Hooverville was a term used during the Great Depression to describe shantytowns built by homeless individuals. You could use it in a sentence like, "During the 1930s, many unemployed Americans lived in Hoovervilles as they struggled to find work and make ends meet."
this is how you use dwellers in a sentence. i live in the dwellers place
You can predict words and ideas in wich the definition of the word to make a sentence out of it.
The company has strict policies in place to ensure legitimate access to confidential information.
No it is the person place or thing (noun), the action is a verb which is the predicate.
use a comma to add a pause in a sentence. use a period to stop the thought and start a new sentence
Over 1,200 people lived in Hooverville
Place the word "Nabob' In A Sentence
You should use the word "where" is a sentence when refering to a place or location. For an example: "Where were you going?" Which you could also ask as "To which place were you going?"
You should use the word "where" is a sentence when refering to a place or location. For an example: "Where were you going?" Which you could also ask as "To which place were you going?"
You use it like the noun (person place or thing) in this case it is a place
The largest Hooverville was located in Seattle, Washington during the Great Depression, with a population of over 1,000 people. It was known as "Hooverville" in sarcastic reference to President Hoover, and it existed from 1931 to 1941.
My country is a wonderful place
"Where is your home?" "Where is your favourite place?" "Where is the toilet?"
In place of "let go of"
My country is a wonderful place
You just used it in a sentence, but just find a place where it fits.
There is no city in Nevada named Hooverville. Hooverville is term used for a crudely built camp put up usually on the edge of a town to house the dispossessed and destitute, it is a practice that started during the depression of the 1930s. There are no cities named Hooverville in the US.