Occupy in a sentence as a verb

They occupy most of the galaxy, and there has been little expansion of humanity.

And NewsBlur is clearly the top choice and will hopefully occupy similar mindshare as Reader did for us until now.

Fortunately, pcwalton seems to believe that Servo's tab processes will occupy less memory than Chrome's.

There may be some overlap in domain, but they occupy different niches and will likely appeal to different crowds.

A romantic relationship is hopefully based on qualities more fundamental than "what professional role do I want to occupy?"3.

You could sleep, read, play games, or otherwise occupy your time. It would literally give the nation tens of billions of hours in added productivity time. It could make the elderly more independent, eliminate drunk-driving, and a lot more.

It must be obvious to any patriotic Korean that the danger posed by American imperialists who still occupy the southern half of the country is ever-present and growing.

I don't think that if the occupy/tea party/anonymous/truther/conspiracy/pick-your-revolution-of-week movements have struggled for five minutes to make their ideas available, it was because of the lack of bookstores.

Who will satisfy them?If you're an entrepreneur, there are millions if not billions of people who are on the cusp of becoming your target market, and the dominant technological discourse and journalistic coverage gives you no insight into the market they occupy.

Occupy definitions

verb

keep busy with; "She busies herself with her butterfly collection"

See also: busy

verb

live (in a certain place); "She resides in Princeton"; "he occupies two rooms on the top floor"

See also: reside

verb

occupy the whole of; "The liquid fills the container"

See also: fill

verb

be on the mind of; "I worry about the second Germanic consonant shift"

See also: concern interest worry

verb

march aggressively into another's territory by military force for the purposes of conquest and occupation; "Hitler invaded Poland on September 1, 1939"

See also: invade

verb

require (time or space); "It took three hours to get to work this morning"; "This event occupied a very short time"

See also: take

verb

consume all of one's attention or time; "Her interest in butterflies absorbs her completely"

See also: absorb engross engage

verb

assume, as of positions or roles; "She took the job as director of development"; "he occupies the position of manager"; "the young prince will soon occupy the throne"

See also: fill take