Sentence for that | Use that in a sentence

Sentences using the word that. The sentences below are ordered by length from shorter and easier to longer and more complex. They use that in a sentence, providing visitors a sentence for that.

  • I know that. (8)
  • I am to believe that? (10)
  • That could not be wrong. (8)
  • That money is a burden. (10)
  • Make him discontinue that practice. (22)
  • He could not think how that occurred. (1)
  • Suddenly she understood that saying. (12)
  • There is no ideal that it represents. (9)
  • Well, he had known that she would not. (8)
  • They cure their own hams at that house. (10)
  • You have paid five cents for that newspaper. (1)
  • We thought that at last we had convinced her. (10)
  • He moved that hand, held it out in supplication. (8)
  • That if one rose from the dead it would not avail. (9)
  • The hotel had bought three dozen of that little lot! (8)
  • I could see that he was very angry, and yet uncertain. (9)
  • Lorm gave orders that no visitors were to be admitted. (12)
  • The wonder and glory of art is that it is without formulas. (9)
  • Then the hedonist in her revolted against that ascetic vision. (8)
  • You hold that the young grocer should have a soul above sugar. (10)
  • The gardener objected that he really must make the lawn smooth. (10)
  • He dimly understood that with those last words a wire had snapped. (8)
  • That circumstance, ladies and gentlemen, has been a lesson to me. (10)
  • It occurred yesterday, and on no other occasion that I am aware of. (22)
  • She stirred at that, smiled up at him, and instantly went off again. (8)
  • That was previous to her perjury by little, by a day-eighteen hours. (10)
  • His eyes are fixed on the double-doors that lead into the dining-room. (8)
  • That animals like to hear a violin played seems to be clearly proved. (21)
  • I have told you that I am more to blame than he, but I must accuse him. (10)
  • Beppo ignominiously confessed that he had not heard of this second duel. (10)
  • Understand once for all that I shall take two thousand shares in this mine. (8)
  • That fellow went to the wrong station, I suppose, for we saw nothing of him. (10)
  • He would not have done that had he not smelled sympathy with the performance. (10)
  • She must do and say nothing that could excite him, and bring back his illness. (8)
  • Neither spoke for a time that seemed long, and then it was Clementina who spoke. (9)
  • Before quitting the shop, Beauchamp warned Carpendike that he should come again. (10)
  • It is a little grief to me that I think this man loves music more deeply than I do. (10)
  • That will be in their secresy: in the close and boundless together of clasped hands. (10)
  • Better as a whole, I mean, for there are passages in this beyond any in that, I think. (14)
  • For possibly, at that moment when he stood watching her window-light (ah, poor heart!) (10)
  • I should not like to leave out the tobacco in this good change that was wrought in him. (10)
  • Nor at the moment did it seem in the least strange that he should conceive such an odd thought. (8)
  • He talked with an insistent courtesy and worldly coolness that had apparently been recently acquired. (12)
  • She would tell Alan how the jay had asked her for that last dance, and then never come near her again. (9)
  • A good genius prompted Evan to avoid the silly squabble that might have ensued and made him ridiculous. (10)
  • Sometimes Miss Andrews apparently knew that he was playing with her innocence, and sometimes she did not. (9)
  • Chronicles of the season in London informed him that he was not the only fellow to whom the gates were shut. (10)
  • She remembered too the raindrops on the vines like a million tiny lamps, and the throstle that began singing. (8)
  • The crouth of the Welsh bards differed in some respects from those that were made use of by the Breton bards. (3)
  • I hastened to prepare my pack, and tackle the steep ascent that lay before me; but I had something on my mind. (2)
  • By the time that it would have taken him so long as to walk to the top of the grand stairway he was back again. (9)
  • When we do have an aristocracy, it will be an aristocracy that will go ahead of anything the world has ever seen. (9)
  • The submission to a tangle that could be cut through instantaneously by any exertion of a noble will, convicts them. (10)
  • As long as a man is not disabled he can go forward; can it be anything but fear that makes him stop and finally retire? (7)
  • He attributed the unheated smile to a defect in her manner, that was always chargeable with something, as he remembered. (10)
  • It shows the force of his genius that he was able to make his works in the strict contrapuntal forms full of real feeling. (3)
  • When he heard that you were going to leave Milan for Baveno, he was mad, and with two fists up, against all English persons. (10)
  • But at times it seemed to him that a knowledge of her antecedents might relieve him from his ridiculous perplexity of feeling. (10)
  • At night Marko sent her word that she might sleep in peace, for things would soon be arranged and her father had left the city. (10)
  • After the death of young Bosinney, whose mistress she had so reprehensibly become, he had heard that she had left Soames at once. (8)
  • Richard stuck to that view of the case, and stuck to it the faster the more imperatively the urgency of a movement dawned upon him. (10)
  • Resigned to his charge, a feeling of sheer physical faintness so beset her that she could hardly reach the compartment he had reserved. (8)
  • Mrs. Chump had identified herself with Brookfield so warmly that the defection of Mr. Pericles was a fine legitimate excitement to her. (10)
  • That made her think of the paper in her work-basket, and she decided not to make the careworn, distracted man ask her for it, after all. (9)
  • Governor de Montmagny bade the pioneers welcome, and, after listening to their scheme, told them flatly that he thought it was all a mistake. (19)
  • So the contest raged, Mrs. Chump being run clean through the soul twenty times, without touching the consciousness of that sensitive essence. (10)
  • Their good friend saw that Marianne was unhappy, and felt that every thing was due to her which might make her at all less so. (4)
  • While these words were issuing between the yellow stumps of teeth in that withered mouth, Hughs stood silent, the back of his arm covering his eyes. (8)
  • That is, he did nice things for others without asking; but with her there was always an explicit pause, and an implicit prayer and permission, first. (9)
  • She was provided for under that settlement he had made on her mother fifteen years ago, well before the not altogether unexpected crisis in his affairs. (8)
  • Thus she thought, under pressure of the knowledge, that unless rushing into conflicts bigger than conceivable, she had to do it, and should therefore think it. (10)
  • No Sunday is complete without it—not because its pages invariably delight, but because, like flies in summer, there is no screen that will altogether exclude them. (16)

Also see sentences for: tharp, thatch.

Definition of that:

  • that, th_at, pron. demons. and rel. | as a demons. (_pl. those) it points out a person or thing: the former or more distant thing: not this but the other: as a rel._, who or which. | conj. used to introduce a clause: because: for: in order that. (0)

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