How to Use geography in a Sentence
geography
noun-
The geography, the way that the dust kicks off the tires.
—Brayden Garcia, Fort Worth Star-Telegram, 16 Apr. 2026
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The rest of Nike’s geographies missed the mark.
—Jeff Marks, CNBC, 19 Dec. 2025
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The source added that geography played a large part in her choice to leave.
—Natalie Stone, PEOPLE.com, 6 Aug. 2021
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The four projects span a range of subjects and geographies.
—Naman Ramachandran, Variety, 17 May 2026
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To some extent, this is true across geographies, the study shows.
—Martino Carrera, Footwear News, 21 Oct. 2025
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This isn’t the first case where Airbnb got its geography wrong.
—Christopher Elliott, Mercury News, 4 May 2026
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Look at our geography, guarded left and right by vast oceans.
—James Stavridis, Time, 7 Jan. 2023
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They were built into the very geography of the city.
—Tonika Lewis Johnson, Chicago Tribune, 22 Mar. 2026
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And the tool will map for you where, within your geography, first, what are the paths?
—Recode Staff, Recode, 21 June 2018
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The nation’s unique geography is what sets these wines apart.
—Marnie Old, Philly.com, 6 Sep. 2017
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Because of the geography, your state trooper may be up to two days away.
—Clare Hymes, CBS News, 28 June 2019
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Iran controls the strait through mines, drones and geography.
—Farah N. Jan, The Conversation, 14 Apr. 2026
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The geography of the risk is equally clear.
—John W.h. Denton Ao, Fortune, 6 June 2026
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Investors who don’t study their geography are liable to be held back a grade.
—Jacky Wong, WSJ, 17 May 2021
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About the geography that shapes — and sometimes breaks — them.
—San Diego Union-Tribune, 4 Apr. 2022
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The price tag varies by geography and the number of syringes used.
—Washington Post, 17 Dec. 2021
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The move marks a shift not just in geography, but in identity.
—Nicole Buss, Sacbee.com, 21 Mar. 2026
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Tehran has long used its geography to shape energy and trade flows.
—Efrat Lachter, FOXNews.com, 22 Aug. 2025
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What struck me at the time, was the role of cross-pollination of ideas across geographies.
—Alex Lazarow, Forbes.com, 28 Jan. 2026
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And Hoosiers' beliefs across the state vary as much as its geography.
—Kaitlin Lange, IndyStar, 22 Sep. 2025
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The geography has now changed, and there's entire chunks of the beach missing.
—Paul P. Murphy, CNN, 28 Aug. 2020
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The four-day war was brief but fierce, with hostilities waged across vast geographies.
—Michael Kugelman, Time, 26 June 2026
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The data backs him up—and the geography surprised even him.
—Nick Lichtenberg, Fortune, 28 May 2026
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The geography doesn’t make sense.
—Mac Engel january 18, Fort Worth Star-Telegram, 18 Jan. 2026
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That was by far the strongest geography.
—Natasha Abellard, CNBC, 30 Mar. 2026
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With climate change, for instance, the geography of floods may change.
—Kuwar Singh, Quartz India, 10 Oct. 2019
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That is due in part to geography, with high winds and shallow seas, and in part to policy.
—The Economist, 21 Sep. 2019
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What geographies will the new DC cover?
—David Moin, Footwear News, 18 June 2026
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The cheery paints for the walls were selected due to geography as much as mood-boosting.
—Shoko Wagner, House Beautiful, 18 Nov. 2019
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By luck of geography, his small hut sits on one of the finest coffee-growing areas in the world.
—Kevin Sieff, Anchorage Daily News, 12 June 2019
Some of these examples are programmatically compiled from various online sources to illustrate current usage of the word 'geography.' 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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