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The site shows example sentences for English words. How the word or phrase could be used in a sentence?
" ... "Once could hardly picture the jungle and swampy woods that a good portion of the city is built upon. These swampy grounds had to be cleared and drained. The writer himself quite clearly remembers that the southwestern portion of the city was a green scum lake, studded with giant sweet gum trees, and water from one to two and a half feet deep... The labor of clearing the great space was done by negro slaves and Mexicans, as no white man could have worked and endured the insect bites and malaria, snake bites, impure water, and other hardships. Many of the blacks died before their work was done." ... "
" ... 4/27/1961-Farmville, VA-ORIGINAL CAPTION READS: The Federal Government, in an unprecedented move, ... [+] asked the courts yesterday to force Prince Edward County, Va., to reopen its public schools on a racially-integrated basis. Since 6/1959, there have been no public school facilities for the estimated 1,700 negro children there. The 1,400 white children attend private schools financed by state, county, and private contributions made in lieu of tax payments. This photo, made yesterday, shows negro students attending school in a one-room shack. The teacher is Mrs. Althea Jones. ... "
" ... As a result, faculty and students alike have good reason to ask whether they can, for example, use words such as “negro” even in appropriate circumstances. Can a professor even assign a reading that includes the N-word? Or assign a reading written by someone who has used the word in other works? What about gender-based epithets that appear in documents or videos that are relevant to the class material? When the rules are unstated, change rapidly, and seem to be based on the level of outrage expressed rather than a steady process for evaluating whether someone should be disciplined, professors and students will naturally stay very far from anything that might conceivably cross someone’s line. ... "
" ... Dozie Mbonu=DM: I’m Dozie Mbonu. I was born and raised in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. I come from a family lineage of ministers, principals, professors and teachers. My mother, Dr. Faith Janerette Mbonu was a home economics teacher, opera and negro spiritual singer. My father, Prof. Jonathan Mbonu came to the USA by way of missionaries and became a college professor of political science at a historically black college that became a university. My brother, Chimdi Mbonu and uncle, Charles Janerette (who also played in the NFL and the CFL and is enshrined at Penn State University) taught me how to play basketball after I witnessed my hometown Philadelphia 76ers win the 1982-83 NBA Championship and declared that I was going to be a professional basketball player. During my senior year of high school at the Church Farm School (CFS) [named “The Most Beautiful Private High School in Pennsylvania” by Architectural Digest in 2018] I was named first team all-conference in soccer, basketball and track & field. My passion was and still is to this day, Basketball! At the conclusion of my senior basketball season, I was named the Chester County Player of the Year and All-State Honorable mention after becoming CFCs all-time leading scorer, and the leading scorer and rebounder in Southeastern Pennsylvania (which includes my hometown city of Philadelphia). ... "
" ... Of the 2.9 trillion pesos budgeted for 2018, 1.4 trillion pesos was destined for social expenditure, compared with 143 billion pesos in government expenditures and 406 billion pesos to service public debt. The crux, of course, is how to lower social security without deeply affecting consumption. Through the provisional reform, Macri sought to rationalize the pension system and make it more sustainable. Then, unable to utilize his political capital, he fell short of labor reform, one of the most important—and much needed—responses to the actual conundrum. More than 99% of businesses in Argentina are considered small- or medium-size, accounting for two-thirds of employment, yet 34.2% of workers are part of the informal economy (en negro), which incentivizes the government to impose one of the world’s heaviest tax burdens. Rigid labor laws and extremely high taxes make Argentina one of the world’s most unproductive places. No wonder imports have jumped to 29.3% of GDP, beating exports by ten percentage points and causing a dangerous lack of dollars. ... "