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14 Sentences With "free of drugs"

How to use free of drugs in a sentence? Find typical usage patterns (collocations)/phrases/context for "free of drugs" and check conjugation/comparative form for "free of drugs". Mastering all the usages of "free of drugs" from sentence examples published by news publications.

Her other son Jake managed to become free of drugs for seven years, before relapsing.
"The international drug control system promised a world free of drugs, but has delivered the exact opposite," Rolles said.
Originally Canadian-born, Whitby, ON appealed to the young teenager as a second chance—a place to live a life free of drugs and crime.
"Once she completes an in-patient program, she will be in further step-down programs and eventually reach a point where I hope she will lead an independent life free of drugs and substance abuse," Bassil said.
Breaking the Prison Pipeline: Susan Burton, who spent years in prison, is determined to keep other female ex-convicts from returning to prison by giving them a place to live that's free of drugs, alcohol and abusive relationships.
His dream, he says, is to regain strength so he can work, and build a home for himself and his children in the Market 3 shanty town where they can live, free of drugs and the fear of police raids.
People often assume that the antidoping rules are exclusively meant to prevent athletes from taking drugs to make them stronger, faster or more focused, but accepting the code is about trying to keep the sport "clean" and free of drugs, Mr. Harris said.
From 1998 to 2001, Kay dated Denise van Outen. They were engaged and reported to be on the verge of marriage, but split up in 2001. In a 2010 interview, Kay stated that he at one point had a "substantial" cocaine habit. He has been free of drugs since 2003.
The Gracie philosophy goes beyond the application of simply submitting opponents. The Gracie philosophy prepares practitioners for life, enabling them to live a healthy life and use their body and mind to its full potential. The philosophy promotes a life free of drugs, alcohol, and cigarettes. The reason being that taking care of your body is crucial in reaching your full potential in Jiu Jitsu.
The diarist's former friends harass her at school and threaten her and her family. They eventually drug her against her will; she has a bad trip resulting in physical and mental damage, and is sent to a psychiatric hospital. There she bonds with a younger girl named Babbie, who has also been a drug addict and child prostitute. Released from the hospital, the diarist returns home, finally free of drugs.
He underwent a course of chemotherapy for the illness and made a full recovery. In 1999, he moved to the Caribbean island of Saint Martin, but soon began taking crack on the island and returned to London. In 2004, he entered rehab for a second time, at which point his cancer returned; by March 2005 he was again free of drugs and his cancer was in remission. After two years working as a driver for disabled children, he became a classroom assistant in November 2007.
The success the track brought however fueled a growing heroin addiction, and Hannibal spent eighteen months in prison for failing to pay a tax bill. Released from jail and free of drugs, he restarted his recording career in the early 1970s now billed as King Hannibal. He issued a number of singles and an album, Truth, (1973) on the Aware label. His singles included "I'm Coming Home," another social comment on the ongoing Vietnam situation, and the anti-drug song, "The Truth Shall Make You Free (St. John 8:32)," a No. 37 R&B; hit in 1973.
It describes how difficult it is to get free of drugs once addicted, and recovered addict who is now finally free sings "no more." Writer Ken Beilen describes the second verse as an attempt by the former addict to recover his muse and creativity now that he does not have drugs to fall back on. The third and last verse can be interpreted as being about drugs or about music. Beilen interprets it as being about the former addict being torn between a desire to do his best and a need to fill up an album's worth of songs.
The Drug-Free Workplace Act of 1988 (41 U.S.C. 81) is an act of the United States which requires some federal contractors and all federal grantees to agree that they will provide drug-free workplaces as a precondition of receiving a contract or grant from a Federal agency. Although all covered contractors and grantees must maintain a drug-free workplace, the specific components necessary to meet the requirements of the Act vary based on whether the contractor or grantee is an individual or an organization. The requirements for organizations are more extensive, because organizations have to take comprehensive, programmatic steps to achieve a workplace free of drugs.

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