Sentences Generator
And
Your saved sentences

No sentences have been saved yet

"subsist" Definitions
  1. [intransitive] subsist (on something) to manage to stay alive, especially with limited food or money
  2. [intransitive] (law) to exist; to apply and be relevant

271 Sentences With "subsist"

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

The unemployed masses will subsist on a universal basic income.
Many subsist on often predatory debt to cover basic expenses.
For now, though, we'll just have to subsist off reruns.
They subsist on state grants of about €200 a month.
But a successful reboot cannot subsist on fond memories alone, and
There are lots of communities that subsist on fishing and hunting.
Big hotel chains subsist on weary business travellers; Airbnb does not.
It's a tired cliché that poor college students subsist on ramen.
We do not know whether it will subsist outside flu season.
While they subsist on roadkill, she feasts on pizza and marshmallows.
But if you subsist on corn chips alone, you'll end up sick.
Nomads subsist almost entirely on the milk and meat of their animals.
It is hard to imagine how anyone could subsist on so little.
But these folks don't subsist only on ice cream and cold beverages.
They subsist on the local wildlife: fish, the occasional moose and seal.
Her shows subsist on the meat of people griping for three minutes straight.
The state makes Big Men rich while ordinary folk subsist on food aid.
All three subsist on a ration of just rice, pulses and cooking oil.
Until a new CEO is found, HQ must subsist on its existing funds.
It's estimated some 2.53,000 people still live, or subsist, there -- under continual bombardment.
The moral of the story: A baby cannot subsist on almond milk alone.
They subsist on fruit, mainly bananas and rambutan, and on human infant formula.
Lifestyle: Ghost sharks are predators that mainly subsist on worms, crabs, and mollusks.
But meaning doesn't subsist in art like a relic in an ancient vault.
"You would have to subsist largely on a diet of dairy products," Miller said.
Do the world's plutocrats subsist solely on chocolate bars and chicken, like Howard Hughes?
Others subsist for just a few generations, leaving barely a trace of their glories.
But a well-managed line of business doesn't try to subsist on sporadic breakthroughs.
The gardens subsist off of rainwater—even though there's been so little of it.
Despite common perception, runway models don't necessarily subsist entirely on celery and grain bowls.
You don't need to subsist solely on kale and coconut oil to be healthy.
Some subsist on the thin gruel of political cartoon shows and online impeachment petitions.
But the problem is trying to subsist and survive while you're a college student.
Legacy brands have a certain nostalgic value, but you can't subsist on nostalgia alone.
You know the people on your list who subsist on microwave popcorn and takeout?
The animals subsist on garbage retrieved from the Warsaw ghetto in daily truck runs.
The man he murdered is the sole reason he was able to subsist at all.
It's estimated some 320,000 people still live, or subsist, in the city under continual bombardment.
"I was more agile than they, and could subsist upon coarser diet," the creature says.
Snow leopards subsist on wild mountain-dwelling hoofed animals such as ibex, bharal and markhor.
He is happy to subsist on the golden (white) superhero as food for his fantasies.
He said that extremely poor fishermen like himself usually subsist on rice, lentils and vegetables.
The rap on Hollywood actresses is that they subsist on green juices and aromatherapy fumes.
We subsist on Beachbody B-LINES resistance bands, $19.95, and our traveling YOGO yoga mats, $62.
She told police her alleged kidnappers fed her, bringing her fast food meals to subsist on.
Even now, when thousands of children subsist in a city that is toxic, this remains true.
She told police her kidnappers did feed her, bringing her fast food meals to subsist on.
Meanwhile, cold water is lowering their metabolism, allowing the jellies to subsist on very little food.
She allegedly told police the men fed her, bringing her fast food meals to subsist on.
New Yorkers tend to be a dour people, as we subsist largely on coffee and cynicism.
When the floods are bad, Ms. Villarmia has learned to subsist on cold rice and coffee.
Brave residents sheltered Christian neighbors and colleagues, giving them canned goods and rice to subsist on.
And should they escape death, your children and grandchildren might subsist instead through proto-apocalyptic ruin.
The network of women is self-sufficient; they use their very own bodies to subsist and connect.
In sub-Saharan Africa as a whole, 41% of people subsist on less than $1.90 a day.
One study suggests that about 1.5m families now subsist for periods on almost no income at all.
Most small farms subsist on short-term leases, according to Adam Asquith, a taro farmer on Kauai.
The remaining workers subsist on partial pay, commonly disbursed with government assistance in China to stem unrest.
Women and men alike risk their lives and subsist in squalor in the mountain's thin frigid air.
Coppola's seem to subsist without effort, as if an invisible staff were meeting their well-bred needs.
Others, like the Simeone, the Petersen and the Henry Ford, subsist on grants, fund-raisers and endowments.
They still rely on their nearby land to grow the millet and vegetables on which they subsist.
Some are able to subsist on farm laboring, but most are unable to find work to support themselves.
Zurbarán had to subsist ad hoc, often on commissions from religious orders that tethered him to pious subjects.
The Alibaba deal, however, gave Yahoo the financial firepower to subsist for longer than it otherwise might have.
Regarding compensation, only 85033 percent of families surveyed said they could subsist on their service member's salary alone.
In the early summer, their menu options are limited — the omnivorous bears can subsist on sedge and berries.
The moral imperative is obvious, but for organizations that subsist largely on charitable donations, it is also existential.
The critical groups largely subsist on government grants, which are contingent on the organizations meeting contractually-obligated benchmarks.
Considered cursed, they were required to shave their heads, wear drab, coarse clothes and subsist on meager food.
We subsist now on a meager vocabulary of winners and "losers," of "sad!" naysayers and "nut job" adversaries.
To me, the brownish bars look like blocks of red bean jelly, which I would subsist on happily.
No one I know thinks that humans should spawn like wave-borne grunion or subsist entirely on flies.
Both subsist on human flesh, but zombification works like a disease, where cannibalistic tendencies creep in like an addiction.
Be adorable or memorable enough, and a contestant can become Instafamous and subsist on brand partnerships after the show.
Some cults subsist on donations from their followers, several institute membership fees, and others start businesses of their own.
Mr Romano of Nestlé says that Latin American ones used to subsist largely on table scraps, but no longer.
The birds, when feeding, both ingest these bacteria directly and consume small crustaceans that themselves subsist on such bacteria.
Humanity can no longer subsist on a few crops to feed billions, especially in the age of global warming.
So even those who assume they subsist solely on a plant-based diet actually eat animal remains as well.
The city's monks, who have taken a vow of poverty, depend solely on the generosity of devotees to subsist.
That was why he had thrived in America, which was an ideal place for those who could subsist alone.
Basically, nothing is safe and the sooner humans can find a way to subsist without eating food, the better.
If some of the school's neighbors subsist on the vagaries of the corn and soybean market, Grinnell does not.
Children have died in recent months because of famine, and many families subsist on a single meal a day.
And the Chamber of Commerce business establishment is losing sway, unable to subsist on tax cuts and Obama bashing alone.
Workers, who had to subsist on strike pay of just $250 a week for most of the time, clearly suffered.
The Porcupine Caribou Herd, upon which the Gwich'in subsist, return here year after year to give birth to their young.
In fact, no multinational brand or retailer currently claims to pay its garment workers a wage they can subsist on.
Residents there will take one-minute showers and subsist on a regimen of cheese, whey shakes, and almost constant exercise.
While the bigger pasta companies cannot subsist on Italian wheat alone, for smaller manufacturers, it is an increasingly appealing option.
He finds Zapotec and Mixtec communities in Oaxaca that largely subsist on artisanal crafts like basket making and mezcal brewing.
Allowing the surcharge to subsist would put any other streaming service at a serious competitive disadvantage vis-a-vis Apple Music.
Pangolins subsist mostly on ants and termites, catching them with tongues that can stretch longer than the length of their bodies.
They subsist on the brothers earning between 70 cents to $2.70 per day, picking through trash or working nearby rice paddies.
In dense jungles, productivity depends on the canopy: Animals on the ground must largely subsist on what drops from the treetops.
With each passing episode, those fans will have to subsist on the latest Baby Yoda developments until the next episode arrives.
He dreams of going to medical school, even as he and his siblings subsist on remnants of food donated by neighbors.
Rather than a steady diet of post-ups, bigs now subsist on things like pick-and-rolls, cuts, and rim runs.
It's a dire time of the year for men's basketball fans, who must subsist on trade analyses and free-agency rumors.
They're enormous — the biggest creatures that have ever lived, as far as anyone knows — but subsist almost entirely on tiny krill.
Was rape still the black woman's story, living such degradation 30 years after emancipation just to subsist at the pleasure of whites?
Many automated systems, remember, from self-checkout kiosks to call menus, only subsist with ample human assistance, and some get dismantled altogether.
Many organisms take much more time to grow and reproduce compared to their counterparts on land because they subsist on fewer nutrients.
Breakfast tacos are within arm's reach at any hour of the day, but a girl can't subsist on eggs and tortillas alone.
He seems to subsist on a kind of unconquerable optimism and assurance—a sense, constantly confirmed, that there's no harm in trying.
These microbes, which can subsist on the tiniest drop of water (many don't even need oxygen) are constantly testing life's known limits.
Still others struggle to subsist, depending on soup kitchens for meals or working illegally for small shops or factories for paltry wages.
Paleo dieters subsist on meats, fish, fruits, vegetables, nuts, and seeds, while shying away from grains, sugar, dairy products, and anything processed.
Qaanaaq, population six hundred and thirty, is one of the few places in Greenland where people still subsist on what they catch.
We want control of our attention, but they subsist on stealing as much of it as possible with distraction while showing us ads.
You should be able to study your art in order to enrich your community, and you should be able to subsist on that.
Ms. Cohen's Nell has an ingratiating smile that's heartbreaking; she seems perfectly content to subsist on the crumbs of attention tossed her way.
More than 60 percent of the population subsist on less than $1.25 a day, with an average life expectancy of just 48 years.
The bugs are fed an all-grain diet but they are not that picky — they can subsist on scraps or other food waste.
They subsist by hunting and herding reindeer, leading the animals hundreds of miles to pasturelands in the north or south according to the season.
Baluchi had planned to catch fish and subsist on protein bars while inside his bubble, which occasionally reaches temperatures as high as 120 degrees.
My students looked baffled, but unpersuaded, caught up in the convenient rationalization that authors subsist on inspiration and the purest love of subject matter.
But I can't stop honing in on that word, "magic" — the idea that black women have had to subsist on their mystical powers to persist.
Although the mean income per person is $3,110, twice the sub-Saharan average, about two-thirds of Angolans subsist on less than $2 a day.
They have the digestive system of a carnivore, but have to subsist entirely on bamboo, which doesn't provide much energy for rolls in the hay.
The notion of voter suppression really does not subsist very comfortably alongside popular majorities in favor of the candidate whose voters are allegedly being suppressed.
Most of the animals we eat (chickens, pigs and cows) today subsist on a diet of corn, regardless of whether it is good for them.
All of this says nothing of the army of contractors -- from the low-paid janitor to the high-paid executive -- who subsist on federal contracts.
It is also a new concept for how top runners can subsist and thrive in a sport that has massive participation but relatively few fans.
He recruited obese people to stay at the hospital and subsist on a 600-calorie a day liquid diet until they reached a normal weight.
And servers at fast-food joints and hip coffee shops alike subsist on a meager tipped minimum wage that's been frozen at $2.13 since 1991.
The tribe he studied, called the Tsimane, subsist mostly on what they grow and hunt in the jungle, and about two-thirds have intestinal parasites.
And the insight startled him because, drawn out to its logical conclusion, it meant that mankind would decouple itself from having to strive to subsist.
And since they prefer to graze and can't entirely subsist on grain, it is even harder to raise them at scale, meaning slimmer profit margins.
Instead, they subsist on a largely plant-based diet filled with beans, nuts, and cruciferous vegetables, which Buettner has written about in a new cookbook.
The reason lies in its basic assumptions: that a family of four, for example, can subsist on less than $30,000, no matter where they live.
One more time for the people in the back: "It's just unrealistic to think one could subsist on a diet completely devoid of carbohydrates," Harbstreet says.
More intriguing still, both subsist almost entirely on bamboo (some etymologists think their mutual name is derived from the Nepali phrase nigalya ponya, meaning "bamboo-eater").
For students, many of whom subsist on ramen noodles and search couch cushions for loose change to last the semester financially, that is a punishing figure.
"I have to work to subsist, but if I could, I would strike," said clothes seller Victor Sanabria, 49, in the southern town of San Felix.
Participants won't have to subsist on pi alone: A pizza and ice cream party will be held between the two sessions of this drop-off program.
Will those who don't subsist entirely on raw produce be able to tell a difference between organic and nonorganic fruit, as Mr. Evans claims to do?
The motivation to live beyond just mere survival, to strive to do more than subsist at the minimal possible level, that takes a type of conviction.
He had planned to subsist on grass, he said, but because the area was heavily populated by herds of sheep and goats, there was little available.
Fluctuations in the economy and politics determine whether my attendants will receive a living wage and whether I'll have enough services to subsist rather than thrive.
But, that still leaves three whole months when we all have to go Bachelor-less and subsist on Instagram posts and news stories about Bachelor people.
All of this may make the conscientious American want to drive the family S.U.V. into the nearest body of water and subsist on locally grown radishes.
Foods go in and out of style — we're promised immortality so long as we switch to oat milk or stronger bones if we subsist on açaí, exclusively.
About a dozen people there echoed Emmanuel's complaint; they couldn't, or could no longer, subsist on the food distributed by the government: sausages, chips, and candy bars.
Shooting continued until around midnight, and because of his character's deformed mouth he had to subsist on eggs mixed into orange juice and sipped through a straw.
The social scientists Kathryn J. Edin and H. Luke Shaefer have calculated that 1.5 million American households subsist on no more than $2 per person a day.
They subsist off a constant churn of passes, cuts, screens, and movement that breeds an unselfish energy—a complete culture shock for Crowder after his first game.
Mr Asahara, a former seller of quack medicines, ordered his followers to subsist on boiled vegetables while he gorged on prawn tempura and drove a white Rolls-Royce.
The moment, packed with a decade of pent up longing to have the MCU recognize women's heroism, packs a punch for those who've needed to subsist on scraps.
Those prices are roughly in line with global standards, but are out of reach for the many Cubans who subsist on state salaries of about $30 a month.
" He quotes Winthrop's admonition to his fellow Arbella passengers: "It is a true rule," he told them, "that particular estates cannot subsist in the ruin of the public.
These excellent women are excellent — they volunteer, they go to church, they subsist modestly on small chops and simple suppers — but they can also be dowdy and difficult.
Corporate greed promotes costly interventions, price-gouges medications for chronic illness and fuels the arms race of advanced medical devices while most Americans subsist on subsidized junk food.
Trix and Reese's Puffs have been a bit easier to revamp, since both can subsist with using natural flavors like vanilla and spice extracts and still maintain taste.
The brothers share a single T-shirt between them, subsist on leftover junk food, and while away the hours streaming porn, playing video games and rarely venturing outside.
Over a five-month span, The New York Times exposed the harrowing conditions in which babies and children barely subsist in 21 public hospitals across 20163 states in Venezuela.
Surely if Outback Steakhouse did its research, they would know most Australians subsist on a lean and healthy diet of Winnie Blue cigarettes, meat pies and Victoria Bitter beer.
The adult wasps, however, cannot actually digest the invertebrates that serve as baby food and instead subsist on flower nectar and a "sugar-rich spit" produced by the larvae.
From a dance music artist's perspective, it's very difficult to subsist entirely off your art from North America alone, unless you work within a few narrow EDM/Beatport lanes.
But it is the flow of resources between cities that determines which cities rise to become major, empire-sustaining metropolises, and what areas subsist mostly to fuel that progress.
The bees, from the halictid family, subsist primarily on pollen and nectar but also need salt produced by human and animal glands, so they feed on sweat and tears.
Long ago, a village of Trolls, joyful creatures in a rainbow of colors and patterns, was raided by the Bergens, gray giants with bad teeth who subsist on them.
For now, we&aposll have to subsist on a Polestar diet of a turbocharged-and-supercharged gas engine mated to a pair of electric motors driving the rear wheels.
But while a highly trained astronaut might be able to subsist on space gorp without losing her mind, what about a civilian with a one-way ticket to Mars?
Now that it's January, there's going to be an impulse in the air to cut back, to make health soup and green juice, to subsist on grains and beans.
"By virtue of not having any significant product evolution in years, users end up doing a lot of things and figure out how to subsist on their own," he says.
And many people who live on cleared forests subsist on their farming, so they need to be compensated and given alternative livelihoods if that land is going to be repurposed.
I have a system: eat all the produce and perishables first, then subsist on beans and rice for the last week until I get paid and can go shopping again.
These creatures subsist on whatever they can, the oleaginous lumbering ones sleepily devouring the least elusive specimens in volume, the horribly blistered long-clawed ones chasing anything they can catch.
He'll mostly subsist on protein bars (though he'll also try more exotic fare like gigantic bugs), and sometimes his lodgings consist of a tent or a cot under the stars.
Money sent home from Salvadorans abroad is a lifeline for many in the country, where four out of 10 households subsist below the poverty line, according to the World Bank.
An entire pig crackled on a spit outside in front of the merch stands all weekend, providing fatty succor for those who found it impossible to subsist on beer alone.
That many retirees cannot subsist on pensions alone and will outlive their savings is one of Japan's worst-kept secrets and one reason Abe is considering raising the retirement age.
People living in the world's five "Blue Zones," where elders routinely live to age 100 in good health, also subsist on very little meat, prioritizing beans, nuts, and whole grains instead.
Yet according to nonprofit advocacy group The Borgen Project, at least 82 million Chinese still live below the poverty line, while millions more subsist on an annual income of less than $400.
"INCONVENIENT TRUTH" That many retirees cannot subsist on pensions alone and will outlive their savings is one of Japan's worst-kept secrets and one reason Abe is considering raising the retirement age.
It's understandable to want to kickstart your health, but there are much safer and healthier ways to refocus your eating patterns — and they certainly don't require you to subsist entirely on liquids.
That China's state-sponsored propaganda can freely subsist in the virtual echo chambers of Twitter while the platform is blocked entirely on the Chinese mainland is certainly a less than reciprocal arrangement.
University of California's 'Tightwad Hill' Many broke college students have been there, forced to subsist on ramen noodles and Pop-Tarts until your next paycheck arrives from work ... or mom and dad.
Oddly enough, amid high-minded discussions about the aerial application of chemicals and remote-sensing systems, was tucked this suggestion: Perhaps humans could subsist wholly—or partially—on a diet of krill.
Luckily, instead of vaporous theories, we have tangible breadcrumbs of information to subsist off until season 3 of The Crown premieres (which, like Season 8 of Game of Thrones, will air in 2019).
He may be a legendary figure given imaginary life around that time, a prototype of the Chinese poets who even now reside in caves and subsist by foraging in their otherwise uninhabited mountainsides.
In a tweet earlier this month, Ramon Muchacho, mayor of the Caracas district of Chacao, claimed that residents of the capital are resorting to various forms of urban hunting in order to subsist.
This week, AT&T unveiled its new TV streaming service for cord cutters, who aren't ready to subsist entirely on Netflix, YouTube and whatever else they can watch for free around the web.
It feels like we have spent more time in other people's homes than our own, cleaning, dusting, scrubbing, cooking, the same tasks that many women who migrate to the United States subsist on.
The rarest member of the bear family with roughly 1,864 in the wild, pandas live mainly in bamboo forests high in the mountains of western China, where they subsist almost entirely on bamboo leaves.
Not just public defenders but Louisiana's sheriffs and prosecutors, and the courts themselves, subsist partly on fees, fines and bonds imposed largely at judges' discretion, mostly on defendants who plead or are found guilty.
Unlike with the Boeing 747, the A380 freighter never came to fruition, so Airbus won't be able to subsist on sales of a cargo variant while it waits for passenger-plane sales to rebound.
The old-fashioned flavors — some a very acquired taste — are pungent, but also reveal the hardscrabble history of the Faroes, where until recent decades locals had to subsist on what they could source locally.
This was true even without counting homeless youth or people who didn't work a significant amount of hours (that latter group including otherwise well-off college students who subsist on Top Ramen for four years).
Are you drinking red wine with your breakfast in celebration of some first-rate drunken diplomacy, or are you munching on bugs, training yourself to subsist on lean proteins in preparation for a hard winter?
Like many people here, they could not imagine a world in which they did anything but subsist on the land and water, and in which their fortunes did not rise and fall with the Sekong.
Instead, many proud Natchezians honor their heritage — and, in some cases, subsist — by preserving their big old houses and opening them to the public: some year-round, many more during annual spring and fall pilgrimages.
Even in the limited form for young children that House Democrats are proposing, the policy could substantially cut child poverty and help wipe out extreme forms of poverty where families subsist without any cash income.
Mid-speech, I realize this is precisely how Trump gets exercise—emphatic speaking is a workout, he feels—and now, schvitzing from the exertion, I understand that if you subsist on the Trump Diet, it is.
Cubans previously only had access to state-run email accounts on their phones, but the cost of the new mobile data packages will likely be too great for most citizens who subsist on state-provided salaries.
People who are predisposed to believe Jasmuheen and her ilk will undoubtedly dismiss these charges as uninformed; that Breatharians who claim to subsist without food or water for months are living proof that the practice works.
Enjoying a certain amount of special status from the Indonesian government, the Lamalerans subsist largely by harpooning sperm whales, bartering with neighboring communities, and mostly (they have taken to limited use of motorboats) maintaining ancient practices.
In this picture, the ecosystem would be largely devoid of primary producers and instead subsist on leftovers, the detritus of long dead organisms washed down from above or deposited with the sediment 2.9 billion years ago.
Working for the government in the early 1950s, I had to travel by train across the United States because air travel was too costly, and had to subsist on $9 a day for meals and lodging.
For years, locals have been increasingly angered by the influx of migrants on to the island, where about 20,000 people subsist in squalid conditions in the island's infamous Moria camp, built to hold just 3,000 people.
Notice how the hero and the heroine of the movie, in line with its title, subsist on fantasies instead of careers, conforming to a chase-your-dream credo that is not so much traditional as antique.
It was offered up during plea negotiations as Manafort's lawyers sought to preserve assets for Manafort's wife, Kathleen, and for the once notoriously high-living political consultant to subsist on when he gets out of prison.
If we moved to the country and decided we could subsist on one income and have a comfortable living, and I could be a stay-at-home dad, I would find a way to drive myself crazy.
Instead, Hausmann and Hedwig moved to Peyrat-le-Château in central France where Hausmann gave lessons in German, English, and Spanish to subsist — and where they met Marthe Prévot with whom they formed another ménage à trois.
Employment in Saudi Arabia can help their families survive, but to get it they have to travel through Yemen — where a serious cholera epidemic is adding to misery and nearly seven million people subsist on food aid.
Stewart didn't mention if packing her bags with freshly prepared food has ever led her to miss a flight, but clearly trying to subsist on microwaved entrees or a handful of pretzels is an even more untenable fate.
The longer people are out of work, the more their skills and their self-confidence atrophy, the less appealing they look to potential employers and the more likely they are to give up and subsist on the dole.
If you're going to subsist on packets of dehydrated noodles and powdered, salty seasoning, we've got some suggestions for how to get a lot more out of the experience by putting in just a liiiiittle more effort. 1.
Check out more videos from VICE: PCB toxicity in the Hudson's fish remains at unacceptably high levels, threatening the health of any who consume them, especially lower-income families and minorities who subsist on them despite health warnings.
Sure, Xbox One has been kicking around for as long as the PS4, but it appears to subsist solely on the strength of brand loyalty; certainly its paltry list of console-exclusives isn't any sort of driving motivation.
But as the empty shells disintegrate over the next few months, those populations are likely to shrink — and that will cascade up the food chain to the people of the island, many of whom subsist on the sea.
Over there, you can't swing a weighted jump rope without hitting a star — sometimes the same one who'd claimed to subsist on poached eggs and wild salmon in People — proudly scarfing a cheeseburger or a plate of nachos.
This helps fill the gap between a full day's pay and the dollars needed to subsist, but these programs were intended as a safety net, not as a subsidy to corporations who refuse to pay even a subsistence wage.
If putting your fingers up there really grosses you out, wrap your digits in a condom or use a rubber glove, but as long as you don't subsist on a diet of Taco Bell and Fritos, you're probably fine.
I was too idealistic to want more money than I needed to subsist, too arrogant to envy Heisler, and so to me the rich were mainly a curiosity, interesting for the conspicuousness of both their consumption and their thrift.
Stories of opiate addiction are common in Oak Beach, and Scalise and his family claim that Hackett was using his access to a prescription pad to subsist as a quasi–drug dealer after allegedly being fired by the county.
A staggering 96 percent of songbirds, even those that subsist on seeds and berries as adults, rely on insects to feed their young: A growing body needs protein, and for birds the best source of protein is a bug.
Jack Wilshere and Wayne Rooney appeared to have the basic fitness of a couple of middle-aged binmen who suffer from chronic lung impairment, and subsist exclusively on a diet of fried eggs, hash browns and exceedingly viscous black pudding.
It would be nice to get another drama-filled pop album from the songstress, but for now, we'll just have to subsist on one-off singles like the recent "I Don't Wanna Live Forever," on which Swift collaborated with Zayn Malik.
But mostly, there was the promise of a proper Body Talk follow-up that never quite materialized amid the smaller-scale side projects, leaving fans to subsist on her existing body of work as they waited out the Great Robyn Famine.
"I became irrationally terrified of fat," she writes in the book, explaining that after watching both her mother and stepmother adhere to diets, she began to subsist primarily on rice cakes, apples, and nonfat yogurt from the ages of 14-18.
"The directions that have been passed by the National Green Tribunal by its judgment ... will continue to subsist and will be subject to the ultimate outcome of the appeal," the supreme court said in its order uploaded on its website.
Australian MP blames 'human stupidity' for suspected fatal croc attack Terrifying -- but mostly harmless Huntsman spiders, which are part of the informal "hairy scary" variety given their size and scuttling speed, usually subsist on a diet of insects and other invertebrates.
Futurism's men of steel would subsist on "food sculptures" created with the aid of "a battery of scientific instruments," Filippo Marinetti prophesied in The Futurist Cookbook (1932) — an uncanny premonition of the molecular gastronomy of the Catalan chef Ferran Adrià.
Ford studies the teeth of wild orca whales, of which there are three main varieties: resident (coastal killer whales that subsist primarily on fish), transient (coastal whales that eat marine mammals), and offshore (deep sea orcas that feed on schooling fish).
Some of the detainees are from India, Nepal, Guatemala, Mexico and China, according to the court documents, which allege that Hindu asylum seekers were offered only beef and pork meals and were forced to attempt to subsist off scant vegetable portions.
If that sounds overly convoluted, consider the following anecdote from the Times report, which will make you want to go live in a bunker and subsist on Soylent: "Secret science" may sound like a Trumpism, but there's actually a troubling precedent.
All of the immigrants I have interviewed and known throughout my life seem to accept chronic exhaustion, low self-esteem, fear and panic, low moods and fits of crying as normal for the melancholic migrant struggling to subsist without being arrested.
But then, just as we're about to delete our Twitter accounts and subsist solely on a reading diet of London Review of Books back issues, perused from a Wi-Fi-less cabin in the Outer Hebrides, it delivers solid gold.
One mystery she's eager to solve is whether urban pigeons have lately evolved the means to process refined sugar without suffering health consequences—a trait that would explain their ability to subsist on diets rich in discarded cookies and doughnuts.
He admitted that he used to subsist on coffee and three slices of whole grain bread topped with small allotments of I Can't Believe It's Not Butter per day while trying to achieve a body that more closely resembled fellow figure skaters.
It can subsist for a while on novelty, but once the meaning is pinned down, "jk" fatigue is going to set in pretty quickly and the upside-down smiley face will become what all of these sarcasm shorthands become: passive-aggressive digs.
The trick is simply to announce that this other person is those things, and to do so in a tone that suggests that you go around in a potato sack and subsist on lentils (or better yet—because lentils suggest cultural capital—McDonald's).
Now that he's making outside shots—a quarter of all his attempts are "wide open" threes and nearly half go in—and forcing bigs to close hard, Gordon can afford to subsist off action that's generated by a teammate's pass or penetration.
"This is the place on Mars where you have something that most resembles a habitat, a place where life could subsist," said planetary scientist Roberto Orosei of Istituto Nazionale di Astrofisica in Italy, who led the research published in the journal Science.
Most families in Nenton, a mountainous area near the Mexican border, are of indigenous origin and subsist on corn and beans, as well as money sent back from relatives working in the United States and Mexico, according to a local government report.
And suffering: Three-quarters of the country's 80 million people subsist on less than $2 a day, thousands of civilians have been killed by security forces and various militias in the past two years and 4.5 million Congolese have been displaced by violence.
Maybe they have sacrificed everything — even adequate dental care — to follow their dreams, and now their molars are falling out of their mouth and they can hardly eat yogurt, let alone subsist on all the writing they produce on a daily basis.
Costco is a place for families, or else individuals of family-sized needs: restaurateurs, corporate picnic planners, fraternity brothers, older couples who eat the same five foods with pious regularity, the clinically depressed who subsist on bulk bags of pretzels and Craisins and little else.
There are many hard-core re-enactors — the kind of people who want to know what it felt like to march 25 miles in disintegrating shoes, sleep in ditches and subsist on hardtack and rancid salt pork — who eschew Gettysburg as a mainstream event.
In many parts of Africa, average farm size is just an acre or two, and after repeated divisions of the same property, some people are left trying to subsist on a sliver of a farm that is not much bigger than a tennis court.
"It's a world where you have to work so hard just to exist, and subsist, and where a few people have more than everyone else, and there's a sort of dichotomy of people," Baldacci says in Episode 351 of the Geek's Guide to the Galaxy podcast.
The proposed transit fare of $1.20 a ride, a nearly 4 percent increase, would have been a heavy burden on low-income families, who spend upward of 13 percent of their budgets on transportation, and retirees who subsist on a fixed pension that is below minimum wage.
While this doesn't mean libraries are to subsist on these funds alone—state and federal dollars are a library's smallest source of funding—it does mean that libraries must work harder to secure the local sources of funding that they traditionally need to make ends meet.
But Archie's helps dispel a myth that has taken hold — at least among some members of the press corps who descend on the state every four years to cover the presidential caucuses — that Iowans subsist on heat-lamped slices from Pizza Ranch and pork chops on a stick.
Low-volume providers typically charge more per hour and have a two- to four-hour minimum for dates; they either subsist off that income (the highest rate I've seen is $2,000 an hour) or have income from a day job that they supplement with sex work for fun.
Although Trump's strategy discusses how the Trump administration will work to reduce the stigmatization of people who struggle with addiction, President Trump's extreme rhetoric calling for the execution of drug sellers undermines these efforts, since many drug sellers are people who struggle with addiction and sell drugs to subsist.
Despite health warnings by state and federal officials to limit consumption of fish tainted with the chemical — including an "eat none" notice to pregnant women and those of childbearing age — many poor minority residents of riverfront communities continue to eat, and even subsist on, fish caught in the river.
"This means that if no superseding agreement can be reached within the implementation period, the protocol would be activated and in international law would subsist even if negotiations had broken down," Cox said, explaining the legal structure of the deal which faces a vote in parliament next week.
Since then, plans for more aid and evacuations have stalled, and malnutrition has worsened in Madaya, where, according to interviews with a dozen residents as well as with humanitarian workers assisting a clinic there, people have been collapsing of hunger as they try to subsist on things like grass soup.
It was just the latest, but easily the most official, sign that it isn't necessarily okay for the measures we take to subsist to amount to a horrible, pointless slog that fills all of our days with dread and misery as we toil joylessly to make some other person rich.
On the other, you have an ideology that operates outside the system as much as it possibly can, and plays the games dictated by the world just enough to subsist alongside them—which would, one would think, include fashion and its dictates of what things are supposed to look like.
Their lives are bound by seasonal rhythms—of the sea rather than the land, for brother and sister must subsist as their parents did, catching cod, salting and drying it, exchanging what they preserve for the supplies they need when a ship aptly called the Hope appears over the horizon.
For years, the argument for legalizing sports betting was that it would be a shot of adrenaline for the state's languishing casinos and horse racing tracks, a new revenue source that would also draw a more consistent, year-round crowd to venues that struggle to subsist largely on summer surges.
Setting aside the now useless degree in humanities you spent six years of high school preparing for, you got a job working 72 hours a week in a pub, and your mum considered it an achievement that you were making enough to pay rent, subsist on ramen, and not have to move home.
But maybe you didn't catch the whopper of a piece in The Sun last week, profiling a California couple that practices Breatharianism—an extremely fringe philosophy based on a handful of yogic tenets that its adherents claim allows them to subsist on prana, or cosmic life force, which they absorb through air and sunlight.
More often, though, it added to my stress, as I read post after post instructing me that if I really wanted the best for my child, the absolute least I could do was to subsist on a diet of nothing but baked chicken and sweet potatoes while using a breast pump every two hours.
This analysis found more than 720 of these emails touched on race or immigration, and that these messages included links to white nationalist articles; the promotion of a white supremacist book that casts immigrants of color as savages who subsist on feces; and praise for President Calvin Coolidge's nativist, hardline immigration policies in the 1920s.
The US government, for instance, threw in another $2.2 billion on top of the Gateses' $123 billion: The formation of the Global Fund to Fight AIDS, Tuberculosis, and Malaria is a similar story: the Gateses played a convening and angel-funding role in putting together an organization that would eventually subsist on funding from governments.
AT&T is trying to differentiate itself from a crowded field of internet TV options that already includes Sony's PlayStation Vue and Dish Network's Sling TV. The company is also trying to convince cable subscribers or those who subsist solely on Netflix that it makes sense to subscribe to a skinny bundle for $35 or more a month.
As Vox's Nicole Narea has explained, the first batch of Miller emails the Southern Poverty Law Center analyzed revealed messages that included links to white nationalist articles; that promoted a white supremacist book that casts immigrants of color as savages who subsist on feces; and that praised President Calvin Coolidge's nativist, hardline immigration policies in the 1920s.
Impossible choices -- The ultimate issue in this excruciating dilemma is the choice is between many people dying and many more people not just disrupting their daily lives, but potentially losing their ability to subsist on a scale far beyond what Congress, which is talking about sending people hundreds of dollars or even a little more, can realistically fix.
In Denmark, an ornithologist named Anders Tottrup was the one who came up with the idea of turning cars into insect trackers for the windshield-effect study after he noticed that rollers, little owls, Eurasian hobbies and bee-eaters — all birds that subsist on large insects such as beetles and dragonflies — had abruptly disappeared from the landscape.
For example, a recent Australian study, funded by the Australian National Health and Medical Research Council and the Sir Edward Dunlop Medical Research Foundation, randomly assigned 25 obese people to subsist on just 450 to 800 calories a day for 12 weeks, or to cut a more modest 400 to 500 calories a day from their diets over 36 weeks.
In the lecture "The Art Language," presented to the Philosophy Study Circle at Visva-Bharati University in 1987 (and published in 2007), he said: In a theoretical sense, a sensitive artist can subsist and function all by himself in his private world, even if he is surrounded by apathetic and insensitive people, if he does not rue his isolation and lack of appreciation and reward.
This occurred to me while I was rereading Gibbon's Decline and Fall, as one does, and in particular its depictions of the early days of the Christian faith: But whatever difference of opinion might subsist between the Orthodox [church], the Ebionites, and the Gnostics, concerning the divinity or the obligation of the Mosaic law, they were all equally animated by the same exclusive zeal; and by the same abhorrence for idolatry ..,.
You whined and whined as a kid to have Maggi in your school lunchbox; the older you loaded up giant batches of it with cheese for the perfect stoner snack; you could subsist for days on a diet of chai and Maggi, cooked on the hot plate, as a broke student, and that lone shack by the side of the road when you got lost hiking had to have Maggi.
In the U.S., McDonald's website states plainly that it does not offer veggie burgers:  Vegetarian diners in the U.K. have to subsist mostly on breakfast items to get by: In Singapore, prior to the new veggie burger's release, the restaurant's website suggested that vegetarians eat french fries and hashbrowns, or ask for a custom order on a burger without the patty — the main component of the burger: But while it's meatless, it isn't vegan.
What meal prepping all boils down to is making sure you have a lunch to take to work all week long so you don't subsist on coffee and water and that limp granola bar you found in the bottom of your desk drawer until you finally cave and order takeout at 3 PM. This is both for your health—not in a *healthy* way, but in a, like, your body needs calories before mid-afternoon way—and for your budget.

No results under this filter, show 271 sentences.

Copyright © 2024 RandomSentenceGen.com All rights reserved.