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86 Sentences With "put down roots in"

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

Klobuchar, Yang and Booker each put down roots in Portsmouth.
There is no way we can put down roots in the south.
Now, she explains, she's finally ready to put down roots in the city.
Yet Eurocrats enjoy reduced-tax salaries and have put down roots in Brussels.
Jackals are just starting to put down roots in Italy, Germany and Austria.
For Schnabel, the desire to put down roots in the Engadin Valley was inherited.
Becca Kufrin and Garrett Yrigoyen are ready to put down roots in sunny San Diego!
Many Dreamers have purchased homes, supported families, joined churches, and put down roots in neighborhoods.
The couple put down roots in Mexico and set up their own company in 1950.
After some traveling, they put down roots in Marrakech, Morocco, purchasing Le Palais Da Zahir for $10,000.
It has "consequences" for green-card holders who have "established families and put down roots in a community".
She soon put down roots in France, in the Dordogne region, and married Albert Roger, a French citizen.
Then AOL, which put down roots in D.C. 30 years ago, "put us on the map," he says.
And new migrant communities are popping up as people from around the world put down roots in Mexico.
They should secede from mainstream culture, pull their children from public school, put down roots in separate communities.
They listed the home where they previously said they planned to "put down roots" in December for $14 million.
Alaska offers a slew of grant programs and tax incentives to attract people to put down roots in the state.
Art Review The hardy noncommercial gallery, founded in 1972, has put down roots in a cast-iron building in TriBeCa.
He urged his followers to put down roots in particular places, as he himself did in Brantwood, in the Lake District.
Four years ago, the couple decided it was time to put down roots in New York City and buy an apartment.
Researchers have found that caused many to put down roots in the United States instead of returning seasonally to Mexico and Central America.
Once Golden graduated and put down roots in Detroit, she was inspired by the book and documentary Sign Painters to pursue formal training.
According to the Tampa Bay Times, both of Simpson's kids have put down roots in St. Petersburg, Florida, where they work in real estate.
The Obamas recently put down roots in Washington, D.C.: They purchased the mansion they've been renting for $2463 million, The New York Times reports.
Her eagerness to put down roots in New York City hardened into resolve when her London tenants showed themselves to be a bad bunch.
It has since put down roots in London where a cumulative 2.3 million fans have flocked to the venue for the week-long event.
With no easy way into the U.S., new migrant communities have emerged as people from around the world put down roots in Mexico. 5.
He has more than put down roots: In addition to numerous thriving plants, he has cultivated a life-sized labyrinthine hedge maze in his backyard.
Officials aim, she says, to prevent applicants from claiming they've already put down roots in Canada -- something that often comes up in lengthy US immigration cases.
And we still don't have a good grasp on the interconnected human, social and political factors that lead people to put down roots in dangerous places.
After years on the run, Georgia desperately wants to put down roots in picturesque New England and give her family something they've never had... a normal life.
There's another reason why Worcester makes sense as an organizing hub: Rising rents in Boston have driven artists and DIY creatives to put down roots in the city.
Over aromatic shiitake soup, poured from tiny clay pots, Oei expanded on the aims and the attitudes of Chinese families who decide to put down roots in Canada.
"It is true you have to build a national audience as a candidate, but you also have to put down roots in Iowa and New Hampshire," Scala said.
In her docs, she points out her ex has put down roots in the Hoosier state -- he's lived there for 2 years and, obviously, had a child during that time.
Carville notes that the suburban communities of East Jefferson Parish that moved away from the GOP on Saturday was where the Republican Party first put down roots in the state.
How can we claim to reflect these values if we continue enacting policies that punish immigrant communities who are working hard to raise their families and put down roots in America?
Defenders of chain migration tend to argue that it's important for immigrants to put down roots in the US, and that having a family here is part of what that means.
What unites the two groups of immigrants is that both have put down roots in the US, generally living here for more (sometimes much more) than a decade but without permanent status.
It's not an accident that companies like PhishMe are choosing to put down roots in cities best known as tourist destinations and finding them to be a good place to scale up.
Much of the action on Good Trouble takes place in "The Coterie" — the communal living building where The Fosters' Mariana (Cierra Ramirez) and Callie (Maia Mitchell) put down roots in the City of Angels.
Under the Government's view, the aliens subject to detention without a bail hearing may have been released from criminal custody years earlier, and may have established families and put down roots in a community.
As part of that strategy, Ford has been racing to develop self-driving cars, put down roots in Silicon Valley and acquire fledgling players in ride-hailing services, autonomous-driving technologies and related areas.
This influence has grown since the defeat of ISIS, as Iranian-backed groups put down roots in areas from which ISIS had been removed, such as Albukamal on the border of Syria and Iraq.
Shreveport, Louisiana — 11.93% Meanwhile, if you want to avoid having to put down a high down payment, don't look to put down roots in New York, where the average down payment is 19.74%, or $983,979.51.
A few months later, he jumped to the N.B.A. Over the years, James has put down roots in Los Angeles, buying a pair of homes and opening an office on the lot at Warner Bros.
One Vanessa is a Swiss citizen, while the other is not, and is locked in a lengthy and expensive process to obtain citizenship even though her family put down roots in Switzerland two generations ago.
"A lot of these people have already put down roots in this city, and it's not really possible for them to return to the countryside," said Zhang Lifan, a respected independent commentator and historian of Beijing.
It's also the lead on a highlight reel for a once barely defeated fighter who, just as MMA was beginning to put down roots in the America's mainstream, had become legendary for his brutality in Japan.
There's an additional irony here, which is that virtually no degrowther wants to put down roots in the home of degrowth, though François's partner, Alexandra Guerri, lives with him in the austere precincts of Can Decreix.
Crockett never got to put down roots in Texas — he died two months later defending the Alamo — but his faith in Texas' exceptionalism, a much-maligned term today, would become a fixture of Lone Star culture.
In 1955, at the urging of his sister, who had moved to California, he drove across the country and put down roots in Los Angeles, where he was appointed a deputy counsel for Los Angeles County.
The reality star had previously expressed a desire to put down "roots" in the abode, but told PEOPLE earlier this month that the financial burden (she was paying $6,600/month) was too much considering her legal troubles.
Irish Hell's Kitchen (Saturday) When Ireland's potato famine forced millions to flee their country in the 2339th Century, many of those who came to New York put down roots in the neighborhood formerly known as Hell's Kitchen.
Advertise on Hyperallergic with Nectar Ads OAKLAND — Since Natufian people first put down roots in the city of Jericho 11,2013 years ago, capitalism has been the prevailing economic regime for humans for less than three percent of the time.
By establishing smaller production branches, Disney has expanded to nature documentaries, wholesome live-action films (the company had a hand in last year's Queen of Katwe and The BFG, to name a couple), and even put down roots in Bollywood.
From affordability and mobility to community and culture, there's a range of factors those approaching their golden years need to take into consideration when deciding whether to retire in place or put down roots in greener — and less stressful — pastures. Bankrate.
They are hoping to persuade the White House and Congress to see the value in TPS, to protect it, and to offer routes to permanent status for those who have put down roots in the U.S. The moral argument is on their side.
"So it was only a matter of time before Orban's attention turned to C.E.U." In 1989, Mr. Soros funded a scholarship for Viktor Orban, then a rabble-rousing young liberal from provincial Hungary, and in 1993, the fledgling university he founded put down roots in Budapest.
This is part of a broader pattern for the Trump administration: Its policies are pushing people who have already put down roots in the US closer to deportation, with no attention to the role the US played in the circumstances that made them come here to begin with.
For Costa, the apparent death of the Senate bill represents a reevaluation of the political calculus of repealing Obamacare — a law that, over time, put down "roots" in many states and is currently twice as popular as the Senate health care bill, according to the Washington Post/ABC News poll released this week.
Despite the fact that the band got its start in New York City and later relocated to Staten Island, all but Whipple have put down roots in Philadelphia, a city that any casual listener of current rock music will tell you has become a sweltering hot bed for new talent over the past few years.
For my parents, moving was a deeply taxing thing: There were the obvious logistical challenges of trying to put down roots in a place that resembled nothing of our former home, but also the emotional challenge of trying to learn a new language at an age that no longer accommodated failure as mercifully as their twenties had.
In Utica, a former industrial hub in upstate New York where the near collapse of manufacturing has made for a scarcity of jobs and a rarity of good news, the announcement in August 2015 that an Austrian chip maker had decided to put down roots in a fabrication plant built by the state was cause for jubilation. Gov.
Step back from the political arguments within the show, and its conflict between Philip and Elizabeth has always been the conflict between any two people who are split between wanting to put down roots in a new place (as Philip has always been more inclined to do) and wanting to stay true to their cultural heritage (as Elizabeth has always hoped to do).
London Breed: It's really tough because you're right, most of the data shows that folks who come here to work in San Francisco in the tech industry, they usually won't register to vote because they're registered at home and they don't necessarily get involved in politics because they're here to do a job and you don't know if you're going to stay or not and put down roots in San Francisco or what have you.
Williamson has black belts in Kenpō, Shotokan karate and taekwondo. Since 1997, Williamson has had a home in Palm Springs, California.Blair, Iain (January 3, 2008). "Desert home companions: a wide range of industry pros, from stars to stuntmen, have put down roots in P.S.".
She remained on the board until President Jimmy Carter succeeded President Gerald Ford in 1977. By then, she had put down roots in Washington, D.C., that would become permanent in her last years. In 1979, she was the first woman to be awarded the Sylvanus Thayer Award by the United States Military Academy at West Point. President Reagan reappointed Luce to PFIAB.
Brazeau Presbyterian Church Some of the earliest Americans to put down roots in Perry County were English and Scots- Irish Presbyterian settlers from Rowan, Iredell, Cabarrus, and Mecklenburg counties in North Carolina, who settled Brazeau in 1817. There, they opened land in the Brazeau Creek drainage basin. In 1804, Brazeau was estimated to have had 88 inhabitants. The Evangelical Presbyterian Church of Brazeau was established on September 2, 1819, and a log church was erected.
The Rhodes family bought a summer house in East Pascagoula, Mississippi in 1834. This site later became the site of the East Pascagoula Hotel opened there in 1836. The Rhodes family held a residence in Mobile, Alabama but put down roots in Jackson County as early as 1840, and Rufus' father began operating a sawmill there. Rufus Rhodes later said that he had been a resident of Jackson County since about 1828.
Obituary of Betty de Ropp from The Davis Enterprise Thursday, February 12, 2004, (Yolo County, California) To support his family and finance their transition into the direct economy of living from the land and ocean, de Ropp worked until 1973 as a research scientist at the University of San Francisco. The family put down roots in their rural Sonoma-County locale, working at living simply. They grew fruits, vines, vegetables and wheat, as well as many ornamental plants. de Ropp fished in the ocean and Betty raised chickens.
Langkow is the second child of Randy and Vivian Langkow and grew up in Vegreville, Alberta. His parents divorced when he was ten years old. His father is a plumber in Edmonton, while his mother managed a restaurant in British Columbia prior to her November 2011 death. Langkow and his wife Stephanie have four children, and expressed a desire to put down roots in the city of Calgary as a reason for his decision to sign a long-term contract extension with the Flames in 2008 rather than test free agency.
Aylesford Cenotaph Aylesford is one of the oldest surviving settlements in Kings County, originally settled by Ulster Scots (Scots-Irish) during the early 1770s. Between 1772 and 1781, the population of Nova Scotia actually fell - from 19,000 to 12,000 - but by 1784, after the continued arrival of United Empire Loyalists during the American Revolution, the population had reached 32,000. A number of Loyalists, aka "The King’s Loyal Americans" put down roots in Aylesford and the surrounding area. Aylesford emerged as a major centre for packing, processing and exporting apples after the arrival of the Windsor and Annapolis Railway in 1869.
Adam Funk, Jr. had at one time accumulated significant wealth, but he died poor. However, he was prolific in progeny: he and his wife had nine children—six sons and three daughters. Family patriarch Isaac Funk The Funks and Stubblefields were among the first settlers in the county and put down roots in the area now known as Funks Grove, Illinois. In 1824, brothers Isaac and Absalom Funk, the sons of Adam Funk, Jr., moved to McLean County. Six months later in December 1824, Dorothy Funk Stubblefield and husband Robert Stubblefield followed from Ohio; Robert had earlier been widowed after being married to another Funk suster, Sarah, for 25 years.
These racial barriers, while quite real were more informal than formal; they began to weaken after World War I as the Indian freedom movement gained steam. The author Emily Eden, sister of the Governor-General Lord Auckland, wrote incisively about the biting racism of Britons towards all Indians (except Maharajas, whose over-the-top hospitality they craved), after spending much time in Landour, Shimla and Ooty in the late 1830s. Many Anglo-Indian families also put down roots in Landour, and in Barlowganj just below Mussoorie, in the 19th century. They were attracted in part by the schools, and by the sense of 'otherness' versus quotidian India.
The two sides of the arms may be taken to represent allegorically the Blessed Trinity and the Blessed Virgin Mary; also on the one hand the theological virtues, on the other the virtue of purity, supported by the Sacraments of the Church. Lastly the supporting lions symbolise heroic courage while the lilies symbolise beauty and the mitre truth and goodness: three values that the courage of the lions must serve if it is to be truly heroic. Echoing these sentiments, the full heraldic achievement features two croziers (one abbatial and one episcopal) and two lions rampant. The college's motto is In electis tuis mitte radices, 'Put down roots in those Thou hast chosen'.
In 1904 Agar was declared as a demonstrator in zoology at University of Glasgow, where he put down roots in teaching and research. His work on the embryology of the lungfish Lepidosiren and Protopterus caused a fellowship at King's College, Cambridge; this did not make an impact on his leaving Glasgow, for he had to continue academic and research work. The work on Lepidosiren was very precious for him. The cells of this fish, being unusually large, offer favourable material for the study of chromosomes and in 1907, aided by grants from the Royal Society and the Balfour Fund at Cambridge, Agar made an expedition to the almost unreachable Gran Chaco, Paraguay, to collect material for cytological study.
Dhammadharini serves among bhikkhunī locations in supporting and facilitating these traditions, for qualified aspirants. With the closing of the old temporary Dhammadharini Vihara in Santa Rosa in July 2016, and the opening of the new Dhammadharini Monastery (Dhammadharini Sonoma Mountain Bhikkhunī Aramaya) this same month, a longterm wish and dream of the Dhammadharini community and support foundation, to offer a place for the young Bo tree of the Bhikkhunī Sangha to be able to put down roots in native American soil, will be fulfilled. The Buddhist women's monastic community, and the Bhikkhunī Sangha, as an essential part of the Buddha Catuparisa (Fourfold Sangha of the Buddha), is taking root in North America.
Almost two decades after the original Maverick series, and a few years after his appearance in the 1978 TV-movie The New Maverick, Bret Maverick has put down roots in the frontier community of Sweetwater, Arizona Territory where he's now the silent partner of the Red Ox saloon that he won in a card game. Maverick's still a gambler, and is not above running various con games to help make the money he needs to keep his businesses afloat. Because of this, he's viewed with suspicion by many of the town's more prominent citizens, especially the town's newly appointed sheriff. Bret's business partner is Tom Guthrie (Ed Bruce), the town's former sheriff and co-owner of the Red Ox Saloon.
With coal mining and iron smelting being the main trades of south Wales, many thousands of immigrants from the Midlands, Scotland, Ireland, Cornwall and even Italy came and set up homes and put down roots in the region. Very many came from other coal mining areas such as Somerset, the Forest of Dean in Gloucestershire and the tin mines of Cornwall such as Geevor Tin Mine, as a large but experienced and willing workforce was required. Whilst some of the migrants left, many settled and established in the South Wales Valleys between Swansea and Abergavenny as English-speaking communities with a unique identity. Industrial workers were housed in cottages and terraced houses close to the mines and foundries in which they worked.
Alexander Ramsey, Saint Paul's fifth mayor England claimed the land east of the Mississippi and France, then Spain, and again France claimed the land west of the river as further territory of New France. In 1787 land on the east side of the river became part of the Northwest Territory. Between the 1780s and 1800s, Spanish traders from St. Louis traded through the region, including Manuel Lisa and José María Vigó (also known as Francisco Vigó). From 1837 to 1848, Saint Paul grew from a few traders of mostly French and French Canadian origins, with tents and shacks on the riverside to a small town with settlers starting to put down roots; in 1840, the town had only nine cabins scattered between the Upper and Lower Landings.
Bangladeshi labour migration to Japan, in common with that to other economically developed parts of East Asia, namely South Korea and Taiwan, is believed to have begun around 1985. Prospective workers would obtain student visas to enter into language schools, which would allow them to work legally up to 20 hours per week to support themselves; they used their period of study to put down roots in Japan and find more permanent full-time work. Such migration reached a peak in 1988, but dropped off sharply in 1989 as Japanese authorities tightened the requirements for obtaining student visas. In the late 1980s and early 1990s, deportations jumped sharply, with nearly five thousand in 1990 alone; however, both new arrivals and previous deportees turned to people smugglers to re-enter the country.
He wished that Hampden and his followers "were well whipped into their right senses". The judges had given the King the right to levy ship-money, but, unless his majesty had "the like power declared to raise a land army, the Crown" seemed "to stand upon one leg at home, to be considerable but by halves to foreign princes abroad". When the Scottish Covenanters rebelled he advocated the most decided measures of repression, in February 1639 sending the King £2000 as his contribution to the expenses of the coming war, at the same time deprecating an invasion of Scotland before the English army was trained, and advising certain concessions in religion. Wentworth apparently intended to put down roots in Ireland: in the late 1630s he was much occupied with building a mansion, Jigginstown Castle, near Naas, County Kildare.
In the final phase of Indian inhabitation of the area that eventually became "North Miami", United States Army soldiers in 1856 cut a Military Trail through nearly impassable thickets and rivers connecting Fort Lauderdale to Fort Dallas at the mouth of the Miami River. This eight foot trail, Dade County’s first roadway, crossed a unique natural bridge -- a natural limestone bridge spanning across the creek that no longer stands in Arch Creek Memorial Park -- in an area that would attract a settlement that early on would be known as "Arch Creek". Even before 1890 a handful of adventuresome pioneers spent brief periods around the Arch Creek Natural Bridge, a centuries-old Indian settlement. In 1891, Mr. Ilhe was the first to put down roots in the Arch Creek vicinity. He purchased from the State of Florida at one dollar an acre in the area of today’s N.E. 116th Street and Biscayne Boulevard.
After graduating in 1934, McCord lived for a short time in Boston, but by 1938 she had returned to Chicago, lured by the city’s progressive politics and more cosmopolitan art scene. One of the few sites where these forces overlapped was Hull House, the legendary settlement house founded by Nobel Peace Prize laureate Jane Addams in 1889 as a place where immigrants of diverse communities could gather to learn, eat, debate, and acquire the tools necessary to put down roots in their adopted country. McCord accepted a job in the Hull House Art Department, where she taught immigrants how to paint and draw, and moved into a garret on the top floor of Addams’ old Victorian mansion. McCord produced her first mature works during her time at Hull House, which lasted until 1945. In the summer of 1938, she created several covers for the Hull House Block News, and also designed a poster, “Halsted Street,” for the organization. Soon after, she was accepted as an “easel artist” for the Federal Art Project (FAP), which was the visual arts division of Franklin Roosevelt’s ambitious, Depression-Era Works Progress Administration (WPA).
In February 2009, text on how both draft evaders and resisters of the Vietnam War were ultimately allowed to stay in Canada suddenly vanished from the website of the Department of Citizenship and Immigration Canada." Originally, the Government of Canada website had contained the following statements: > ... Starting in 1965, Canada became a choice haven for American draft > resisters and deserters, ... Although some of these transplanted Americans > returned home after the Vietnam War, most of them put down roots in Canada, > making up the largest, best-educated group this country had ever received. The above statement (now gone from the website) was part of an extensive online chapter on draft resisters and deserters from the Vietnam war, which was found in the larger online document,"Forging Our Legacy: Canadian Citizenship and Immigration, 1900–1977" It was originally posted on the Government of Canada website in the year 2000, when the Liberal Party of Canada, led by Jean Chrétien, was in power and responsible for the content of that website. But in 2009, the Ministry of Stephen Harper [took] "a much dimmer view of dozens of U.S. soldiers who've come north after refusing to serve in the invasion of Iraq.

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