Navigating can be categorized as a verb.
Verb |
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navigate - act as the navigator in a car, plane, or vessel and plan, direct, plot the path and position of the conveyance; "Is anyone volunteering to navigate during the trip?"; "Who was navigating the ship during the accident?" | ||
navigate - direct carefully and safely; "He navigated his way to the altar" | ||
navigate - travel on water propelled by wind or by other means; "The QE2 will sail to Southampton tomorrow" |
# | Sentence | ||
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1. | verb | A clove cigarette miasma made navigating the pub like swimming underwater. | |
2. | verb | After braving perilous seas and navigating through what are now known as the Straits of Magellan, Magellan's small fleet entered an unfamiliar ocean in Nov. 1520. He called this body of water pacific, due to the calmness of the water at the time ('pacific' means peaceful). | |
3. | verb | Turpin has been navigating lava tour boats for many years and has lived on the Big Island since 1983. | |
4. | verb | Sami was navigating the attic in the dark. | |
5. | verb | The lack of meaningful connection with students from the host culture is associated with many well-documented costs, including poorer sociocultural adaptation, greater difficulty navigating the trials of higher education, and less satisfaction with the sojourn experience. | |
6. | verb | The ship is navigating towards the harbor. | |
7. | verb | Is anyone volunteering to navigate during the trip? | |
8. | verb | Nowadays, we can navigate with just a smart phone. | |
9. | verb | When you live on cash, you understand the limits of the world around which you navigate each day. Credit leads into a desert with invisible boundaries. | |
10. | verb | Cetaceans are thought to use Earth's magnetic field to navigate. | |
11. | verb | Can you navigate? | |
12. | verb | Can you navigate by starlight? | |
13. | verb | Do you know how to navigate with a compass and map? | |
14. | verb | The inhabitants use wooden pirogues with outboard motors to navigate waterways that stretch from horizon to horizon. | |
15. | verb | Sami used a flashlight to navigate in the attic. |
Sentence | |
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verb | |
A clove cigarette miasma made navigating the pub like swimming underwater. | |
After braving perilous seas and navigating through what are now known as the Straits of Magellan, Magellan's small fleet entered an unfamiliar ocean in Nov. 1520. He called this body of water pacific, due to the calmness of the water at the time ('pacific' means peaceful). | |
Turpin has been navigating lava tour boats for many years and has lived on the Big Island since 1983. | |
Sami was navigating the attic in the dark. | |
The lack of meaningful connection with students from the host culture is associated with many well-documented costs, including poorer sociocultural adaptation, greater difficulty navigating the trials of higher education, and less satisfaction with the sojourn experience. | |
The ship is navigating towards the harbor. | |
Is anyone volunteering to navigate during the trip? |
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Nowadays, we can navigate with just a smart phone. | |
When you live on cash, you understand the limits of the world around which you navigate each day. Credit leads into a desert with invisible boundaries. | |
Cetaceans are thought to use Earth's magnetic field to navigate. | |
Can you navigate? | |
Can you navigate by starlight? | |
Do you know how to navigate with a compass and map? | |
The inhabitants use wooden pirogues with outboard motors to navigate waterways that stretch from horizon to horizon. | |
Sami used a flashlight to navigate in the attic. |