Stonewall - charity - was created in 1989.
founded in 1980 and registered as charity in 1989
"Ceased to be" is the correct phrase to use when something has stopped existing or functioning. For example, "The company ceased to be profitable." "Has ceased to be" is also grammatically correct but may sound more formal.
The Soviet Union only came in to existence after the Russian Revolution of 1917. It ceased to exist when the communist system collapsed in 1989.
the queen was on the Canadian one dollar bill witch ceased circulation in 1989 after the successful implementation of the Canadian Loonie in 1987.
Ceased means to stopThe word 'ceased' means 'finished' or 'ended', as in:The fighting has ceased.
He ceased to exist. Both sides ceased fire. Their attention ceased as the teacher went on. Cease: Stop, Fade Away.
Ceased production in 2004.Ceased production in 2004.
No. A proper use of ceased would be, "After they stopped breathing, they ceased to exist." The word you need is seized, which means to take hold of. "They seized the chance."
FOR GOLD & SILVER, INC. The company ceased operations in 1989. See: http://www.yourtrademarkia.com/company-for-gold--silver-inc-457981-page-1-2
Savage began producing the Springfield Model 67 in the 1950s. It was a pump action budget grade shotgun that ceased production in 1989.
Both "had ceased" and "ceased" are grammatically correct, but they are used in different contexts. "Had ceased" is used in the past perfect tense to indicate an action that was completed before another past action. "Ceased" is used in the simple past tense to indicate that something came to an end.