Definition, Betydelse & Anagram | Engelska ordet THRIVED


THRIVED

Definition av THRIVED

  1. böjningsform av thrive
  2. perfektparticip av thrive

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Exempel på hur man kan använda THRIVED i en mening

  • Often mistaken for his popular descendant, Moctezuma II, Moctezuma I greatly contributed to the famed Aztec Empire that thrived until Spanish arrival, and he ruled over a period of peace from 1440 to 1453.
  • Romania's newspaper market thrived after the 1989 revolution, but many newspapers subsequently closed because of rising costs.
  • The island of Zanzibar thrived as a trading hub, successively controlled by the Portuguese, the Sultanate of Oman, and then as a British protectorate by the end of the nineteenth century.
  • Lublin thrived as a centre of trade and commerce due to its strategic location on the route between Vilnius and Kraków; the inhabitants had the privilege of free trade in the Grand Duchy of Lithuania.
  • Industries such as distilleries and mills thrived all through the county until 1820, when they began to be concentrated around Winchester.
  • Langston initially thrived as a river port along the Tennessee River, eventually growing to include nine stores and a blacksmith.
  • Mooresville thrived as a cotton farming hub until the early 20th century, when the boll weevil infestation wrecked the cotton economy.
  • The Coast Miwok civilization thrived in the Cotati area since at least 2000 BC, with principal villages built near major streams.
  • Eldorado thrived for much of the late 1800s until the 1980s as a coal mining town, until several major mines shut down.
  • The town of Fithian was a center for trading livestock and grain; it thrived when the Illinois Traction System (an interurban railroad) went through in 1903, and declined along with the ITS, especially during the Great Depression.
  • The presence of these two main routes benefitted Ogden's businesses which thrived from all the traffic these two roadways brought through the town.
  • Leiston thrived in the late 19th and early 20th centuries as a manufacturing town, dominated by Richard Garrett & Sons, owners of Leiston Works, which boasted the world's first flow assembly line, for the manufacture of portable steam engines.
  • The economy thrived in the first decades based on sawmills, carriage and cart factories, copper shops, a steam flourmill and a buffalo robe manufacturer.
  • The community thrived during its first decade, adding general mercantiles, a butcher shop, a concrete plant, restaurants, and other businesses to serve the region's growing homesteader population.
  • The industry thrived until the early 1900s when agricultural businesses began to flourish in the face of the waning glass industry.
  • As a result of the availability of cheap and easy transportation, which by the 1850s included the railroad as well as the canal, companies such as the DeLand Chemical Company, the Cobb Preserving Company, Taylor's Oil of Life, and eventually the American Can Company, grew and thrived.
  • With the arrival of the Long Island Rail Road, a commercial center developed and thrived around the Locust Valley station and the nearby intersection of Forest Ave/Buckram Road and Birch Hill Road.
  • According to some historians, a town resident named Ves Bogert found small pearls in mussels that thrived in Muddy Brook and, upon hearing this, the wife of John Demarest, the president of the New Jersey and New York Railroad, suggested the name "Pearl River" to him.
  • The white deer — a genetic quirk that developed naturally on the 7,000-acre, fenced-in expanse — have thrived, even as the depot itself has transitioned from one of the most important Cold War storehouses of bombs and ammunition to a decommissioned relic.
  • The local economy was severely impacted, although the real-estate market temporarily thrived from the sale of XIT lands.


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