18 example sentences using rotted.
Rotted used in a sentence
Rotted in a sentence as an adjective
Well rotted, or heat treated, manure should be safe.
I use boric acid for restoring rotted wood in my old 1800's house.
We would tunnel over it and then we would throw away the rotted bits and replace them with wires.
Humans survived with poor dental care by dying before their teeth were completely rotted.
So that, to me, was one possible way, you know, as the IPv4 Internet rotted the underneath.
Amazon has completely neglected the platform and it's rotted.
It's sad that the classical education is no more, but it's also true that the humanities rotted from within.
Also, the sole source of storage are government granaries & silos, where a lot of food has either been found to have rotted, or been stolen.
Thank you for devoting your time to putting this on the web. Otherwise it might have rotted in your attic!It's unclear to me whether there is anything theoretically new in here yet.
Really, any project that hasn't been updated for more than a week probably bit-rotted to the core and shouldn't be considered for production use.
Had it not been for user-generated coverage on the net and the generous person who bailed him out, he would have probably rotted in jail for who knows how long.
Many of the characteristics of money are downright deceptive; one may save $100 today, but $100 of, say, corn today is not going to feed any retirees 20 years from now, it'll just be a rotted mess.
> It's sad that the classical education is no more, but it's also true that the humanities rotted from withinThis really resonated with me. I find the concept of a classical education immensely important.
I have almost every file I've ever created on any computer in my entire life, with the exception of a handful of Zip and floppy disks that rotted away before I could preserve them, but that is only a few hundred gigabytes.
It assumes people can't deal with the mildest hint of non-mission-critical information on the screen, which is false, or at least it used to be; if it catches on too much people's minds might get so rotted that they get confused navigating a web page with more than two buttons.
It's having the nous to think through what you're about to do and judge whether you're at risk of ending up in trouble, and it starts with learning the hard way that the branch you're about to stand on to climb up the tree is woefully rotted and is about to give way under you.
Standing in a clearing wondering what was meant, he realized that the space he was standing in - an unusually empty space in an otherwise dense forest - must have been created by a very large and very old tree that had subsequently fallen and rotted away, leaving a space other trees had been unable to grow in.
Could we not turn that objection around to say we'd like to see implementations that allow exposure of random people's payroll data by typo-ed/bit-rotted/guessed SSNs should be criminalized?In my head, this is related to the "expectation of privacy in public" and "ubiquitous surveillance" arguments.