Make a sentence using the word supply

Examples of how to use the word “supply” in a sentence. How to connect “supply” with other words to make correct English sentences.

supply (n, v): an amount of something that is available for use; to provide something that is wanted or needed, often in large quantities and over a long period of time:

Use “supply” in a sentence

Water is in short supply in many countries.
He supplies us with everything we need.
They supply us with house furniture.

Back to “3000 Most Common Words in English”

0 Shares

Definition of Supply

an amount of something that someone has available to them

Examples of Supply in a sentence

Since Emily had an excess supply of eyeshadow and blush, she donated some to her twin sister.

 🔊

She wished for an endless supply of her mother’s home-made caramel popcorn so she’d never run out.

 🔊

The city has had to manage its water supply to make sure it was sanitized and readily available.

 🔊

Because I used all of her craft paper for the project, I had to replenish her supply the next day.

 🔊

On some days at the bakery, the supply of Mexican vanilla is being used faster than it can be restocked.

 🔊

Other words in the Materials, Objects, Tools category:

Most Searched Words (with Video)

Synonym: furnish, provide, stock, store. Antonym: demand. Similar words: apply, apply to, apply for, supplier, apple, upper, comply, reply. Meaning: [sə’plaɪ]  n. 1. an amount of something available for use 2. offering goods and services for sale 3. the activity of supplying or providing something. v. 1. provide or furnish with 2. circulate or distribute or equip with 3. provide what is desired or needed, especially support, food or sustenance 4. state or say further. 

Random good picture Not show

1. The bank will supply and buy back foreign currency.

2. Please supply a valid user password.

3. They supply us with latest equipment.

4. The demand for fish this month exceeds the supply.

5. The brain needs a continuous supply of blood.

6. We can supply the goods from our main store.

7. I’ve only got a week’s supply of tablets left.

8. There is an abundant supply of cheap labour.

9. Supply is relative to demand.

10. Our water supply is becoming polluted with nitrates.

11. The electricity supply here is quite erratic.

12. We can supply the best service for you.

13. Many countries have a big deficit in food supply.

14. Demand has far outstripped supply of qualified teachers.

15. We have a great supply of meat.

16. The rivers afford an inexhaustible supply of fish.

17. The bank can supply you with foreign currency .

17. Sentencedict.com is a sentence dictionary, on which you can find good sentences for a large number of words.

18. Exploitable raw materials were in short supply.

19. The campers ‘food supply gradually diminished as the days wore on.

20. The port is vital to supply relief to millions of drought victims.

21. The normal supply of water has turned brown and unusable.

22. That boy has eaten through a week’s supply in a day!

23. With a supply of compressed air, the large balloon inflated in a matter of seconds.

24. The surge in the power supply knocked out all the computers.

25. We don’t have an endless supply of money, you know.

26. Our affections are our life— We live by them; they supply our warmth. 

27. The evening was a lavish affair with glorious food and an endless supply of champagne.

28. If you have great talents, industry will improve them. If you have but moderate abilities, industry will supply their deficiency.

29. It’s our hope that we will play an increasingly greater role in the marketplace and, therefore, supply more jobs.

30. They are hoping to clinch a major deal to supply computers to the army.

More similar words: apply, apply to, apply for, supplier, apple, upper, comply, reply, imply, support, simply, suppose, sharply, application, supposing, supporter, supposedly, supportive, comply with, in support of. 

  • Dictionary
  • S
  • Supply
  • Sentences
  • To supply tools to workers
  • To supply workers with tools
  • To supply a deficiency
  • To supply another’s pulpit
  • When a direct current supply is connected to the conductor, it is seen to move.In the event of a fault isolate the mains supply before attempting to open the unit.An electrical supply is a source of electrical energy.
  • …an agreement not to produce or supply chemical weapons. [VERB noun]
  • What happens when food and gasoline supplies run low?
  • The brain requires a constant supply of oxygen. [+ of]
  • Prices change according to supply and demand.
  • Supply the missing word(s) and you could win a T-shirt. [VERB noun]
  • To supply the community with good government
  • To supply books to the library
  • Who will supply their needs?
  • There are no clergymen to supply the pulpit
  • A supply dump
  • To supply someone clothing; to supply a community with electricity.
  • To supply electricity to a community.
  • The TVA supplied the need for cheap electricity.
  • During the summer local clergymen will supply the pulpit.
  • Who will supply until the new minister arrives?
  • To begin the supply of household help.
  • The storm cut off our water supply.
  • Did you see our new supply of shirts?
  • To lay in supplies for the winter.

  • Top Definitions
  • Quiz
  • Related Content
  • More About Supply
  • Examples
  • British
  • Cultural
  • Idioms And Phrases

This shows grade level based on the word’s complexity.

This shows grade level based on the word’s complexity.


verb (used with object), sup·plied, sup·ply·ing.

to furnish or provide (a person, establishment, place, etc.) with what is lacking or requisite: to supply someone clothing;to supply a community with electricity.

to furnish or provide (something wanting or requisite): to supply electricity to a community.

to make up, compensate for, or satisfy (a deficiency, loss, need, etc.): The TVA supplied the need for cheap electricity.

to fill or occupy as a substitute, as a vacancy, a pulpit, etc.: During the summer local clergymen will supply the pulpit.

verb (used without object), sup·plied, sup·ply·ing.

to fill the place of another, especially the pulpit of a church, temporarily or as a substitute: Who will supply until the new minister arrives?

noun, plural sup·plies.

the act of supplying, furnishing, providing, satisfying, etc.: to begin the supply of household help.

something that is supplied: The storm cut off our water supply.

a quantity of something on hand or available, as for use; a stock or store: Did you see our new supply of shirts?

Usually supplies . a provision, stock, or store of food or other things necessary for maintenance: to lay in supplies for the winter.

Economics. the quantity of a commodity that is in the market and available for purchase or that is available for purchase at a particular price.

supplies, Military.

  1. all items necessary for the equipment, maintenance, and operation of a military command, including food, clothing, arms, ammunition, fuel, materials, and machinery.
  2. procurement, distribution, maintenance, and salvage of supplies.

a person who fills a vacancy or takes the place of another, especially temporarily.

Obsolete. aid.

QUIZ

CAN YOU ANSWER THESE COMMON GRAMMAR DEBATES?

There are grammar debates that never die; and the ones highlighted in the questions in this quiz are sure to rile everyone up once again. Do you know how to answer the questions that cause some of the greatest grammar debates?

Which sentence is correct?

Origin of supply

1

First recorded in 1350–1400; Middle English verb sup(p)lien “to fill up, complete,” from Middle French souplier, soupleer, ultimately from Latin supplēre “to fill up” (equivalent to sup- prefix + plēre “to fill”); noun derivative of the verb; see sup- full1

OTHER WORDS FROM supply

sup·pli·er, nounun·sup·plied, adjectivewell-sup·plied, adjective

Words nearby supply

suppliancy, suppliant, supplicant, supplicate, supplication, supply, supply and demand, supply chain, supply line, supply-side, supply-side economics

Other definitions for supply (2 of 2)


adverb

in a supple manner or way; supplely.

Origin of supply

2

First recorded in 1525–35; supple + -ly

Dictionary.com Unabridged
Based on the Random House Unabridged Dictionary, © Random House, Inc. 2023

MORE ABOUT SUPPLY

What is a basic definition of supply?

The word supply is used as a verb to mean to provide something. As a noun, supply refers to a stockpile or quantity of something. Supply has several other senses as a verb or a noun.

As a verb, supply means to give something. You might supply something in response to a request for that item, as when a clothing factory supplies a department store with new clothes in return for money. You might supply something that satisfies a need, as when plants supply us with oxygen as a byproduct of photosynthesis. Or you might supply something in order to make up for a deficiency, as when a food pantry supplies food for hungry people.

  • Real-life examples: A hydroelectric dam can supply a city with electricity. Soup kitchens supply impoverished people with food. Nature often supplies water and sunlight to plants.
  • Used in a sentence: The teacher supplied pencils and paper to the students.

As a noun, supply means an amount of something that has been stored up or stockpiled. For example, almost everyone keeps a supply of food in their house. The plural of supply is supplies and is used when more than one type of thing is being stored.

  • Real-life examples: Hospitals keep a supply of blood to use for emergencies. It is a good idea to keep an ample supply of toilet paper so you never run out. Soldiers are often given a lot of supplies to carry with them in case of problems.
  • Used in a sentence: The grocery story was running low on its supply of milk.

Where does supply come from?

The first records of the verb supply come from around 1325. It ultimately comes from the Latin verb supplēre, which means “to fill up.” The first records of the noun come from around 1420. It comes from the verb.

Did you know … ?

How is supply used in real life?

Supply is a common word that means to give something or means a stored quantity of something.

The Indian Air Force to use HAMMER missiles to further boost the Rafale fighter aircrafts which are arriving in the country amid a dispute with China.

The order for the HAMMER missiles is under process and France has agreed to supply them at a short notice.

— Sonam Mahajan (@AsYouNotWish) July 23, 2020

CNN: The U.S. coronavirus death toll reached 18,693 on Friday evening, an increase of 2,009 deaths today, which is the most number of deaths in a single day.

This data is supplied by Johns Hopkins University.

— Jake Tapper (@jaketapper) April 11, 2020

If there’s one rule I believe in as an artist, it’s this: keep a supply of tea and cupcakes on hand.

— Joe Hill (@joe_hill) August 1, 2012

Try using supply!

True or False?

If a bakery has a supply of milk, it means it doesn’t have any milk left.

Words related to supply

amount, fund, inventory, number, quantity, stock, stockpile, afford, cater, contribute, deliver, equip, feed, fill, find, grant, hand over, produce, store, transfer

How to use supply in a sentence

  • If you’re looking for a weatherproof, heavy-duty case with plenty of first aid supplies, this one’s for you.

  • It supplies Nreal with its Snapdragon processors, allowing the startup’s lightweight mixed reality glasses to easily plug into an Android phone.

  • “Despite a high self-sufficiency ratio for grains, the balance between the food demand and supply has been quite tight in recent years,” Si says.

  • While the Covid-19 outbreak has hammered the global economy and disrupted supply chains, Apple is seeing strong demand for iPhones, iPads and Mac computers from people working and studying remotely.

  • Greening that supply chain is crucial to the consumer electronics giant’s goal, announced in July, to have a net zero carbon footprint by 2030.

  • Fluoride first entered an American water supply through a rather inelegant technocratic scheme.

  • But the qualities Mario Cuomo brought to public life—compassion, integrity, commitment to principle—remain in short supply today.

  • If you answered seven or more of these correctly, you are eligible for a lifetime supply of Metamucil.

  • In Mosul, foreign fighters have left, the city is flooded with refugees and supply routes are cut off.

  • It would seek to cut off the main Allied lines of supply and communication.

  • First, how about the expansibility needed to supply adequate funds for crop-moving?

  • What course was taken to supply that assembly when any noble family became extinct?

  • You see, I am the city undertaker, and the people are dying here so fast, that I can hardly supply the demand for coffins.

  • Almost one-quarter of the total supply printed has been placed in circulation.

  • The increased volume of the supply thus produced inevitably forces down the price till it sinks to the point of cost.

British Dictionary definitions for supply (1 of 2)


verb -plies, -plying or -plied

(tr often foll by with) to furnish with something that is requiredto supply the community with good government

(tr; often foll by to or for) to make available or provide (something that is desired or lacking)to supply books to the library

(tr) to provide for adequately; make good; satisfywho will supply their needs?

to serve as a substitute, usually temporary, in (another’s position, etc)there are no clergymen to supply the pulpit

(tr) British to fill (a vacancy, position, etc)

noun plural -plies

  1. the act of providing or something that is provided
  2. (as modifier)a supply dump

(often plural) an amount available for use; stock

(plural) food, equipment, etc, needed for a campaign or trip

economics

  1. willingness and ability to offer goods and services for sale
  2. the amount of a commodity that producers are willing and able to offer for sale at a specified priceCompare demand (def. 9)

military

  1. the management and disposal of food and equipment
  2. (as modifier)supply routes

(often plural) a grant of money voted by a legislature for government expenses, esp those not covered by other revenues

(in Parliament and similar legislatures) the money voted annually for the expenses of the civil service and armed forces

  1. a person who acts as a temporary substitute
  2. (as modifier)a supply vicar

a source of electrical energy, gas, etc

obsolete aid or assistance

Derived forms of supply

suppliable, adjectivesupplier, noun

Word Origin for supply

C14: from Old French souppleier, from Latin supplēre to complete, from sub- up + plēre to fill

British Dictionary definitions for supply (2 of 2)

supply2

supplely (ˈsʌpə)


adverb

Collins English Dictionary — Complete & Unabridged 2012 Digital Edition
© William Collins Sons & Co. Ltd. 1979, 1986 © HarperCollins
Publishers 1998, 2000, 2003, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2009, 2012

Cultural definitions for supply


The amount of any given commodity available for sale at a given time.

The New Dictionary of Cultural Literacy, Third Edition
Copyright © 2005 by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company. Published by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company. All rights reserved.

Other Idioms and Phrases with supply

The American Heritage® Idioms Dictionary
Copyright © 2002, 2001, 1995 by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company. Published by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company.

Понравилась статья? Поделить с друзьями:
  • Make a sentence using the word might
  • Magic word is name
  • Make a sentence using the word last
  • Magic word if not found
  • Make a sentence using the word know