Additional examples are adjusted to the entries in an automated way - we cannot guarantee that they are correct.
"He got some of his ideas from our geography books."
His mother named him for the mountain range, of which she learned from a geography book.
"The geography book you left or had left for me is interesting."
Confucius did not know that, but you will find it in all the geography books.
There aren't enough people writing our own books - like geography books, for schools.
All the Russians would need would be a geography book.
My geography book devoted a whole section to telling how necessary it was."
There she wrote a geography book for children and her first sketches of New England life.
Some of Philip's books were missing, including a geography book and two religion books.
Nineteenth-century European maps, usually taken from old atlases and geography books, start at around $20.
Physical geography books written for a variety of educational levels have adopted a systems viewpoint to provide an organizational structure.
Second, get all the details you can by reading everything to be found about the targeted place - newspapers and history and geography books.
Without a word she got up, went to her shelf and fetched her geography book.
Johnny remembered a piece about over popu- lation in a school Geography book.
Using a map torn from a geography book, the crew reached Gibraltar, where they received a warm welcome.
She then began researching for her Horrible Geography books.
An earlier Spanish geography book writes the island as "Camiguing".
Last time I checked a geography book, all Sicily.
The green one's a geography book.
In his lap was a geography book that he had found on the bedside table, presumably placed there by Rachyla, or at her direction.
In the geography books of my youth prairie fires were always portrayed as taking place in long grass, and all living things ran before them.
(Aug. 11) brought back painful memories of a particular lesson I remember from my sixth-grade geography book.
Shotouka-Chiri is a geography book for elementary schools that was published in Japan in 1943.
Many of his photographs were used by the Underwood & Underwood to illustrate geography books.
Among its attractions, Feynman discovered in a geography book, was the spelling of its capital city, Kyzyl.