It has been ages since I saw you last, your absence has been long.
I'm sorry, the omission of your number was an accident.
He absented himself from the meeting and went outside for a smoke. -- past tense
"The absence of prosody makes modern so-called poetry indistinguishable from prose."
'In lieu of my absence' is a phrase, not a sentence. As a phrase, it is grammatically correct, and could form part of a sentence, although it is not easy to think of such a sentence. It means 'Instead of my being absent ... ' So, how about 'In lieu of my absence, you have my presence!' as a jocular exclamation made by someone who turns up at a meeting for which s/he has previously given an apology for absence.
Abiosis refers to the absence of life. It is more usually used as abiotic, not abiosis. You could say "The study of abiosis was a little unnerving to me."
We usually use this adjective with the verb to be: He was absent yesterday. Meaning that he sould have been there but was not. Also, we can use absent as a verb. He absented himself from the tiring gossip.
.. how can use scrum in a sentence
Knowing how to use a word in a sentence is very important in learning the word meaning. A sentence with the word absence is;Their mother's absence , had the children worried, they had not seen her all day."
In the absence of credible evidence, the judge dropped the case. Due to the absence of the teacher, a substitute was called.
A drought is the absence of rainfall for an extended period.
The meeting was stalled in absence of quorum.
I will not tolerate another absence from my class!
the wedding was in great upheaval due to the bride and groom's absence
Yes, the sentence "when he officially files leave of absence" is not grammatically correct. It should be "when he officially files for a leave of absence."
Her continuous absence got her into trouble.
"The absence of prosody makes modern so-called poetry indistinguishable from prose."
The absence of a passenger put the cruise ship on high alert.
I felt an absence in my heart when my dog died.
A logic of absence?