We found 22 examples of how to use peer in an English sentence.
Sentences 1 to 22 of 22.
# | Sentence | |
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1. | He was created a peer. | |
2. | The king created him a peer. | |
3. | Don't give in to peer pressure. | |
4. | Peer helpers made the teacher's job a lot easier, but established a cruel hierarchy among the students. | |
5. | This article is not peer-reviewed. | |
6. | Every scientific article needs to pass peer review before it is published in a scientific journal. | |
7. | Tom experienced strong peer pressure to dabble in drugs when he was a teenager. | |
8. | Oh, you have evidence disproving evolution? Gather your data, have it peer-reviewed, and receive your Nobel prize. | |
9. | In a popular sci-fi show, the alien Minbari have three peer castes. | |
10. | Sami faced peer pressure at school. | |
11. | I can't peer into the future. | |
12. | Tom's paper was published in a peer-reviewed journal. | |
13. | Uprose the image of my father dear, / as there I see the monarch, bathed in blood, / like him in prowess and in age his peer. / Uprose Creusa, desolate and drear, / Iulus' peril, and a plundered home. | |
14. | Sami was trying to peer through the bushes. | |
15. | Sami hated peer pressure. | |
16. | Esther is the best Hebrew speaker in her peer group. | |
17. | Esther is the best Yiddish speaker in her peer group. | |
18. | Esther is the shyest person in her peer group. | |
19. | Tom is at an age where he is more likely to succumb to peer pressure. | |
20. | Hubble has yielded to date 1.4 million observations and provided data that astronomers around the world have used to write more than 17,000 peer-reviewed scientific publications. | |
21. | Entitled "Predicting the Impacts of Mining Deep Sea Polymetallic Nodules in the Pacific Ocean," the 52-page report represents a scientific consensus based on 250 peer-reviewed articles. | |
22. | In the cities nothing is more surprising to a foreigner than to go from the dust and turmoil of a busy street directly into a rustic yard and the felicity of quiet country life. On one of the busy streets of Tokio I had often passed a low shop, the barred front of which was never opened to traffic, nor was there ever any one present with whom to deal. I used often to peer between the bars; and from the form of the wooden boxes on the step-like shelves within, I knew that the occupant was a dealer in old pottery. |