16 example sentences using belongings.
Belongings used in a sentence
Belongings in a sentence as a noun
I was sent back into Canada with most of my belongings still being in the US.
They should have checked all of his belongings and let him go, and not focused at all on his "attitude".
People leave belongings unattended in coffee shops and restaurants all the time.
When i started, i moved out of my apartment, gave away all my belongings but a backpack of clothes, my camera and thinkpad.
I've talked to people trained in various martial arts and the vast majority of them say that if they were mugged they would hand over their belongings.
They repeatedly went through his belongings and tried to figure out if he was indeed in the business of making explosions.
Similarly when you vacate an apartment and leave all your belongings behind, they become the property of the landlord.
It's not realistic, or hospitable, to expect him to watch his belongings while he's interacting with his audience.
The TSA agent made a snide remark about about me being separated from my belongings, which I'd already put on the X-ray conveyor belt [2].
If you don't remove these belongings, people will naturally keep peeking at them and grabbing them and insisting on touching them because they're afraid.
The fact that you need to sell most of your belongings and turn your apartment into a barren wasteland to be happy is no better than feeling like you need to buy things to be happy.
But weakening everyone's security, so they can intercept and read your mail at will, in secret, with no oversight, is just as wrong as the police breaking into your house in secret, at night, and rifling through your belongings.
Rather than fascism per-se, actions like holding people without charge, perusing their personal belongings and papers without due process, and threatening families or associates, are the marks of totalitarianism.
"DHS lawyers claimed that international travel provides, in and of itself, sufficient Constitutional basis for detention and search of international travellers and the search, seizure and copying of the digital contents of their belongings."Really?
Every dwarf has likes and dislikes, friendships, pets, belongings, all driven by a fairly simple AI that just takes these preferences into account when deciding whether or not the dwarf is drunk enough to actually do some work, or whether it's so depressed it wants to sit in its room and cry.
When an organized group of people uses force to take your belongings, leveraging tactics of fear for political ends, isn't that firmly within the definition of terrorism?I don't know the facts here so I'm not implying anything in this specific case, but I like to remember that the terminology we use drastically shapes our thinking.