vice - use in sentences

Adjective modifier

  • executive: Mooney executive vise she put up to consider the.
  • senior: Hour day a hotz senior vise they're part of several different angles.
  • secret: Inventing history was a little game, a ' secret vise ' ; Middle-earth grew out of the game.
  • bad: There's worse vices than optimism, I suppose.
  • only: His only vices are coffee, movies with subtitles and really loud music.
  • other: In Paris, James II was too preoccupied with his mistresses and other vices.

Converse of object

  • have: For too long the farming lobby has had a vise like grip on policy, its time we ended their dependency culture.

Preposition: like

  • grip: For too long the farming lobby has had a vise like grip on policy, its time we ended their dependency culture.

Modifies a noun

  • president: A vise president will be named at a later date.
  • chancellor: Exeter University vise chancellor has denied the accusation made by Professor Roger Burt.
  • chairman: Made ' vise chairman ' of the Conservative party in June last year.
  • chair: The Assembly shall be chaired by the Chair or Vise Chair of the Board of Trustees.
  • admiral: Again exonerated by his superiors in England, he was made a rear-admiral in 1811 and a vise admiral in 1814.
  • captain: Bridget, who has been in SINI for the past 3 years, is vise captain of the Irish team.

Noun used with modifier

  • kling: Go to the set season iii placed on a. Scott kling vise scott who went the wildcats were sheets of thick.
  • ser-: In this case, the ser- vise is the name of the file in the /etc/pam.d / directory.
  • schmitt: Require a radical schmitt executive vise he says is.
  • ser: In current web ser vices standards, the notion of sequencing is handled by the workflow definitions provided by proposals such as BPEL4WS.
  • bench: We have all seen a movements case lug held in a bench vise.
  • executive: Schmitt executive vise smart business people quot we're a accessories in your.

The word usage examples above have been gathered from various sources to reflect current and historical usage. They do not represent the opinions of YourDictionary.com.