We found 21 examples of how to use categories in an English sentence.
Sentences 1 to 21 of 21.
# | Sentence | |
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1. | The New York City DCA analyzed almost 800 items in 35 product categories and found that items for female consumers cost more than products for men across 30 of those categories. | |
2. | Why people fall into these categories, however, is a mystery. | |
3. | These specimens are divided into several categories. | |
4. | As a writer, she does not fit into any of the traditional categories. | |
5. | He grouped his books into five categories. | |
6. | There are two categories of verbs in the Uyghur language - primary and auxiliary. | |
7. | BMI categories (underweight, overweight or obese) from general reading table are inappropriate for athletes, children, the elderly, and the infirm. | |
8. | Data compression algorithms can be classified in two categories: those with data loss and those without data loss. | |
9. | How many categories are there? | |
10. | The representatives of the elite continue to think according to the categories of the past. | |
11. | All books can be divided into two categories. | |
12. | He is a nominee in four award categories. | |
13. | There are two main categories of rocket engines; liquid rockets and solid rockets. | |
14. | I divide all literary works into two categories: those I like and those I don't like. No other criterion exists for me. | |
15. | The site is international and primarily focuses on radical politics, with categories ranging from Ableism to War and Imperialism. | |
16. | He divided his books into five categories. | |
17. | He divided his book into five categories. | |
18. | People can essentially be divided into two categories when it comes to making choices. | |
19. | The words in our dictionary are split into four categories: those which we understand and we use, those which we understand but don't use, those which we don't understand and don't use and finally those which we don't understand and still use. | |
20. | I like to separate all irregular preterite Spanish conjugations into three categories: the "Third-Person" preterite change, which only affects the third person conjugations and maybe a few other spelling changes, the "All-Person" preterite change, which affects all forms AND removes the accent on the 'yo' and 'él/ella/ud.' forms, and the "Plain Irregular" preterite change, which only consists of 'ser,' 'ir,' and 'dar.' | |
21. | Algeria shouldn't penalize its poorest categories. |