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149 Sentences With "rooming"

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

Since 2006, only 82 rooming houses have legally been registered in Philadelphia, yet housing inspectors conducted more than 500 investigations because of neighbor complaints of suspected rooming houses.
Ultimately she agreed to the rooming situation, assuming it was harmless.
Mr. Mason now lives in an apartment in a rooming house.
And yet, rooming in for opioid-exposed newborns remains an exception.
In April 1943, we married in the parlor of Henry's rooming house.
Back then, you had Democrats and Republicans rooming together in apartment buildings.
Additionally, we always need to assure the safety of newborns rooming in.
We were all rooming together and I was dressed up for an audition.
"It was more healthy than rooming with a thirty-year-old racer," Eileen said.
There he found himself rooming with a wonky, gregarious Georgetown graduate named Bill Clinton.
Other rooming options include inside triples and the outside doubles/triples, which have windows.
Mostly, he lived with his mother and brother in rooming houses or studio apartments.
She was living in a rooming house and she passed away completely unexpectedly in November.
One of the coolest experiences I ever had was rooming with him with the Rams.
Can you see rooming with your mom, à la Dorothy and Sophia on Golden Girls?
Others traveled to Washington on their own, some of them rooming with family and friends.
She found lodging in a rooming house in Venice and went looking for a job.
Behind our rooming house was a long black rail yard, going off to Stanley and Bingham.
We were the lobby of a bygone rooming house or the waiting room of some settlement charity.
Constand on Monday in court denied ever knowing Jackson, rooming with her or ever speaking to her.
Its upper floors served as a rooming house, with rooms starting at $8 per week, she said.
"Rooming is important for smaller, rural hospitals," said Dr. Holmes, the first author on the Pediatrics study.
Guy lived in a rooming house that had a public area where all the residents could hang out.
But, she said, if that roommate leaves, she would consider rooming with John — Nick has a serious girlfriend.
A slapstick comedy tinged with pathos, "Rooming-House" is set in a London attic hung with metal hooks.
Rooming-in brings value to families, to communities, and to taxpayers, but full neonatal ICUs keep hospitals afloat.
"I ended up rooming with maybe a coach, or maybe they would get me my own room," he says.
For many years, an odd structure stood down the boardwalk from the Taj Mahal—a three-story rooming house.
Many elite teams are more like families, often rooming together as well as training and competing in CSGO together.
True, he lived for more than three decades in a rooming house in the East Village in New York.
Though it is standard for healthy newborns, newborns at risk for opioid withdrawal benefit even more from rooming in.
Another Phud, Loren Cobb, had moved to a rooming house on Eddy Street with eight others, six of them Phuds.
Some women were cranky because sleeping in dry hotel rooms is hard, and rooming with their mothers is also hard.
That night, after Eli went 10th to the Giants and Darron 20th to the Jets, they joked about rooming together.
Ms. Kidwell Burger long ago cleared out the rooming house operation upstairs but continued to rent out two upper floors.
All graduates, whether they're moving into their own place or rooming with friends, will need a fresh set of sheets.
Whether you're rooming with a friend, a family member or a significant other, having conversations about money can be awkward.
The Hunt Mark Normand moved to New York a decade ago, rooming primarily with "Craigslist people and weirdos," he said.
Her father was a Pentecostal minister and her mother was entrepreneur who operated the family's home as a rooming house.
This led him to Harvard, where he ended up rooming with three guys he didn't know too well, including Mark Zuckerberg .
By all accounts, Hamilton was a loner who lived in rooming houses in New Jersey and subsisted on a small inheritance.
She was a widow with three children when she met and married Paul Taylor Sr., who was rooming in her home.
Saoirse-Monica Jackson plays Erin, an intensely self-conscious youngster who is stuck rooming with her weirdo cousin Orla (Louisa Harland).
There is quite a bit of humor in this satirical series about Jesus Christ rooming with an alien superhero named Sunstar.
He's divided, existentially and every which way, living in Harlem and rooming with Will (Ellar Coltrane), a pleasantly innocuous white guy.
That is where she and Sierra first met, while rooming together at the Women's Under-20 World Cup Germany in 2010.
But of course rooming with a stranger is hardly every traveler's idea of a vacation (and a solo one at that).
How did you end up being roommates, because that's sort of an odd coincidence that you and Megan ending up rooming together.
This total includes $51,870 for tuition, $1863,090 for rooming, $7,060 for boarding, $3,500 in miscellaneous expenses and a $930 residential college fee.
The law contains an exemption, however, for small owner-occupied rooming houses, a category that may seem to include most Airbnb hosts.
Rooming houses for "career-minded professional women" still exist in New York City, and men aren't allowed above the first floor. 603.
Indeed, it is not unusual for a college student to have mental health concerns, or to be rooming with someone who does.
Across the street, a man raises his rifle in the narrow bathroom of a derelict rooming house and points it at King.
High Point University works to keep students with different levels of conscientiousness from rooming together by administering personality surveys before they assign rooms.
Thousands of migrants fill the city's shelters and budget hotels, or crowd cheap rooming houses, waiting months for a resolution to their applications.
In San Diego, meanwhile, Schlichtman is advised to buy a rooming house, evict the tenants and convert it to a single-family home.
Hamill says Pierpont most likely wrote the song in a rooming house not far from where he lived in downtown Boston in 1857.
Bridie moves through a Victorian London of ravens and ghosts, apothecaries and circuses, a foggy underworld filled with crypts and stuffy rooming houses.
Turn your living rooming into a movie theater with a gigantic 75-inch LG LED 4K TV that's powered by a quad-core processor.
At one hospital in Connecticut, 75 percent of expectant mothers requested a rooming-in plan, according to a New York Times article from 1950.
Two of the students, who were natives of Wuhan, have been rooming with each other instead of with American students, as was originally planned.
Ennis, who also came from an Orthodox background, moved from Detroit the same year; she lived in a rooming house in the West Nineties.
A new Netflix documentary, Amanda Knox, digs into the 2007 murder of Kercher, a British exchange student, who was rooming with Knox in Perugia, Italy.
The BFHI also strongly recommends rooming-in, the practice of having babies sleep in the hospital room, if not in the bed, with their mom.
It doesn't look good — reports indicate that after about a year of rooming together, Woods is no longer living with Kylie — but what about Wesley?
Three of the studies in the current analysis also suggested that the cost of care may be cheaper with rooming-in than with the NICU.
"No matter newborn status/health, rooming-in should be advocated to increase skin-to-skin time, breastfeeding and a loving environment," Brown said by email.
Would there be other aspects of rooming with an animal that you may object to more than documented severity of a student's disability or need?
"Boarding and rooming houses stretch back to the founding of the country," said Alex Armlovich, a fellow at the Manhattan Institute, a policy research group.
But the startup doesn't mind customers going "show rooming," where they visit a traditional boutique to gather inspiration for what they want Anomalie to make them.
Many others are rooming with two or three other millennials in a small apartment, trying to pay down their $40,000 student debt from their $40,153 salary.
The study wasn't a controlled experiment designed to prove whether or how rooming-in might directly improve outcomes or lower costs for treating opioid-exposed newborns.
Through the 1920s, they lived in rooming houses and with assorted relatives; his mother begged for money in the streets, and Macdonald narrowly avoided the orphanage.
But even when he was there (and rooming houses are, by nature, provisional) he spent much of his time walking with purposeful aimlessness through the city.
Often the best treatment is rooming-in with their moms, keeping the room dim and quiet, breastfeeding, and receiving medication to manage their withdrawal symptoms if appropriate.
One of the old ladies from the residences yet to be converted to a rooming house was outside in her pink housecoat, sweeping chinaberries off her sidewalk.
George McQuinn, the manager of the Braves' Quebec City farm team, took him north, to cold weather and the odd experience of rooming with a white family.
By legalizing rooming houses, potentially hundreds of housing units can come out of shadows and tenants can benefit from the safeguards that come with landlords' required compliance.
The subset of babies with more severe withdrawal still receives medications, but medication use has dramatically declined, and when used, babies remain rooming in with their families.
Whether photographing people in a rooming house, drinking around a pub, or making love in city parks, Brandt's portraiture frames the landscape as slightly alien to its occupants.
They worry that rooming-in could lead to mothers' accidentally smothering their children and possibly contribute to sudden unexpected postnatal collapse, a rare but often fatal respiratory failure.
Diane had a talent for friendship, and she maintained long-term connections with all sorts of people — eccentrics in rooming houses, freaks in sideshows, socialites on Park Avenue.
Rooming-in for opioid exposure leads to shorter hospital stays and is more acceptable to families, but let's keep in mind that neonatal ICUs are hospital profit centers.
Some have criticized that rooming in forces parents to be "babysitters" for their newborns — something we would not require if the baby were being treated for another condition.
While you traveled to my house by taxi, her father, a veteran NYC police officer, was banging on the door of the rooming house in which the boy lived.
Instead, Betty quickly finds herself in the belly of the beast — she's rooming with Ethel (Shannon Purser) who believes she has met and conversed with the Gargoyle King himself.
In November, the company of five actors, with U.S. visas secured, moved to Ramallah, rooming together to avoid traveling back and forth through Israeli checkpoints, and began to rehearse.
Dainard now has 250 units (10 single-family houses, rooming houses, duplexes, and fourplexes), flips about 100 houses a year, and made over $1 million on a single deal.
A Philadelphia official last month called for increasing the city's number of rooming houses, better regulating them and relinquishing long-held assumptions that shared, transient living is inherently bad.
On April 4, 1968, James Earl Ray parked his Mustang, with its "Heart of Dixie" Alabama license plate, outside a Memphis rooming house within sight of the Lorraine Motel.
For his dissertation fieldwork, he moved into a rundown trailer park on Milwaukee's predominantly white South Side, and later to a rooming house on the city's mainly black North Side.
I'm rooming with my friend, and she knows I'm broke on a journalist's budget, so she offered me a flat fee that's pretty cheap for the Sioux Falls rental market.
Mr. Hatchett and Ms. Carter had seen each other earlier on the evening of the murder, in a rooming house where his aunt lived alongside Ms. Carter and her mother.
Rooming-in also may be better for mothers addicted to opioids, who "often have a history of trauma and loss," helping them bond with babies from birth, Dr. Bogen said.
Eight months later, Mr. Durst was arrested in Galveston, where he was accused of murdering a neighbor in a rooming house he had rented while posing as a mute woman.
And then, steeling himself, he slipped across the street and into the dark yard of the rooming house, where they'd come for him once and would come for him again.
The stately rooming house for "career minded professional women" where she has lived for a little over a year is one of the few of its kind left in the city.
Ashley found a care team that congratulated her on her success, and informed her that her baby girl would fare best by "rooming in" with her in a calm, quiet environment.
Yale, a prestigious member of the Ivy League, reports that during the 2019-2020 school year, tuition costs $55,500, rooming costs $9,400 and boarding costs $13,200, for a sum total of $72,100.
Desmond, a professor of social sciences at Harvard, spent 2008 and 2009 living in a white trailer park on Milwaukee's South Side and a rooming house on the African-American North Side.
The two met when Susan was going to be rooming with Buffett's youngest sister as a college student at Northwestern University, she says in an old video clip shared in the documentary.
Another drawback is that the smaller studies in the analysis used a variety of designs and measured different things, making it hard to measure the effects of rooming-in, the authors note.
Some years later, Goodwin moved to a rooming house in Brooklyn, where she met Oscar A. Seaholm, a neighbor who also happened to be a handsome young singer 30 years her junior.
Among the unsavory characters who found refuge in 1934 at 334 Riverside, which by then had been renovated into a rooming house, was the book's title character — Bernard (Bennie the Bum) McMahon.
"The best founders do what the best recruiters do, which is spend a lot of time war-rooming the potential objections a candidate may have," explained a top executive recruiter we spoke with.
Plus, living where they were, in a rooming house, crammed into small, bad-smelling spaces, when they'd had a whole house paid for where they'd come from—it made no sense to him.
Being brand new to an area with no safety net of close friends or family on top of being a young woman, I didn't feel safe just blindly rooming with someone off Craigslist.
They also looked at data on breastfeeding from medical records and from patient surveys done starting in 2015 as part of a new effort to support breastfeeding and rooming-in at the hospital.
Her father was a Pentecostal minister and her mother was an entrepreneur who operated the family's home as a rooming house — that meant a variety of guests were always coming and going, Higginsen recalls.
With rooming-in, these babies also tended to leave the hospital about ten days sooner than infants treated in the NICU, a difference that might be explained by fewer complications or better quality care.
To expand affordable housing in these places where land and construction costs are high, we need to disrupt the model of single-family homes and bring back rooming houses and other shared living arrangements.
Though considered an extreme measure, quorum-busting has a long, colorful history that includes Democrats rooming together at a Comfort Inn and a young state legislator named Abraham Lincoln jumping out a window. Gov.
You look through its window and see where Dr. King fell and, some distance away, the back of a building, the former rooming house — now part of the museum — from which his killer took aim.
The "Brown trio" was also rooming together in Brooklyn at the time with a man named Kasper, who was often tired and slept with his feet hanging off the bed, wrote Diana Pearl for Adweek.
His childhood home in New Concord doubled as a rooming house for students from nearby Muskingum College and Glenn credits the older students he knew, as well as his mother and father, with encouraging his interests.
LONDON (Thomson Reuters Foundation) - Children in England are sleeping in converted shipping containers and rooming houses, environments that are often dangerous and far from their schools, a report by the Children's Commissioner for England found on Wednesday.
Babies rooming with their parents at four months of age were more than twice as likely to have unsafe objects around them like blankets or pillows that increase the risk of sleep-related deaths, the study found.
While these cases should serve as a reminder that hospitals and new parents need to take precautions to prevent falls, they shouldn't discourage breastfeeding or rooming-in, said Dr. Michael Goodstein of WellSpan Health in York, Pennsylvania.
A man in a sleeveless white t-shirt and dark pants is sitting on the right side of a wallpapered room, by the window of what is likely a rooming house, his left arm resting on the sill.
Jheon explains that she and her husband, who were parents to one child and expecting another, put in a $560,000 offer on a dilapidated three-story Victorian, which was at the time being used as a rooming house.
Hilton said it conducted extensive research which showed that travelers who opt to stay at a hostel do not like rooming with strangers and often choose a hostel just so they can be close to their friends and family.
Scott: I also remember going back to the room, because we were rooming together, and him feeling so bad for kind of letting the team down for being sent from the game, to the extent that he was crying.
Show-rooming vehicles (giving users a chance to see what ownership would be like) is part of every automaker's strategy with car-sharing services and partnerships, but this one, given the market and the EV angle, seems particularly apt.
Mr. Hughes made his fortune as a sidekick to Mark Zuckerberg, the lead co-founder of Facebook, and I suggest that he give Harvard, let's say, $100 million as payback for rooming him with such an imaginative and practical genius.
But Cosmin Chivu's production makes a much weaker case for "A Recluse and His Guest," in its world premiere, than it does for "The Remarkable Rooming-House of Mme Le Monde," wildly funny in its New York premiere (1:30).
When that woman does become pregnant, she has increasing odds of delivering her baby at a baby-friendly designated hospital, one that supports rooming in, provides access to a lactation consultant, and does not give formula without the mother's specific request.
He has adjusted to a new life of flying commercial and of rooming with a teammate on road trips, working-class realities of M.L.S. that Rooney seldom, if ever, endured when he was one of the Premier League's brightest stars.
Rooming-in reduced the length of stay for morphine-treated infants to 12 days from nearly 17, and the average hospital costs per infant to $2017,000 from roughly $20,000, according to a study published last year in the journal Pediatrics.
Brown University in Providence, Rhode Island, reports that the cost to attend for the 243-22022 academic year included $2204,2200 for tuition, $203,220 for rooming, $219,21 for boarding, $2,017 for personal expenses, $1,595 for books, and $1,236 for fees — totaling roughly $193,892.
In 2015, a Canadian study found that using a rooming-in program reduced the number of babies who needed medication for NAS from 83.3 percent to 14.3 percent and decreased the average length of their hospital stays from 25 days to eight.
They mull over the tragedy that is Ruby (Yootha Wong-Loi-Sing), the woman Yasir is dating and rooming with before he meets the one; some even going so far as to mock her when she wanted to get back together with him.
Adama Iwu, a California lobbyist and cofounder of the "We Said Enough" movement that spotlighted sexual abuse in Sacramento, said de León was "lacking in credibility" after having presided over a legislative body roiled by accusations of harassment and rooming with Mendoza.
While the number of such units swelled during the Great Depression, several factors led to their disappearance, among them the deinstitutionalization of the mentally ill, which flooded rooming houses with often-troubled tenants, driving out those with the means to live elsewhere.
Then reality — the shabby rooming house in which she tries to begin again, and the fickleness of her new love — sets in, and Hester chooses to end her life, which is where Terence Davies's adaptation of the 1952 Terence Rattigan play begins.
Grossman, the Yale doctor, has had similar success using a model called "Eat, Sleep, Console" or ESC, which keeps mothers "rooming-in" with NAS newborns virtually 24/7 and encourages them to do normal mom things like feed and gently rock their babies to sleep.
Black Lives Matter had set up camp in opposition to a recent decision by Ontario's Special Investigations Unit (SIU) not to charge an officer who fatally shot Andrew Loku, a mentally ill black man who was wielding a hammer in a rooming house last summer.
Clinicians caring for newborn babies play a critical role teaching parents how to care for infants with NAS and encouraging evidence-based practices, such as rooming-in and breastfeeding, that have been shown to improve outcomes and decrease length of stay for this vulnerable patient population.
In Milwaukee, he moved into a trailer park and then to a rooming house on the ­poverty-stricken North Side and diligently took notes on the lives of people who pay 70 to 80 percent of their incomes for homes that, objectively speaking, are unfit for human habitation.
"Our findings support rooming-in as the standard of care for opioid-exposed newborns, suggesting that mothers should be viewed as the first-line treatment for these infants," said study co-author Kanak Verma, a researcher at the Geisel School of Medicine at Dartmouth in Hanover, New Hampshire.
For a middle-income woman who has had the time, education, and support to do ample research on infant feeding and care, it may be annoying to hear a nurse choose not to talk about formula or to hear lactation consultants impart the benefits of rooming in and breastfeeding.
Korn missed the entire 1985-86 season to injury, was traded to the Sabres, and was dealt to New Jersey in time for that magical 1987-88 season, spending most of his Devils career as a winger (and often rooming with Shanahan) before finishing his career with nine games in Calgary.
Sturdy as well as space- and money-saving, Dorel Home Products (DHP) Twin-Over-Twin Metal Bunk Bed fulfills the needs of parents (who want safety as well as plenty of leftover playing room for kids), college students (or other dorm dwellers), and adults rooming together to save on rent.
Their former rooming house stood here until 2002, when New York City sold the peaked-roof brownstone, one of six in a matching row, to an investor from Rye, N.Y. The home came down, and a new one, no bigger, was built in its place, its most distinguishing feature being a driveway.
One semester short of graduation, Mr. George had gone to Paris on a break and was rooming with the writer and humorist Art Buchwald when both got coveted job offers: Mr. Buchwald with The International Herald Tribune and Mr. George with the Marshall Plan, the American effort to rebuild war-ravaged Europe.
Under South Carolina law, obtaining "food, lodging, or other [services], or accommodation at any hotel, motel, inn, boarding, or rooming house, campground, café, or restaurant and intentionally [absconding] without paying for it" is a misdemeanor that is punishable with a fine of $1,000 or less, jail time of six months or less, or both.
Fans will remember in August 2006 during the season one finale when Conrad was a Teen Vogue intern in Hollywood – and was also dating her high school boyfriend Jason Wahler and rooming with then-best friend Heidi Montag – when she chose spending the summer in Malibu with Jason over spending the summer in Paris for work.
While the studies add to the evidence that rooming-in may benefit babies, in the case of neonatal abstinence syndrome hospitals must ensure that the mothers are drug-free and able to care for infants before choosing this option instead of the NICU, said Joshua Brown, a researcher at the University of Florida College of Pharmacy in Gainesville who wasn't involved in the study.
A screening of Everything Must Fall, Rehad Desai's documentary about the student movement against rising education costs in South Africa, is among the fair's diverse programmatic offerings (tickets here.) Point Comfort Art Fair + Show When: December 252043–252033 / 252023am–252013pm Where: Ward Rooming House, 252003 NW 2211th Street, Miami  This joint art fair and exhibition, now in its second year, is organized by champions of African-American art known as Hampton Arts Lovers.
Mr. Desmond, a sociologist and a co-director of the Justice and Poverty Project at Harvard, lived among them in 2008 and 2009 — first in the poor, white College Mobile Home Park, a dark hole of vanished ambitions and drug abuse (one woman is "Heroin Susie," not to be confused with "Office Susie"); and then in a rooming house run by the landlords Sherrena and Quentin, who eventually introduced him to many of their black tenants in other properties.

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