscellaneous snacks, and found that a smaller plate meant eating less no matter what you're cramming into your head.
In 1936, the Springfield Traction Company announced that the next year the electric streetcars would be replaced by gasoline-powered buses. To them, it seemed “the modern thing to do.” A final streetcar parade was held on August 2nd, 1937, with people cramming into the cars for one last ride.
Overview of key education-related challenges in refugee contexts Education affects not only migrants’ attitudes, aspirations and beliefs but also those of their hosts. Increased classroom diversity brings both challenges and opportunities to learn from other cultures and experiences. Countries are challenged to fulfil the international commitment to respect the right to education for all, from addressing the needs of those cramming into slums to living nomadically or awaiting refugee status. Teachers have to deal with multilingual classrooms and traumas affecting displaced students. Qualifications and prior learning need to be recognized to make the most of migrants’ and refugees’ skills.
The public relations exercise to showcase the game in Melbourne proved a success with a sell-out crowd of 25,800 cramming into Olympic Park. The game was highlighted by NSW halfback Ricky Stuart racing 70 metres to score, easily outpacing Qld winger Les Kiss who made no ground on the former Wallaby. Queensland halfback Allan Langer's stealing of the ball from Blues replacement prop Glenn Lazarus helped spell the end of three years of Queensland State of Origin dominance which had included two consecutive series clean sweeps from 1988. Langer's steal was a defining moment giving Rod Wishart the chance to put the Blues ahead 8-6.
With the virus gone, they are able to control the ship, but since it has been accelerating for several hours there is not sufficient fuel left to avoid hitting the planet. Cramming into Ace's one-man ship Wildfire, which he had programmed for another jump, they cross dimensions—their only other option being to go back to an uninhabited and gutted Red Dwarf in this universe—finding themselves in a timeline where Kryten and Rimmer are still alive, but their own counterparts died playing Better Than Life. As they dock with the alternate Red Dwarf, Lister reflects that while this isn't home, it might be close enough.
Dave Tomlinson (2015) Leeds United: A History, Amberley Publishing The club erected a new stand in readiness for the 1898–99 season. The ground eventually became known simply as Elland Road. For the 1902–03 season the Association football team, Leeds Woodville of the Leeds League, shared the ground with Holbeck RLFC in the 1902–03 season, but Holbeck went under in 1904 after losing a play-off against St. Helens and the ground was put on the market. After a meeting at the Griffin Hotel in Boar Lane in August, a new club, Leeds City, was formed and it was agreed that the Elland Road ground would be rented for the upcoming season. The lease was signed on 13 October 1904, for a rent of £75 per year. The club had an option to buy the ground for £5,000 in March 1905, but in November, the price was reduced to £4,500. After City's first season in the Football League, the club built a 5,000-seater covered stand on the west side at a cost of £1,050. Attendances were rising, culminating in over 22,500 people cramming into the stadium to watch a local derby with Bradford City on 30 December, bringing in £487 of gate receipts.

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