Inauguration in a sentence as a noun

Come to think of it, the tunnel hasn't changed much since it's inauguration in 1984.

In Chicago this year, a kid who sang at Obama's inauguration was gunned down in gang-related cross-fire.

Obama was told before his inauguration of a supposed plot by Somali extremists to attack the ceremony[...].

> The minute the 2013 presidential inauguration started, it was as if the 2009 inauguration had never even happened at least as far as Google was concerned.

But the difference between Kouchma and Yanukovuch started to frighten people with every new Yanukovych step from the moment of his inauguration.

From that very article, "Yushchenko was declared the official winner and with his inauguration on 23 January 2005 in Kiev, the Orange Revolution ended.

The "winner" is the candidate who tells the best lies about policies, which will of course be forgotten after inauguration, and both are going to do the same thing anyway so it doesn't matter very much which wins.

"From the very beginning, there was a conviction, that Saddam Hussein was a bad person and that he needed to go," says O'Neill, who adds that going after Saddam was topic "A" 10 days after the inauguration - eight months before Sept.

And while a constitutional amendment would be nice, the only part of the constitution that the US follows anymore is 'election protocol' and details that create the pomp and circumstance around inauguration.

When interviewed on her inauguration for the Iron Warrior, she stated that she did not want to get into the whole Coursera type courses, the reason being that there were plenty of other schools doing it, and they all had more resources and that the race was lost.

However, at Clinton's request she did compose and recite an inauguration poem, so in the general sense that she was officially appointed by a government official to compose a poem for a special event [2] the argument could be made that she was a "poet laureate".

There's been somewhat of a trend in that direction since Pope John Paul I in 1978 kicked it off by downplaying some of the royal-seeming aspects of the papacy: he switched to using "I" instead of the royal "we", and opted for a simpler inauguration ceremony instead of being crowned with the papal tiara in the traditional coronation.

Inauguration definitions

noun

the act of starting a new operation or practice; "he opposed the inauguration of fluoridation"; "the startup of the new factory was delayed by strikes"

See also: startup

noun

the ceremonial induction into a position; "the new president obviously enjoyed his inauguration"

See also: inaugural