create

create
01. His quitting has [created] a lot of problems for us.
02. The fashion world awaits her newest [creations] with a great deal of excitement.
03. Ian Fleming, the [creator] of James Bond, wrote many popular spy novels.
04. Jane paints fruit baskets as a [creative] outlet for her stressful life.
05. A department store spokesman says that their new outlet will [create] more than 75 permanent jobs in the city.
06. In the past 5 years, this government has [created] 15 new major parks in the state.
07. The native people of our province have many wonderful legends regarding the [creation] of our world.
08. Charles Schultz, [creator] of the popular newspaper comic strip Peanuts, has died.
09. President Franklin Roosevelt once remarked that happiness lies in the joy of achievement and the thrill of [creative] effort.
10. Artist Marc Chagall once observed, "If I [create] from the heart, nearly everything works, if from the head, almost nothing."
11. Joseph Chilton Pearce once said that to live a [creative] life we must lose our fear of being wrong.
12. There is a Hebrew proverb which says that time heals old pain, while it [creates] new ones.
13. In the Netherlands, there is a saying that the Lord [created] the land, except for Holland, which was [created] by the Dutch.
14. Manufacturing industries [create] a lot of wealth, but they are employing fewer and fewer people as jobs become automated.
15. Adaptations to the particular environments in which they live are shown by all living [creatures].
16. Belief in a [creator] God is not a part of the Buddhist religion.
17. Some psychologists suggest that [creative] individuals are more likely to suffer from mood disorders.
18. It cost millions of dollars to [recreate] the city of Troy for the film of that name.
19. The city is planning to [recreate] a town center of the 1700s on the first floor of the museum.
20. One of the two men who were the [creators] of the comic book hero Superman came from Toronto.
21. By refusing to talk to your wife about your drinking problem, you are only [creating] a bigger problem.
22. Walt Disney's imagination and [creativity] resulted in the production of some wonderful animated films.
23. Director Peter Jackson [recreated] Middle Earth for his film version of Tolkien's "The Lord of the Rings."
24. James works at a zoo, where he [recreates] natural-looking habitats for the animals to live in.
25. The museum staff has been working [recreating] museum exhibits from bits and pieces found at historical sites.
26. Hector was really [creatively] inspired after visiting the Museum of Modern Art.
27. In all natural processes, energy is never [created] or destroyed, but is merely transformed from one form into another.
28. Much evidence exists suggesting that the seafloors are constantly moving and continually being [created] and destroyed.

Grammatical examples in English. 2013.

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  • Create (!) — Origin Long Beach, California, U.S. Genres free jazz experimental traditional music no wave Years active 1999–present …   Wikipedia

  • create — cre‧ate [kriˈeɪt] verb [transitive] 1. to make something exist that did not exist before: • The building boom has created 50,000 construction jobs in the state. • The two organizations will create a company to sell life insurance in Spain, with… …   Financial and business terms

  • Create — Cre*ate , v. t. [imp. & p. p. {Created}; p. pr. & vb. n. {Creating}.] 1. To bring into being; to form out of nothing; to cause to exist. [1913 Webster] In the beginning, God created the heaven and the earth. Gen. i. 1. [1913 Webster] 2. To effect …   The Collaborative International Dictionary of English

  • create — I verb be responsible, be the agent, be the author, be the cause of, be the reason, beget, bring about, bring into being, bring on, bring out, bring to effect, bring to pass, build, carve, cause, cause to exist, chisel, compose, conceive, concoct …   Law dictionary

  • Create — Cre*ate (kr[ e]*[=a]t ), a. [L. creatus, p. p. of creare to create; akin to Gr. krai nein to accomplish, Skr. k[.r] to make, and to E. ending cracy in aristocracy, also to crescent, cereal.] Created; composed; begotten. [Obs.] [1913 Webster]… …   The Collaborative International Dictionary of English

  • create — [krē āt′; ] often [ krē′āt΄] vt. created, creating [ME createn < L creatus, pp. of creare, to create < IE * k̑rē , var. of base * ker , to grow, cause to grow > CEREAL] 1. to cause to come into existence; bring into being; make;… …   English World dictionary

  • create — late 14c., from L. creatus, pp. of creare to make, bring forth, produce, beget, related to crescere arise, grow (see CRESCENT (Cf. crescent)). Related: Created; creating …   Etymology dictionary

  • create — *invent, discover Analogous words: *make, form, fashion, shape, forge: design, plan, scheme (see under PLAN n) …   New Dictionary of Synonyms

  • create — [v] develop in mind or physically actualize, author, beget, bring into being, bring into existence, bring to pass, build, cause to be, coin, compose, conceive, concoct, constitute, construct, contrive, design, devise, discover, dream up, effect,… …   New thesaurus

  • create — ► VERB 1) bring into existence. 2) make (someone) a member of the nobility. 3) Brit. informal make a fuss; complain. ORIGIN Latin creare produce …   English terms dictionary

  • create — verb 1. make or cause to be or to become (Freq. 94) make a mess in one s office create a furor • Syn: ↑make • See Also: ↑make over (for: ↑mak …   Useful english dictionary

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