How to Use voting booth in a Sentence

voting booth

noun
  • To this end, Vance also saw a lever to pull inside the voting booth.
    Jessica Winter, The New Yorker, 25 July 2024
  • When Dawn Moore was growing up, her parents took her into the voting booth.
    Abigail Gruskin, Baltimore Sun, 8 May 2024
  • But getting them to the voting booth may be more difficult this year than ever.
    Morgan Radford, NBC News, 3 July 2024
  • Darling Allen told her to submit her questions in writing, then showed her to a voting booth to cast her ballot.
    Hailey Branson-Potts, Los Angeles Times, 8 Nov. 2023
  • What to expect: Outside of the music, there's the Renegade Craft Fair, a vinyl record fair, a kids zone and a nonpartisan voting booth.
    Moyo Adeolu, Axios, 18 July 2024
  • Imagine walking into the voting booth and looking at the ballot.
    Jonathan Shorman, Kansas City Star, 7 June 2024
  • After the national anthem was played, all six voters walked one-by-one into the voting booth.
    Kelsey Walsh, ABC News, 23 Jan. 2024
  • But alone in the voting booth, many Ohioans will be reviewing the amendment language for the first time—and likely not thinking to look around for alternative phrasing on a poster.
    Sarah Stankorb, The New Republic, 6 Sep. 2023
  • Voters who get to make the final call in the voting booth will be offered a 90-minute window into what is real and what is spin about their major-party choices.
    Marianne Levine, Washington Post, 24 June 2024
  • The response underscores the depth of Trump’s continued influence over his party and the power of the former president’s base over those who might want to beat him in the voting booth.
    Jess Bidgood, BostonGlobe.com, 20 Mar. 2023
  • Americans could even take these frustrations to the voting booth come November.
    Tribune News Service, The Mercury News, 17 Sep. 2024
  • In Wisconsin, there is same-day voter registration at the voting booth on Election Day.
    Drake Bentley, Journal Sentinel, 30 May 2024
  • So keeping the hope is about taking those actions, demanding those changes, acting accordingly in the voting booth.
    Harper's BAZAAR, 28 Apr. 2023
  • In 2020, when in-person voting was less possible because of the pandemic, Kesselring made her own voting booth and started staying up late to watch the debates and election returns.
    Karissa Waddick, USA TODAY, 19 Jan. 2024
  • Remembering where the world, and our respective governments, fell short during this crisis is a valuable directive to carry with you to the voting booth.
    Ginni Saraswati, Rolling Stone, 5 May 2023
  • Yet, the insurgent populists came up short of converting the widespread support at the voting booth to electoral gains due to tactical voting agreements and support split among right-leaning voters.
    Lukas Mikelionis, Fox News, 21 July 2024
  • Storytelling is incredibly important to move people enough to translate people to new behaviors in the voting booth and as consumers.
    Sarah Raza, BostonGlobe.com, 14 July 2023
  • Our work has spurred reform through legislation, at the voting booth and inside our nation’s most important institutions.
    Sebastian Rotella, ProPublica, 22 Mar. 2024
  • Our work has spurred reform through legislation, at the voting booth and inside our nation’s most important institutions.
    Eli Sanders, ProPublica, 23 Sep. 2024
  • Our work has spurred reform through legislation, at the voting booth and inside our nation’s most important institutions.
    Umar Farooq, ProPublica, 28 Dec. 2023
  • Accommodations—at work or at the voting booth—can help clarify and simplify processes.
    Denise Brodey, Forbes, 13 Sep. 2024
  • This phenomenon describes the discrepancy between what voters report as their opinions and attitudes on surveys or to pollsters—and their subsequent inaction in the voting booth.
    Anu Gupta, TIME, 13 Sep. 2024

Some of these examples are programmatically compiled from various online sources to illustrate current usage of the word 'voting booth.' 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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