Stagecoaches ceased operating as a common mode of transportation in the late 1800s with the rise of railroads and the advent of automobiles.
Chariots ceased to be widely used for transportation and warfare around the 1st century AD, as advancements in technology and military tactics made them less effective on the battlefield.
Around the late 1700s when trains began to take precedence is transportation. Its impossible (or at least very difficult) to rob a train with a horse and pistol, as highwaymen did with carriages, so the crime died out.
Exactly what it says. A cease fire agreement is an agreement between two armies to cease fighting in preparation for peace talks. You can't talk peace if you're shooting at each other.
cease firing when you do not hear enemy fire
1947
No. Cease is a verb. The common adverbs are both negative ones: ceaselessly and unceasingly.
Chariots ceased to be widely used for transportation and warfare around the 1st century AD, as advancements in technology and military tactics made them less effective on the battlefield.
Yes. Without proper timing the engine will never run.
Lil Cease Big Cease All Cease Is Cousin Biggie Small Small Small Tiny Biggie Smallie Cease Lil Biggie?
Yes, cease is a verb.
'cease teasing the baby'.
1907 in common currency, but the mints use it now for special collectors coins.
Cease does not have a Homophone. You may be thinking Seize, but this is a homophone of Seas or Sees. Cease is pronounced differently where the "S" is stressed and not pronounced as a "Zee".
The word cease means stop. It can be used in the following possible sentences:I wish my neighbours would cease playing loud music.It is impossible for a human to cease blinking.I've promised myself that I will cease biting my nails.
Jeff Cease was born in 1967.
Cease to Suffer was created in 2002.
The word cease has one syllable.