How to Use limestone in a Sentence
limestone
noun-
The house is on a beach and has these big limestone cliffs all around.
— Emily Zemler, Condé Nast Traveler, 4 Oct. 2023 -
The pendant lights are by Serge Mouille and the floor is made of three types of limestone.
— Monique Valeris, ELLE Decor, 11 July 2022 -
The name Jewett House is etched in limestone above the front door, Prince John said.
— Candace Taylor, WSJ, 23 Sep. 2022 -
Part of the great tomb was once cloaked in granite blocks rather than limestone.
— Sonja Anderson, Smithsonian Magazine, 20 Feb. 2024 -
That heat could then be used to, say, heat a limestone kiln to make cement.
— TIME, 24 Oct. 2023 -
Sandstone turned to sand and limestone cracked, crumbling the very old and the not very old at all alike.
— Vivian Yee, BostonGlobe.com, 12 Nov. 2022 -
This comes from vineyards in Touraine, on soils of clay, limestone and flint (the prized silex of the Loire Valley).
— Dave McIntyre, Washington Post, 18 Jan. 2024 -
The mud had limestone bits, and dandelion and foxtail did much of the work of holding the soil in place.
— Rivka Galchen, The New Yorker, 6 Mar. 2023 -
Instead of sand, there are slabs of limestone and the famous blue-and-white striped beach chairs to lounge in.
— Lilah Ramzi, Vogue, 17 June 2022 -
The flutings are grooves drawn by the fingers of ice age humans across the soft limestone cave walls.
— Jessie Yeung, CNN, 23 Dec. 2022 -
The marl and limestone bluffs are steep; the wood of the oaks is disconcertingly dark, the scrub spiny.
— Maria Shollenbarger, Travel + Leisure, 20 June 2022 -
The hope here is that oyster larva will catch hold of the hard limestone rock and grow reefs there once again.
— Ike Morgan | Imorgan@al.com, al, 15 Aug. 2023 -
The left side of the road is a sheer cut of rock, quartzite, phyllite, and limestone laid bare by dynamite.
— Scott Gilbertson, WIRED, 28 Mar. 2023 -
The best way to increase the pH of your soil is to use garden lime, which is made from crushed dolomitic limestone.
— Megan Hughes, Better Homes & Gardens, 6 Sep. 2022 -
The Beckers shipped ore and limestone to Pittsburgh steel mills.
— Jacques Kelly, baltimoresun.com, 22 Jan. 2022 -
The limestone rocks, many of them as tall as a school bus, are thought to be the remains of an ancient forest.
— Christopher Elliott, USA TODAY, 10 Feb. 2023 -
The 100-acre park started as the site of a natural limestone cave.
— Natalie Wallington, Kansas City Star, 2 May 2024 -
Outside the living room is a path in Madras gray limestone.
— Pilar Viladas, ELLE Decor, 1 June 2022 -
Use this sudden pause near rocks, logs, limestone ledges, and drop-offs.
— Gerald Almy, Field & Stream, 20 Mar. 2023 -
The basin, believed to date back to the Byzantine era, housed the smiling sphinx statue, carved from limestone.
— Abbas Al Lawati, CNN, 6 Mar. 2023 -
There would be no way to savor the gloomy shadows; the cool, smooth limestone; or the mineral tang of rock and earth.
— Nick Romeo, The New Yorker, 15 Mar. 2023 -
The legs of an outdoor table, carved from limestone, resemble the trunk of a palm tree.
— Gisela Williams Anthony Cotsifas, New York Times, 6 Sep. 2023 -
The trail is made from compacted with crushed limestone.
— Kirby Adams, The Courier-Journal, 27 Sep. 2022 -
The researchers found the remains in a limestone cave on the eastern side of the Indonesian part of Borneo.
— Mckenzie Prillaman, Scientific American, 13 Sep. 2022 -
Pieces of engraved columns and limestone slabs were all that remained of the Temple of Zeus.
— Joshua Hammer, Smithsonian Magazine, 15 May 2024 -
Deep in southern France, near the small town of Malataverne, is a limestone cave called Grotte Mandrin.
— Sara Novak, Discover Magazine, 19 May 2022 -
The abrasive limestone was one of the most challenging aspects of Rayu.
— Sasha Digiulian, Outside Online, 6 Dec. 2022 -
The sandy limestone plays nicely with other, brighter hues.
— Kathryn O'Shea-Evans, WSJ, 23 Dec. 2021 -
This stunning 215-foot-tall limestone arch was carved over many years by babbling Cedar Creek.
— Erin Gifford, Southern Living, 26 Oct. 2024 -
It was thought to be the first plant west of the Mississippi River for portland, a type of cement that uses limestone.
— Madalyn Mendoza, Axios, 31 Oct. 2024
Some of these examples are programmatically compiled from various online sources to illustrate current usage of the word 'limestone.' Any opinions expressed in the examples do not represent those of Merriam-Webster or its editors. Send us feedback about these examples.
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