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43 Sentences With "tidiest"

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

It feels like the tidiest fraternity house I've ever seen.
The premise of "American Vandal" is one of television's tidiest.
It's the tidiest summation in three acts you could ask for.
As you can see in the picture, I'm not the tidiest person.
Even the tidiest homes have that one monstrous mess of papers that everyone tries to ignore.
The home-appliances department, which is on the bottom floor, is the tidiest part of the store.
"Given a larger social map to explore, we pick the tidiest corner we can find," Harford writes.
Brexit, even in its tidiest form, could create paralysis at the Channel Tunnel crossing between France and Britain.
A paper organizer Even the tidiest homes have that one monstrous mess of papers that everyone tries to ignore.
Even when the place is at its tidiest, there is a good deal of flattening your body against walls to let family members pass.
"Junk," Ayad Akhtar's eagerly anticipated drama of dirty dealings on Wall Street in the 1980s, is, for better or worse, the tidiest show on Broadway.
Voters wary of Mr. Sanders are probably right that supporting Mr. Biden is the tidiest way to keep the democratic socialist from the top of the ticket.
The ceremony opened with sincere words from host Kelly Clarkson, who, despite her insistence that she wasn't the right person for the job, pulled off one of the tidiest hosting jobs this year.
They look alike, they share an affection for milk and sardines ("ewwww"); they stretch early in the morning and nap in the afternoon; they're afraid of heights and aren't exactly the tidiest members of the house.
Birdhill was named the "Tidiest Village" in the Tidy Towns Awards in 2006, 2007, 2008, 2016 and again in 2017. In 2017, the village also took the overall award and was named Ireland's "Tidiest Town".
The Rotary Club of Toowoomba was established in 1930. Toowoomba was named as Australia's Tidiest Town in 2008.
In 2011, it was named Ireland's tidiest town and the cleanest town in the country by Irish Business Against Litter.
Aughrim has won the Irish Tidy Towns Award for the tidiest village in County Wicklow from 1996–2007 and won the Irish Tidy Towns Competition in 2007.
Horsham was then named Australia's Tidiest Town in 2001 and was also named Victoria's tidiest town in 2015. The Black Saturday bushfires of 2009 affected Horsham, with area burnt around the city's fringe including the golf club and eight homes destroyed in the Haven area. Horsham experienced significant flooding in successive years in 2010 and 2011 Victorian floods. During these events, the Wimmera reached 3.32 m and 4.71 m respectively.
She was the club's most economic fast bowler and third tidiest overall. Kearney took eight wickets in fourteen matches in 2016/17 and at a club's best economy of 5.27 runs per over.
Castletown is known as "The Tidiest Village in Laois". Chairman of the Tidy Towns committee is Seán Fleming, TD. In 1998, Castletown were just four points behind the national winner. The village won the overall Irish Tidy Towns Competition in 2002.
The town was originally known as Oyster Bay, although it was officially proclaimed Stansbury in 1873 by Governor Anthony Musgrave, in honour of a friend. In 2009, Stansbury was voted as South Australia's tidiest town.AUSTRALIAN TIDY TOWNS HONOUR ROLL. Keep Australia Beautiful.
Other than that, there's an overall winner which is named as "Ireland's Tidiest Town" which is announced at the end of competition every September. The 2020 competition was cancelled by Minister Michael Ring due to the COVID-19 pandemic in the Republic of Ireland for the first time in its history.
Road signs in Clonbulloge, looking north along the R401 towards the Bog of Allen Clonbollogue or Clonbulloge () is a village in County Offaly, Ireland The common pronunciation of the village up to recent times was 'Clon Bolg'. The village has been voted one of the tidiest town in County Offaly every year since 1978.
The town in conjunction with neighbouring township Hawkesdale has an Australian Rules football team competing in the Mininera & District Football League. Golfers play at the course of the Macarthur Golf Club on Hamilton Road. Macarthur is also the site of the large Macarthur Wind Farm, completed in 2013. Macarthur was Victoria’s Tidiest Town in 1988.
Lucindale is home to a health centre, licensed post office and newsagent and a service station. Education from reception to Year 12 is provided by the Lucindale Area School. The town was named Australia's tidiest town in 1994 and was a finalist in 2006. The town hosted the triple j One Night Stand on 14 September 2019.
A seaside holiday destination for many years, recently it has been the site of a marina development. Port Vincent was named Australia's Tidiest Town in 2004, having won the South Australian award in 2000 and 2003. It has active volunteer organisations including the CFS, Coast Guard, Tidy Towns etc. In 2003/04 a large marina was constructed in Port Vincent.
An early settler James Monckton Darlot named the settlement after the town of Horsham in his native England. It grew throughout the latter 19th and early 20th centuries as a centre of Western Victoria's wheat and wool industry, becoming the largest city in the Wimmera and Western Victoria by the early 1910s. Horsham was declared a city in 1949 and was named Australia's Tidiest Town in 2001.
Almost ten years later, in 1962, the first high school opened in the town. In May 1972, the first connections to town sewerage were made, totaling 1,000 by 1976. Through the 1980s and 1990s, Cobram was awarded many town awards, including Tidiest Town in Victoria in 1991 and 1993. In 1993, Cobram Shire was amalgamated with Yarrawonga, Numurkah, Nathalia and Tungamah Shires to form the Moira Shire.
Skerries has received several awards for its scenery, culture, and community activities. For example, Skerries came second in the 2014 Best Place to Live in Ireland awards. The town is also the only place to have won an award as an entire community at RTÉ & Rehab's People of the Year Awards in 2011. In 2016, Skerries was named Ireland's Tidiest Town by the Supervalu National Tidy Towns competition.
Footbridge over the Afon Roe Rowen is a village on the western slopes of the Conwy valley in the parish of Caerhun and the former County of Caernarvonshire in Wales. It lies off the B5106 road, between Tal y Bont and The Groes Inn. Buildings of Gwynedd 2009 refers to the River Roe probably following the Roman route from Caerhun to Abergwyngregyn. Rowen has won tidiest village awards several times.
Rathbarry village has won several awards, including "Ireland's tidiest village" in the 1999 national Tidy Towns Competition and the overall "Ireland's best kept town" award in a 2017 all- island competition. To the south and west of Rathbarry village are a beach, Long Strand, and a Coillte managed woodland, Castlefreke Woods. Behind Long Strand beach is a natural sedimentary lagoon, Kilkeran Lake, and a dunes system, Castlefreke Dunes. The lake and dunes form a protected Special Area of Conservation.
The community centre plays host to several clubs including a Foroige Club (organised for the young people of the village) and evening classes. The small village received its first county award for the tidiest village in Mayo in 1977, going on to win the county Tidy Towns Award on fourteen occasions in total. A new sports hall, built beside the community centre, was officially opened in April 2013. Belcarra was twinned with Belcarra, British Columbia, Canada in 2007.
The Rural City is governed and administered by the Horsham Rural City Council; its seat of local government and administrative centre is located at the council headquarters in Horsham. The Rural City is named after the main urban settlement located in the north-east of the LGA, that is Horsham, which is also the LGA's most populous urban centre with a population of 16,514. Estimated resident population, 30 June 2018. The city was winner of Australia's tidiest town in 2001.
The Wombles were a British novelty pop group, featuring musicians dressed as the characters from children's TV show The Wombles, which in turn was based on the children's book series by Elisabeth Beresford. Songwriter and record producer Mike Batt wrote and performed many successful albums and singles as 'The Wombles' with other collaborators, including the series' theme tune. British Hit Singles & Albums jokingly referred to them as the "furriest (and possibly the tidiest) act... are natives of Wimbledon Common, London". In 2011, the band played at The Glastonbury Festival.
The town is home to the Western Australian College of Agriculture – Denmark, a working farm and educational facility for Year 10, 11 and 12 students providing specialist education in farming and farm-related studies. It is also home to Denmark Senior High School. Denmark was awarded the title of Australia's Tidiest Town in 1998. On the Denmark River near Wilson Inlet there is a wooden Heritage Railway bridge where several walking trails come together including the Bibbulmun Track, which runs from the Perth region to Albany, and the "Denmark–Nornalup Heritage Trail".
His contribution to the town—recognised "as a model town and one of the neatest and tidiest in the country"(1998, p. 183)—led to Pope Pius XI granting him the title of Domestic Prelate in 1928. Joyce was involved in several other local projects, such as the establishment of the town's Vocational School in 1934, the establishment of the fire service, and the very successful Portumna Agricultural and Home Industries Show in the 1930s and 1940s. Due to emigration, the Portumna Brass and Reed Band (established 1907) had declined, until Monsignor Joyce reorganised it and appointed a new bandmaster.
Eventually, the loop is picked up (and stitch marker removed) and worked together with the stitch on the other side of the gap. This is just another way of doing Wrap and Turn as the loop is stored on a stitch marker rather than stored around another stitch. Because the formed loop is usually smaller around a stitch marker than around a stitch, Japanese short rows are usually slightly more tight than Wrap and Turn. Of the three methods listed here, Japanese short rows usually results in the tidiest turning point with the least extraneous yarn bulk.
This is often the tidiest way of making a planned well kill. It involves pumping kill fluid down the 'A' annulus of the well, through a point of communication between it and the production tubing just above the production packer and up the tubing, displacing the lighter well bore fluids, which are allowed to flow to production. The point of communication was traditionally a device called a sliding sleeve, or sliding side door, which is a hydraulically operated device, built into the production tubing. During normal operation, it would remain closed sealing off the tubing and the annulus, but for events such as this, it would be opened to allow the free flow of fluids between the two regions.
In "The Bruce-Partington Plans", Mycroft goes to Baker Street to speak with his brother about recovering missing submarine plans for the government. Sherlock Holmes says in this story that Mycroft only visited 221B Baker Street once before. Though Sherlock initially told Watson in "The Greek Interpreter" that Mycroft audits books for the British government, he reveals to Watson in "The Bruce- Partington Plans" that Mycroft's true role is more substantial: Mycroft has a unique position in the government, which is not named in the stories. Sherlock comments regarding Mycroft's role that there "has never been anything like it before, nor will be again" and that Mycroft "has the tidiest and most orderly brain, with the greatest capacity for storing facts, of any man living".
The village takes its name from the Irish language word for a river or stream (sruth) and from the early medieval Cistercian abbey, the ruins of which still survive on the banks of the Inny. While the original medieval settlement built up around this religious site and the nearby fording point on the river, a number of archaeological finds (including of the Clonbrin Shield in 1906) indicate activity in the area from at least the Bronze Age. The building of the Royal Canal in the early nineteenth century, which required the construction of the Whitworth aqueduct across the Inny, brought increasing trade to the village until the mid twentieth century. Abbeyshrule won the 2012 National Tidy Towns Award with a total of 312 marks. The village also claimed the award for Ireland’s Tidiest Village 2012.
Tidy Towns logo Tidy Towns (Irish: Bailte Slachtmhara) is an annual competition, first held in 1958, organised by the Department of Rural and Community Development in order to honour the tidiest and most attractive cities, towns and villages in Ireland. The competition is organised on a national basis, and entrants must complete modules including Overall Developmental Approach (5 Year Plan), The Built Environment, Landscaping, Wildlife & Natural Amenities, Litter Control, Tidiness, Waste Minimisation, Residential Areas, Roads and Streets & Back Areas. The Competition is judged during the summer months (May to August) by an independent adjudicator, who issues each town with a written report complimenting positive development and actions and providing positive suggestions on how the community can improve their general surroundings. This competition covers many aspects of environment and prizes are awarded to winners of all areas.
Youghal from the air Youghal was formerly a strong manufacturing town, but Ireland's economic success since the mid-1990s to a large extent bypassed the town, and the infrastructural deficit is a major constraint to its growth. In April 2011 it was reported that all the town's large factories had closed over the past decade, leaving at least 2,000 people jobless, and with unemployment approaching 20%, young people were leaving in search of work and workers commuting from Youghal to Cork and Waterford. The focus of the voluntary, business and statutory bodies in the town has switched to promoting Youghal as a tourist destination, with emphasis on its three sandy Blue Flag beaches, its history and its natural amenities. Youghal was declared one the tidiest towns in Cork (and nationally) in the 2012 IBAL anti- litter league (run in conjunction with the Department of the Environment).

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