Livescience is an English word starting with the letter L. With 5 example sentences you'll see exactly how it works in context.
Livescience in a sentence
Using Livescience
- In the example corpus, livescience often appears in combinations such as: livescience com.
Context around Livescience
- Average sentence length in these examples: 25.4 words
- Position in the sentence: 2 start, 0 middle, 3 end
- Sentence types: 5 statements, 0 questions, 0 exclamations
Corpus analysis for Livescience
- In this selection, "livescience" usually appears near the end of the sentence. The average example has 25.4 words, and this corpus slice is mostly made up of statements.
- Around the word, com and explains stand out and add context to how "livescience" is used.
- Recognizable usage signals include according to livescience and choi from livescience com further. That gives this page its own corpus information beyond isolated example sentences.
- By corpus frequency, "livescience" sits close to words such as aadujeevitham, aani and aarne, which helps place it inside the broader word index.
Example types with livescience
The same corpus examples are grouped by length and sentence type, making it easier to see the contexts in which the word appears:
Those homes, complete with camouflaged entrances, can stretch for as long as 30 feet, as LiveScience explains. (17 words)
If you don’t know about the Greenland shark, it’s the longest-lived vertebrate, according to LiveScience. (18 words)
LiveScience.com Instead, young dolphins and whales frequently take rests by pressing their body next to their mother’s while she swims. (22 words)
Charles Q. Choi from LiveScience.com further explains that unlike the Hulk, gamma rays are not green; existing as they do beyond the visible spectrum, gamma rays have no color at all that we can describe. (36 words)
Apart from the immense heat that launches generate, the sound alone is enough to not only hurt people, it can literally set hair on fire and even topple buildings, notes a report by LiveScience. (34 words)
LiveScience.com Instead, young dolphins and whales frequently take rests by pressing their body next to their mother’s while she swims. (22 words)
Example sentences (5)
If you don’t know about the Greenland shark, it’s the longest-lived vertebrate, according to LiveScience.
Those homes, complete with camouflaged entrances, can stretch for as long as 30 feet, as LiveScience explains.
Apart from the immense heat that launches generate, the sound alone is enough to not only hurt people, it can literally set hair on fire and even topple buildings, notes a report by LiveScience.
Charles Q. Choi from LiveScience.com further explains that unlike the Hulk, gamma rays are not green; existing as they do beyond the visible spectrum, gamma rays have no color at all that we can describe.
LiveScience.com Instead, young dolphins and whales frequently take rests by pressing their body next to their mother’s while she swims.
Common combinations with livescience
These word pairs occur most frequently in English texts: