Get to know Menville better with 4 real example sentences.
Menville in a sentence
Context around Menville
- Average sentence length in these examples: 24.8 words
- Position in the sentence: 3 start, 1 middle, 0 end
- Sentence types: 4 statements, 0 questions, 0 exclamations
Corpus analysis for Menville
- In this selection, "menville" usually appears near the start of the sentence. The average example has 24.8 words, and this corpus slice is mostly made up of statements.
- Around the word, scott, chuck, thomas and learned stand out and add context to how "menville" is used.
- Recognizable usage signals include in chuck menville s the and janson and menville learned that. That gives this page its own corpus information beyond isolated example sentences.
- By corpus frequency, "menville" sits close to words such as aaaaand, aaah and aaargh, which helps place it inside the broader word index.
Example types with menville
The same corpus examples are grouped by length and sentence type, making it easier to see the contexts in which the word appears:
Scott Menville: And it goes on from there. (8 words)
It only appeared once, in Chuck Menville's "The Practical Joker", and was known as the "Rec Room". (18 words)
The first recorded shipbuilder was Thomas Menville at Hendon in 1346. citation By 1790 Sunderland was building around nineteen ships per year making it the most important shipbuilding centre in the United Kingdom. (33 words)
When Janson and Menville learned that there was not only a 13-episode order but a 65-episode syndication order as well, they decided that the workload was too much and that they would only work on their own scripts. (40 words)
The first recorded shipbuilder was Thomas Menville at Hendon in 1346. citation By 1790 Sunderland was building around nineteen ships per year making it the most important shipbuilding centre in the United Kingdom. (33 words)
It only appeared once, in Chuck Menville's "The Practical Joker", and was known as the "Rec Room". (18 words)
Example sentences (4)
Scott Menville: And it goes on from there.
It only appeared once, in Chuck Menville's "The Practical Joker", and was known as the "Rec Room".
The first recorded shipbuilder was Thomas Menville at Hendon in 1346. citation By 1790 Sunderland was building around nineteen ships per year making it the most important shipbuilding centre in the United Kingdom.
When Janson and Menville learned that there was not only a 13-episode order but a 65-episode syndication order as well, they decided that the workload was too much and that they would only work on their own scripts.