Sentence for to-day | Use to-day in a sentence

Examples of to-day sentences. The sentences below are ordered by length from shorter and easier to longer and more complex. They use to-day in a sentence, providing visitors a sentence for to-day.

  • I guess not to-day. (13)
  • To-day, it yields at least two thirds. (16)
  • Only let the old woman come to me to-day! (5)
  • We leave England to-day. (10)
  • We leave England to-day. (22)
  • I feel like a ghost to-day. (22)
  • Just out of hospital to-day. (8)
  • They are alive in her to-day. (8)
  • We had a case of arson to-day. (8)
  • Here to-day and gone to-morrow! (8)
  • I shall sit rather late to-day. (8)
  • I saw Wright to-day for a moment. (13)
  • I only had the half day to-day, Jem. (8)
  • It is the same to-day as last night. (10)
  • To-day he gave it no further thought. (12)
  • I wonder whereabouts they will upset to-day. (4)
  • There is not a bit of fish to be got to-day. (4)
  • Let him have all he can get of you both to-day. (8)
  • To-day he is looking forward to Patterne Port. (10)
  • To-day her eyes looked tired, and she was pale. (8)
  • One breathes earth and heaven to-day out of doors. (10)
  • Alphonse will never beat his achievement of to-day. (10)
  • True, to-day the answer was delayed longer than usual. (5)
  • The case of the small circus of to-day bears this out. (21)
  • You are not to make fun to-day, because it is my birthday. (8)
  • He was going to treat to fifteen or twenty bottles to-day. (12)
  • To-day we hesitate at building them as thick as 12 inches. (17)
  • To-day it is raining and eating away the snow very fast…. (14)
  • The weather to-day really seemed of that kind, she remarked. (10)
  • Well, to-morrow, if not to-day, the tripping may be expected! (10)
  • Her speculative ethereal mind clung to bald matter-of-fact to-day. (10)
  • The carriage is gone to-day, to bring Louisa and the Harvilles to-morrow. (4)
  • She had delivered herself of many yesterday in her engagements for to-day. (10)
  • No, to-day, while we were promenading; and I should hear him sing, he said. (10)
  • On an island in what is to-day known as Halifax Harbour, his body was buried. (19)
  • Yesterday I told you to hope; to-day I can say, believe that you will be saved. (10)
  • She said in the letter that she would see him in a few days after the fifteenth, which is to-day! (10)
  • To-day the grass is grass: his heart is chased by phantoms and finds rest nowhere. (10)
  • In fact, 90 per cent of the houses erected to-day use wooden studs and floor beams. (17)
  • And besides, you are variable, and off to-morrow what you are on to-day; is it not so? (22)
  • To-day he had not had the faintest desire to unbosom himself to Holly about his father. (8)
  • This immemorial game, watched by Gyp a hundred times, had to-day a special preciousness. (8)
  • Selkirk may be truly called the founder and father of the prosperous North-West of to-day. (19)
  • Queer that his route should take him past the very house to-day, after this new bereavement! (8)
  • I feel that if I was told to-day that I should die for you to-morrow, it would be happiness. (22)
  • Where a man can trust his own heart, and those of his friends, to-morrow is as good as to-day. (2)
  • He has sloughed off his former skin, and the coin in which he pays to-day is of another mintage. (12)
  • The sky to-day is like a gigantic blue bell tipped over to pour out the sunshine it cannot contain. (14)
  • We are so essentially of to-day that we behave as if to- morrow no more concerned us than yesterday. (9)
  • But the temptation to make money will be before you every moment, and to-day few men can resist that. (13)
  • Let us to-day rejoice and give thanks to Bungoot that the old order of things has passed forever away. (7)
  • The first formal examination by the investigating judge entrusted with the case will take place to-day. (12)
  • To-day when I was shopping after leaving the Holyroods, one of these unemployed came up and spoke to me. (8)
  • If you ask to see Louisburg to-day, you will be shown only a rolling meadow upon which sheep graze peacefully. (19)
  • It was his habit to sit by her at the piano corner, but to-day he stood as if prepared to be exceptionally severe. (8)
  • The older generation of cooks were not attracted by labor-saving devices, but the point of view to-day is different. (17)
  • To-day we think of locks and bolts and latches as distinct, but this was not so at the time they were being evolved. (17)
  • For it is recognized to-day that the publication of a paper is a business affair and not a matter of faith or revenge. (16)
  • I would almost wish and wait to see you to-day in the Gardens, but my crying has made me such a streaked thing to look at. (10)
  • I would almost wish and wait to see you to-day in the Gardens, but my crying has made me such a streaked thing to look at. (22)
  • No more to-day; but descend at your leisure, my dear, and we will try to mount again by-and-by, and not so fast, if you please. (10)
  • Bee, with soft eyes, was thinking of young Tharp, who to-day had told her that he loved her, and wondering if father would object. (8)
  • To-day there was a rumour at the mess table that the Austrians had abandoned Legnano, one of the four fortresses of the quadrilateral. (10)
  • The crew of the farm is only five all told, but to-day they are fifteen, and none strangers, save the owners of the travelling thresher. (8)
  • To-day he had taken advantage of the luncheon interval to bring her some flowers, with a note to say that he could not come that evening. (8)
  • To-day a double-hung window with weight-boxes is used in these dormers, and the whole width made too wide because of these additions to the sides. (17)
  • As you travel through Eastern Canada to-day you will frequently come upon crosses by the wayside, where the country folk kneel and say their prayers. (19)
  • The methods which are used in constructing the small house of to-day are not as simply classified as the previous description would lead one to believe. (17)
  • To-day the art was ravishingly companionable with her sweet-lighted face: too sweet, too vividly meaningful for pretty, if not of the strict severity for beautiful. (10)
  • You will see to-day on the outskirts of the older settlements little mounds, moss-covered tombstones which record the last resting-places of the forefathers of the hamlet. (19)

Also see sentences for: today, toddles.

Definition of to-day:

  • to-day, too-d’, n. this or the present day. (0)

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