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53 Sentences With "nomadically"

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

I flipped nomadically on League Pass, from stream to stream.
Mr. Pudlat lived nomadically for the first years of his life.
Living nomadically out of two backpacks lets them work anywhere in the world with their Macbook Airs, Shen said.
In his previous efforts, the songwriter has thrived on transience, nomadically bouncing between New York and LA crafting homespun songs that explore the edges of American music: folk, rock'n'roll, and soul.
"Despite not having much growing up, my mom was a travel agent and we got to travel a lot" which Taggar says inspired his goal to live nomadically in homes around the world.
This historical novel exploring the life of Jacob Frank, the Polish leader of a heretical Jewish splinter group that converted to Islam and then Catholicism, ranges nomadically across the Hapsburg and Ottoman Empires.
The survey explored the increased yearning to live nomadically and the desire to circumvent productivity challenges, but it also unearthed a worrying reality: the gender wage gap lives everywhere — not just within the walls of traditional offices.
His father, a civil engineer, was mobilized to build roads and bridges for the Russian army, and his mother followed, dragging her son along, traveling behind the battle zone, living nomadically, never staying anywhere more than a few months.
I thought back to the most recent high holidays — a time of the year when my family and I, unaffiliated Jews that we are, end up nomadically wandering from congregation to congregation, always promising that next year we'll finally join somewhere, though we never do.
Black Cube, a nonprofit, experimental art museum that operates nomadically, is currently accepting project proposals for its Sabrina Merage Foundation Artist Fellowship, a specially named year-long Black Cube Artist Fellowship awarded to a contemporary artist working at the intersection of inclusivity and diversity.
"There's no other grant like this in the country, if not the world, that gives a cool mil to a film," said Ani Simon-Kennedy, 29, who was pitching "The Short History of the Long Road," about a teenager living nomadically in a van.
An estimated 210–250 Nukak people live in provisional settlements at San José del Guaviare, while about as many live nomadically in the Nukak Reservation (Resguardo).
Warri (1909–1979) and Yatungka (1919–1979) were an Aboriginal couple from the Mandildjara tribe (a Martu people) of the Gibson Desert in Western Australia who spent about 40 years isolated and living nomadically in the Australian desert.
She is the founder of Music Tech Fest, and chairs the Industry Commons Foundation. In December 2019 she was recognised as an "Outstanding Peer Reviewer" by Leonardo, the International Society for the Arts, Sciences and Technology. Since about 2015, she has lived in Umeå, Sweden, and works nomadically.
They feed on insects and small arthropods, usually remaining densely covered areas of vegetation living nomadically with no regular migration patterns Pizzey, G., Knight, D., Pizzey, S,. (1997). The Field Guide to the Birds of Australia by Graham Pizzey and Frank Knight. 470(3). Retrieved 13 June 2018.
Saving money on accommodation, while traveling on vacation, or when living nomadically, is usually considered to be the main benefit for the sitter. House sitters can experience living like locals in different countries and cultures around the world, for anything from a few days to several months, or sometimes even longer.
The pair met and subsequently fell in love in the 1930s. They chose to elope due to their relationship being against tribal law. They spent approximately forty years living nomadically in the Gibson Desert. Attempts were made by Warri and Yatungka's tribe to find the pair but these attempts proved futile.
It was completed in 1938. Qal'at Murair, the hitherto principal fort of the town, was abandoned soon after Zubarah Fort was erected. In the mid 20th century, the political adviser in Bahrain, Charles Belgrave, reported that just a few Bedouin of the Nua‘imi (Naim) tribe lived, albeit nomadically, in the ruined town.Belgrave, C. 1960.
Males are produced less frequently and in less quantity than females are produced. After eclosion males remain on the nest for up to a week. Upon leaving, they live nomadically and mate with females of other nests. Males do not assist in any of the colony maintenance activities while they reside in the nest.
10 days after the divorce, Edden married his second wife, Elizabeth Shaffer (despite pleas from Elizabeth's family members for her to not marry Edden). The two raised seven children and remained married until Elizabeth's death in 1954. Edden's family lived somewhat nomadically, moving from one place to another usually twice a year. Edden still rarely worked during these times.
Males displaying in an acacia hedge in Es Sénia, Algeria A male in a nest in Lesbos, Greece The Spanish sparrow is strongly gregarious, flocking and breeding in groups. In the winter, it mostly wanders nomadically or makes regular migrations. Little is known of the Spanish sparrow's survival, and the maximum age recorded is 11 years.
Throughout his career, Mark Sink founded many organizations that celebrate contemporary cutting edge photography. The Denver Salon was founded in 1992 and in 2014 transformed into the Denver Collage Club nomadically organizing exhibitions and showcasing contemporary art of living Colorado artists.Alto Gallery The Denver Collage club is continuously an active participant of the Month of Photography events.
Minyintiri was born into a Pitjantjatjara family some time around 1915. He was born in the bush at Pilpirinyi, Western Australia, near the border with South Australia. His childhood was spent living nomadically in the desert with his family. Their homelands were spread over a large area along the border, but they often travelled far to the east for ceremonies.
A warrant for his arrest was issued in Angola for the seditious lyrics of the album, forcing him to move nomadically between Germany, Belgium and France until Angola's independence from Portugal in 1975, brought about by the events of the Carnation Revolution. While in Europe, Bonga met other Portuguese-speaking musicians and adapted the sounds of semba to his already diverse music style.
Its geographic range extends to all continents except Antarctica and Australia. These are medium-sized owls, in length with wingspans. They are long-winged and have the characteristic facial disc. The two northern species are partially migratory, moving south in winter from the northern parts of their range, or wandering nomadically in poor vole years in search of better food supplies.
Bronisława Wajs, commonly known by her Romani name Papusza, was one of the most famous Romani poets ever known. She grew up nomadically with her family in Poland as part of a kumpania or band of families. She was literate, unusual for Polska Roma of that time. She learned to read by trading chickens in exchange for lessons with local villagers.
The System of Dante's Hell is a short novel by African-American writer LeRoi Jones, published in 1965 by Grove Press. The novel follows a young black man living nomadically in big cities and small towns in the Southern United States, and his struggles with segregation and racism. The book correlates the man's experience with Dante's Inferno, and includes a diagram of the fictional hell described by Dante Alighieri.
Pulpurru Davies (born early 1940s) is an Aboriginal artist from central Australia. Most of her early life was spent living nomadically in the desert, until she and her family were settled at Warburton in the late 1960s. Part of her life in the bush was featured in the documentary People of the Australian Western Desert (1966). She has since become one of the earliest and most successful Ngaanyatjarra artists.
Distribution of Malagasy ethnic groups. Zafimaniry are classified as Betsileo. The Zafimaniry people migrated to the dense forests of southeastern Madagascar in the 18th century due to increasing deforestation in other parts of the island. Zafimaniry villages were among those targeted for retaliation by French soldiers during the 1947 Uprising against colonial rule, leading many villagers to flee to the forest where they lived nomadically for two years.
Waxwings are not long-distance migrants, but move nomadically outside the breeding season. Waxwings mostly feed on fruit, but at times of year when fruits are unavailable they feed on sap, buds, flowers and insects. They catch insects by gleaning through foliage or in mid-air. They often nest near water, the female building a loose nest at the fork of a branch, well away from the trunk of the tree.
In Africa, it is a blessing to have the last word of one's dying father, and Yaya had it and participated in the funerals. Yaya Diallo's mother died on 2 February 1997. 1.3 Nomadic life 1950-1953 Each male child in Diallo's family from the age of four to 21 years had to live a nomadic life; Each female child lived nomadically from the age of six until she was married at 16 or after.
Up to 1995, when Seebarn Cricket Ground was built close to Vienna, cricket had been played nomadically on multi-purpose sports grounds, often with a mat put down on a hockey or football ground. After Seebarn, three other cricket grounds have been constructed: one in Vienna, which is the home ground of Austria CC Wien, one in Velden in Carinthia, home of CC Velden '91, and one in Graz, home of Graz Cricket Academy.
To the Ban Raji people, who live semi-nomadically across western Nepal and Uttarakhand, the Pleiades are the "Seven sisters-in-law, and brother-in-law" (Hatai halyou daa salla). They hold or held that when they can first make them out annually over the mountains straddling the upper Kali they feel happy to see their ancient kin.(Fortier 2008: in press) This is about eight hours after noon by local, traditional time standards.
Pickering first performed her own creative writing airing on live radio for The Fall of Babylon show on Resonance FM in London. She self-published her diaries from traveling nomadically between 2009 and 2012 under a pen name described as new beat in style. Her pen name was exposed in press in 2012 and Pickering announced she had removed her writing from the public domain. In 2017, she published Nothing Dries Sooner Than a Tear with Burning House Press.
To avoid inbreeding, most taxa recognize kin and do not consider them in mate selection. R. marginata however show no indication of discriminating against nestmates for mate choice in both males and females. Because males disperse and live nomadically after leaving the nest and breeding does not occur on the nest, inbreeding is relatively unlikely in this species even without the anti-incest behavior. Body size is arbitrary in mate choice for both males and females of this species.
"Stuckism International: Hysterical Shock", Stuckism web site, 12 August 2004. Retrieved from the Internet Archive, 15 November 2008. The Transition Gallery was founded in October 2002 in a converted garage close to Victoria Park, Hackney, London, and is run by artists Cathy Lomax and Alex Michon to show work by established and new contemporary artists. In 2016, the artist-run project Auto Italia South East relocated to Bethnal Green after programming and producing artists work nomadically in donated or squatted buildings since 2007.
Ngarra (c.1920-2008) was an Aboriginal Australian artist of the Andinyin/Gija language groups known for his paintings on canvas and paper which depicted his homelands in the Kimberley region of northwestern Australia along with events from the ancestral and colonial past. Among Aboriginal people in the central and east Kimberley he was revered for his deep knowledge of Aboriginal ceremonial practices which he learned from his grandparents Muelbyne and Larlgarlbyne while living nomadically in the remote Mornington Range.
By the 1920s sufficient archaeological material had been excavated and studied to suggest that diffusionism was not the only mechanism through which change occurred. Influenced by the political upheaval of the inter-war period Childe then argued that revolutions had wrought major changes in past societies. He conjectured a Neolithic Revolution, which inspired people to settle and farm rather than hunt nomadically. This would have led to considerable changes in social organisation, which Childe argued led to a second Urban Revolution that created the first cities.
Autumn migration often begins around October on fairly broad fronts, and may peak around late October. It usually ends in late November to December but steppe eagles frequently travel somewhat nomadically while not breeding and so individuals may not reach their winter terminus point until about January. Spring migration usually commences in February, peaking early from late February to March, with likely all gone from Africa by the end of the latter month, then continuing in a diminishing trickle into April and May.Christensen, S., & Sorensen, U. G. (1989).
Cape sparrows and a southern masked weaver at a bird feeder in Johannesburg during the winter The Cape sparrow is social, lives in flocks, and usually breeds in colonies. Away from settled areas it spends much of the year wandering nomadically, in flocks of up to 200 birds. In cultivated and built up areas, smaller flocks form where food is provided for livestock or birds. In such places, it associates with other seed-eating birds, such as the house sparrow, the Cape weaver, and weavers of the genus Euplectes.
For about 8,000 years, the McKenzie River has been home to Native Americans. In more recent history, Kalapuya and Molala tribes lived nomadically in the summer and spent winters in the lower valley. This way of life continued until the mid-19th century, when many natives died of disease or were relocated to reservations. The first recorded exploration of the river occurred in the spring of 1812, when the Pacific Fur Company reached the McKenzie via the Willamette River, as part of a larger exploration led by Donald McKenzie.
They were left to live in the desert as they had moved into the territory of the neighbouring Budijara tribe. In 1976, local Aboriginal elders in Wiluna approached Australian explorer Stan Gratte to mount an expedition to rescue the couple. Gratte led a search with tribal elder Mudjon for the couple which managed to locate them and bring them to Wiluna where they would both die two years later. At the time, Warri and Yatungka were thought to be the last people living nomadically in the Australian desert.
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.
A ceremony in 1982 marking the naming of a bridge in Amsterdam in Mazirel's honour Journalist Jan Rogier in 1981 founded the Lau Mazirel Stichting (changed to Vereniging Lau Mazirel in 1987), an organisation supporting the rights of Romani and other nomadically living people."Archief Stichting Lau Mazirel (Amsterdam)", Internationaal Instituut voor Sociale Geschiedenis (Dutch) The Lau Mazirelbrug, a bridge across Plantage Muidergracht canal in Amsterdam, was named after her in 1982. A year later, a street in Amsterdam was also named after her, the Lau Mazirelstraat. The cities of The Hague, Leiden, Beverwijk and Spijkenisse also have streets named after her.
The policemen depart, and Udo, still shaken by the aggressive officer, demands an explanation from the Teen. The Teen explains that he ran away from home weeks ago after he began feeling an irresistible call to the night, going out to cruise for sex with men and women, drinking, and wandering the empty streets. His parents attempted to control his wanderings, and so he left, and has been living nomadically, sleeping where he can and having his lovers buy him food or give him money. Everyone asks about the story of the hosts, which all three of them tell.
Threats to his life forced the narrator to live nomadically, moving from town to town in search of kind-hearted people who would offer lodging in exchange for more information about the manuscript and its message. While evading the Church and Peruvian government, the narrator finds time to read from the prized manuscript that offers 'Insights' as a sequence of passages. During pursuit, the narrator experiences real-world lessons that prepare him for each Insight in advance. In the end, he returns to the United States after learning the first nine Insights, and promises to reveal a 'Tenth Insight' to his audience in a short time.
With a background in cinema and conceptual performance, Kirby works with shifting recording technologies, creating film/video hybrids, site interventions and mappings that become records of time, technologies and places. Her improvisational and collaborative projects manifest at the intersection of events and archives, looking at the links between public and private, biographical and historical systems. She has recently collaborated with Etel Adnan, Xiaofei Li, Alexis Petty and Lisa Robertson. Kirby's interest in the histories of place is closely connected to having grown up nomadically, living in Hong Kong, Libya, Belgium, Sweden and France. Kirby moved to the US to finish her undergraduate education at the San Francisco Art Institute’s conceptually driven sculpture program.
Noisy miners and Australian magpies are among the few birds that are successful in driving Torresian crows out of their territories, with the latter species being one of the smaller bird species that dominate and displace crows where they meet. Between the months of January and August, large groups of crows congregate and roam nomadically across farmlands, forests and city suburbs. These groups consist of crows of all ages; however, from September to December, many leave these flocks to breed in temporary territories, with the nomadic flock sizes reducing significantly to only young and old crows. Each pair of crows returns to the same territory each year, but territories may be taken over by other pairs from year to year.
The club continued to train and play some of its games at Newcomen Road, but played most home games nomadically at a variety of south-eastern suburban grounds for the next few years, initially at Waverley Park in 2000, and then in 2001 and 2002 at venues including Moorabbin Oval and Shepley Oval. It returned almost full-time to Newcomen Road from 2003 until 2005. In 2005, to attempt to financially secure its long-term future, the club came to an arrangement with the City of Casey, which had developed the new Casey Fields multi-sports complex in Cranbourne East and was seeking a VFL team to play there. The club moved its training and playing base to Casey Fields in 2006, and changed its name to the Casey Scorpions Football Club.
The southerly brown lemmings behave differently than more northern collared lemming type, increasing almost limitlessly within preferred habitat whereas the collared type tends to spread to suboptimal habitats and therefore does not appear reach the high regional densities of the brown. Authorities now generally agree that there appears to be no synchrony between the brown and collared lemmings and the feeding access of snowy owls is irregular as a result, but snowy owls can likely alternate between the two lemming types as one or the other increases as they nomadically use different parts of the Arctic. It is possible that the rare coincidental mutual peak of both lemming types within a year results in the erratic high productivity that results in irruptions. Within individual Arctic lemming species, historically, populations can vary in rough 4- to 5-year trends.
The cricket club began to share the oval with the football club in 1882, with the football club using the oval in winter, and the cricket club using the oval in the summer. Historically this arrangement has been difficult and the North Melbourne cricket and football clubs have not got along. In 2007, the cricket club moved its First and Second XIs playing base to J. J. Holland Park in neighbouring Kensington, but its Third and Fourth XIs remained at Arden Street; the club left Arden Street altogether in 2010, playing and training nomadically at Holland Park, Albert Park and Royal Park for a couple of years before moving permanently to the outer north-western suburb of Greenvale in 2013. From 1957-62, the Melbourne Greyhound Racing Association used Arden St to hold its Greyhound meetings.
Huddersfield Giants, the town's rugby league club, has won the Rugby Football League Championship seven times, most recently in 1961–62, and the Challenge Cup six times, the last time in 1952–53. Underbank Rangers based in Holmfirth are the most prominent amateur club in the town, formed in 1884, and launched the careers of many professional players including Harold Wagstaff, Paul Dixon and Eorl Crabtree who all served the Huddersfield club. After 1895 rugby was played exclusively under the auspices of the Northern Rugby Football Union until 1909 when Huddersfield Old Boys were formed to play under rugby union rules, playing nomadically at five grounds until buying farmland at Waterloo in 1919 and, in 1946, renaming the club Huddersfield RUFC. In 1969 the club was at the forefront of a revolution in English rugby when it became the first club in the country to organise mini and junior rugby teams.
In March 1990, the Village was forced to relocate when the Singapore government repossessed the Lorong Gambas site at Ulu Sembawang for urban development. While the chicken farm had already been pending requisition by the state even when TAV formed in 1988, the incident has been noted to demonstrate "the inter-dependent and unequal negotiations between the state and artists who were powerless in the face of the state." In February 1992, TAV registered as a non-profit organisation under the Societies Act.. With this status, TAV and its official members were eligible for participation in officially funded events, as well as the application for funding and space under the new rules by the National Arts Council, which had been established in 1991. TAV briefly relocated to rental houses at the Naval Base area in Sembawang, and existed nomadically at locations such as a garage space in Middle Road (that would become the site of Sculpture Square and later Objectifs) and notably the now-defunct Hong Bee Warehouse in Robertson Quay.

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