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12 Sentences With "supernatural occurrence"

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

As the titular teenage sleuth, "It" veteran Sophia Lillis investigates another supernatural occurrence — in this case, a haunted house.
Small Maine town; culturally diverse collection of residents thrown into turmoil by a supernatural occurrence — sure, we're familiar with this story, because we've seen adaptations of Stephen King's works before.
This seemingly supernatural occurrence helped perpetuate the cult around her and inspire the building of her temple, which has become a pilgrimage site that receives more than 20 million annual visitors, according to Mexico City's tourism board.
Many different forms of magic are used within the series, and are not always referred to as such. However, the supernatural occurrence can be roughly divided into three parts: Songs, Half Creatures, and Stones of Power.
This in-progress project (which began in 2102) is called "The Teratology Lullabies."Jill Tracy Interview Chain D.L.K., April 20, 2012. Retrieved May 8, 2013. She was invited by San Francisco's historical Presidio Trust to research its archives and tour abandoned military buildings (dating back to 1776) with old records of supernatural occurrence.
Verne Gay of Newsday praised the cast, and noted that "Manifest wants to be This Is Us with a taste of Lost." Lorraine Ali of the Los Angeles Times wrote that the pilot "initially captivates with Lost-like puzzles ... But once on the ground, rote themes of redemption and faith dilute an otherwise intriguing supernatural occurrence". Matthew Gilbert of The Boston Globe called the episode "soapy", but praised the setup of the primary mystery.
The noble author began a tale, a fragment > of which he printed at the end of his poem of Mazeppa. In the 1818 preface to Frankenstein, Percy Bysshe Shelley described the contest with Lord Byron and John Polidori: > Two other friends (a tale from the pen of one of whom would be far more > acceptable to the public than anything I can ever hope to produce) and > myself agreed to write each a story, founded on some supernatural > occurrence.
An other worldly wail that lasted nearly 30 seconds. Stunned and terrified, the majority of the crowd hastily dispersed and the concert came to a screeching halt. To this date it is still a matter of speculation as to whether this was an actual supernatural occurrence, or was staged by the band in an attempt to add to their mystique and legend. What is known is that Jay Planty, Ted Preiss, and Jason Cobb left the band after the event.
Sussman, "Stories for The Keepsake" (CC), 163–65. Many of Shelley's stories are set in places or times far removed from early 19th-century Britain, such as Greece and the reign of Henry IV of France. Shelley was particularly interested in "the fragility of individual identity" and often depicted "the way a person's role in the world can be cataclysmically altered either by an internal emotional upheaval, or by some supernatural occurrence that mirrors an internal schism".Sussman, "Stories for The Keepsake" (CC), 167.
Christian deists believe that it is never God's will for anyone to be sick or injured. In that bad things occur as a result of prior interactions that resulted in a specified outcome. These bad things may be caused by interfering with naturalistic processes that result in negative consequences to carbon-based life, or by human interaction on the surface of the Earth that leads to degrees of inhospitable conditions for others. Christians deists believe God gifted the human intellect to heal many illnesses, but God does not directly intervene to heal people on demand by some supernatural occurrence.
To this date it is still a matter of speculation as to whether this was an actual supernatural occurrence or was staged by the band in an attempt to add to their mystic and legend. What is known is that Jay Planty, Ted Preiss, and Jason Cobb left the band after the event. Planty and Preiss would return several years later, but this was the last time the band recorded at any alleged haunted sites or cemeteries. Three of the Songs from the session were chosen to be released as the band's first 7-inch ep, In the Attic.
The story traces the history of the titular street in a New England city, presumably Boston, from its first beginnings as "but a path" in colonial times to a quasi-supernatural occurrence in the years immediately following World War I. As the city grows up around the street, it is planted with many trees and built along with "simple, beautiful houses of brick and wood", each with a rose garden. As the Industrial Revolution runs its course, the area degenerates into a run-down and polluted slum, with all of the street's old houses falling into disrepair. After World War I and the October Revolution, the area becomes home to a community of Russian immigrants. Among the new residents is the leadership of a "vast band of terrorists," who are plotting the destruction of the United States on Independence Day.

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