15 example sentences using urine.
Urine used in a sentence
Urine in a sentence as a noun
The whole building smells like urine as a result!
I know there's a family of compounds found in wine that can smell like cat urine[1].
After you form the laptop case / sword / rifle barrel, and it is still hot, it is to be submerged in urine.
>1 Liter of urine gives you 6 hours of electricity.
If your goal is for your server to be urine-proof, then peeing on it from time to time to make sure would be a good idea.
> I also see no mention of why using urine is better/worse than just using regular water.
> Mandatory urine testingI don't think these are the "IP issues" to which he was referring.
You're more than welcome to share your true thoughts about your employer's urine fetish, here and now -- safely and anonymously!
In my experience riding Amtrak trains all around the Northeast Corridor I've never seen their trains smell like urine or vomit.
Went to a Chinese hospital, they did an ultrasound, chest x-ray, CT scan, EKG, blood and urine tests within 2 hours, plus gave me morphine and antibiotics.
The quality of my workday usually begins with "did I get a face full of hot, evaporating urine and avoid a pile of **** on the way here today?
But as kidneys can't produce urine with the concentration of salt higher than certain level you need more body water to excrete the amount of salt you consumed with sea water.
Mandatory urine testing seems vaguely creepy/invasive already, at least outside a narrow range of machine-operator type jobs.
It also increases water usage, albeit modestly, which is sort of anti-california but that was before I talked with the toilet guys who said the water saving toilets only save water on urine flushes since it it typical for solid matter to require more than one flush cycle.
This backfires with our modern caloric and sugar rich, but nutritionally depleted, foods that are available at little expenditure of energy [de Vany, 2010], in the form of chronic diseases, an on-going so-called epidemic of obesity and many other modern so-called developed country diseases [Campbell and Campbell, 2006].For the determination of the amount of needed water, a rule of thumb is to keep urine transparent.