How to Use culture in a Sentence

culture

1 of 2 noun
  • Her art shows the influence of pop culture.
  • It's important to learn about other cultures.
  • The company's corporate culture is focused on increasing profits.
  • This is a huge part of culture.
    Wesley Stenzel, Entertainment Weekly, 16 Feb. 2026
  • The culture of this team is great.
    Fort Worth Star-Telegram, 27 Oct. 2025
  • What is pop culture if not the cause for some folks to be up in arms?
    Lisa Respers France, CNN, 28 Jan. 2023
  • So something needs to change in our culture.
    Maureen Groppe, USA Today, 9 Sep. 2025
  • And such cues can vary widely among cultures.
    R. Daniel Foster, Forbes.com, 24 Jan. 2026
  • Smith is a books and culture writer.
    Nathan Smith, Los Angeles Times, 26 Jan. 2026
  • Of course a culture-first approach has risks.
    Felicia Jackson, Forbes.com, 1 Sep. 2025
  • The sounds of that culture were present throughout the evening.
    J.m. Banks june 15, Kansas City Star, 16 June 2026
  • These cultures date back to the slavery days.
    Nichole Marks, CBS News, 5 Apr. 2026
  • Austria is the pick for culture lovers.
    Lauren Schuster, Miami Herald, 20 Apr. 2026
  • Pop culture is still a big source of stylish and sweet baby girl names.
    Marisa Lascala, Good Housekeeping, 6 May 2022
  • There is a pride and culture through survival, and that gives me hope.
    Mandi Wright, Freep.com, 31 Aug. 2025
  • Each culture has its own name for the New Year.
    Saman Shafiq, USA Today, 16 Feb. 2026
  • Because when artists thrive, culture thrives.
    Matt Emma, USA Today, 6 Oct. 2025
  • She was also obsessed with pop culture and loved to write.
    Clare Malone, New Yorker, 15 Sep. 2025
  • That’s a credit to the culture in that room and in the locker room.
    Michael Niziolek, cleveland, 24 Nov. 2022
  • In some Asian cultures, mung beans are cooked and mashed to form a sweet dessert paste.
    Jennifer Lefton, Verywell Health, 20 Oct. 2025
  • Despite all of this, the overall culture still has a long way to go.
    Vera Papisova, Teen Vogue, 18 Apr. 2018
  • Tired of being hammered over the head with culture war stuff?
    Erik Kain, Forbes, 1 Apr. 2023
  • Follow your desire to learn more about life through art and culture.
    Randon Rosenbohm, Allure, 31 Mar. 2019
  • Pop culture is also picking up on the theme.
    Andrew Silow-Carroll, Sun Sentinel, 9 Mar. 2026
  • For just as long, many women have been toiling to change the culture.
    Erin Wade, Anchorage Daily News, 30 Mar. 2018
  • Like it or not, Warhol’s silver wig still sits atop our culture.
    Blake Gopnik, Smithsonian Magazine, 10 May 2020
  • To some extent, a country can have a culture.
    Alex Crippen, CNBC, 1 Mar. 2026
  • The ancient culture didn’t number days from first to last for each month.
    Jill Gleeson, Country Living, 15 Mar. 2019
  • The week in culture was nothing short of electric.
    Okla Jones, Essence, 15 Sep. 2025
  • Brown claimed the event was not a party, but rather a panel on culture.
    Terry Castleman, Los Angeles Times, 16 Feb. 2026

culture

2 of 2 verb
  • The virus is cultured in the laboratory from samples of infected tissue.
  • Culturing your own butter is old-school; blending your own ketchup is crazy old-school.
    Phil Vettel, chicagotribune.com, 12 May 2017
  • Structure gives culture its shape, and culture gives structure its soul.
    Francois Botha, Forbes.com, 10 Aug. 2025
  • Does your company culture rest on all these pillars?
    Kapil Jain, Forbes.com, 20 May 2026
  • The diagnostic gold standard is to culture it in a lab from a swab or to have a blood test.
    Amy Bennett Williams, USA TODAY, 21 June 2023
  • They can also be made just like dairy yogurts and cultured with bacteria.
    Becky Krystal, Washington Post, 16 Sep. 2019
  • For the first time, scientists didn’t need to culture organisms to study them in the lab.
    Carrie Arnold, WIRED, 21 Apr. 2019
  • Researchers are learning to culture organoids in blood, or in tandem with immune cells.
    Max G. Levy, Wired, 9 Mar. 2022
  • Her doctor prescribed a third drug, ciprofloxacin, the last of the three major front-line medicines, and cultured her urine.
    Matt Richtel, BostonGlobe.com, 13 July 2019
  • Her doctor prescribed a third drug, ciproflaxacin, the last of the three major front-line medicines, and cultured her urine.
    Matt Richtel, New York Times, 6 Apr. 2019
  • No one informed or obtained consent from Lacks or her family to culture her cells.
    Grace Halden, Discover Magazine, 20 Feb. 2015
  • And, given the right cells to culture, its facility can produce any kind of meat, from duck to lobster.
    Janelle Bitker, San Francisco Chronicle, 4 Nov. 2021
  • The center includes cell culturing equipment to grow lung cells from patients, to be used for drug screening.
    Bradley J. Fikes, sandiegouniontribune.com, 18 June 2018
  • Nuclear weapons are in the zeitgeist, but can culture stir public demand for real-world progress once again?
    Ernest J. Moniz, Variety, 23 Oct. 2025
  • The resulting product has a simpler list of ingredients and is cultured in the glass jar in which it is sold.
    Candice Choi, The Seattle Times, 26 June 2017
  • Her mother referred to her as sweet, smart, well-traveled and cultured, according to the news station.
    oregonlive, 29 Oct. 2019
  • Afterward, researchers swabbed the bakers’ washed hands and cultured the microbes.
    New York Times, 11 Apr. 2020
  • The researchers infuse this layer with a type of stem cells, known as mesenchymal cells, cultured from the bone marrow of each patient.
    Maya Wei-Haas, Smithsonian, 10 Jan. 2017
  • For over a decade, Shedd has cultured plankton in-house to feed and nourish tens of thousands of animals on site daily.
    Adriana Pérez, Chicago Tribune, 7 July 2023
  • Joe built a legacy and culture around treating others with kindness and respect, asking only for the same in return.
    al, 25 May 2022
  • That the internet, and perhaps culture as a whole, exist for fleeting amusement seems to be a self-evident fact for her.
    New York Times, 14 Mar. 2022
  • Australia is the last place in the world where pearls are cultured in wild oysters, using mollusks not from hatcheries but handpicked by divers from the deep ocean floor.
    Vera Sprothen, WSJ, 12 Nov. 2016
  • How will culture combine with the increasingly digital world to affect cities, space or even the human body?
    Washington Post, 31 Jan. 2021
  • Scientists found that the cells cultured from her tumor samples didn’t readily die off, and could reproduce again and again.
    Peter Marks, The Mercury News, 20 Apr. 2017
  • Oui yogurt is cultured for eight hours in the small glass jars in which it is sold, and doesn’t contain artificial flavors or preservatives.
    Annie Gasparro, WSJ, 20 Sep. 2017
  • The next step to studying these gargantuan bacteria is for scientists to figure out how to culture them in labs.
    Beth Mole, Ars Technica, 25 June 2022
  • Sign up Monkey blastoids promise to be better models, but the right recipe for culturing them proved elusive.
    Bymitch Leslie, science.org, 6 Apr. 2023
  • Scientists are able to culture cells such as endothelial cells [which line the inside of blood and lymphatic vessels] for a little bit longer.
    Andrea Thompson, Scientific American, 7 Aug. 2019
  • From the pastures, the cows produce a daily flow of milk churned into butter, cultured into yogurt, and curdled into wheels of alpine cheese.
    Danielle Bernabe, National Geographic, 15 Sep. 2019
  • How leaders handle exits and transitions shapes culture far beyond the moment itself.
    Greg Peters, Forbes.com, 24 Feb. 2026

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