Sentences with Species, Species in a Sentence in English, Sentences For Species
1. You’re an interesting species.
2. Here is the endangered species list.
3. It may be Nature’s provision for maintaining the balance of the species, sir.
4. An unjust law is itself a species of violence. Arrest for its breach is more so.
5. Nature is indifferent to the survival of the human species, including Americans.
6. We are not an endangered species ourselves yet, but this is not for lack of trying.
7. They say nothing lasts forever and I’m writing you in the voice of an endangered species.
8. Life is a ?ght, but not everyone’s a ?ghter. Otherwise, bullies would be an endangered species.
9. Men and women belong to different species and communications between them is still in its infancy.
10. Kittering looked up from the display. ‘I am mistaken as a spokesman for an entire species. Very non-cosmopolitan.
11. Rice is the seed of the grass species Oryza sativa (Asian rice) or less commonly Oryza glaberrima (African rice).
12. It is not the strongest of the species that survives, nor the most intelligent, but the one most responsive to change.
13. Our wretched species is so made that those who walk on the well-trodden path always throw stones at those who are showing a new road.
14. If it’s true that our species is alone in the universe, then I’d have to say the universe aimed rather low and settled for very little.
15. For a moment, I pretended. Not that we weren’t two different species, because I didn’t see him that way, but that we actually liked each other.
16. Atomic carbon is a very short-lived species and, therefore, carbon is stabilized in various multi-atomic structures with diverse molecular configurations called allotropes.
17. I cannot understand anti-abortion arguments that centre on the sanctity of life. As a species we’ve fairly comprehensively demonstrated that we don’t believe in the sanctity of life.
18. There will come a time when all of us are dead. All of us. There will come a time when there are no human beings remaining to remember that anyone ever existed or that our species ever did anything…
19. A man, to be greatly good, must imagine intensely and comprehensively; he must put himself in the place of another and many others; the pains and pleasures of his species must become his own. The great instrument of moral good is the imagination.