Sentence for author | Use author in a sentence

Author example sentence. The sentences below are ordered by length from shorter and easier to longer and more complex. They use author in a sentence, providing visitors a sentence for author.

  • There is flower of author! (8)
  • The author also gains. (16)
  • Few, in fact, want flower of author. (8)
  • After all, the critic is also an author. (16)
  • The author of the book of Genesis knew better. (14)
  • Think of us having a real live author in the house! (9)
  • My author discourages the slightest admixture of fable. (9)
  • The young lady took the letter without noticing its author. (10)
  • To either then an untold tale Was Life, and author, hero, we. (10)
  • Are not both, in fact, merely flower of author true to himself? (8)
  • They are of no value—to the public, the publisher, or the author. (16)
  • Felix Freeland, author, wearing the very first gray top hat of the season. (8)
  • No author, no publisher, should think that variety invalidates criticism. (16)
  • Sainte-Beuve was a disappointed author, jealous of the success of others. (16)
  • All the while I did him homage as the first author by calling whom I had met. (9)
  • The object of the System was no sooner safe than its great author was in danger! (10)
  • This must truly have cost him dear, as any author of fixed habits will understand. (9)
  • I believe neither his history nor his novel brought the author more gain than fame. (9)
  • Where it was possible or at all desirable the proof was next submitted to the author. (9)
  • But my author, here, has suggested a brilliant fact which I was unwittingly groping for. (9)
  • Even if he speaks it with unnecessary roughness, the author cannot legitimately complain. (16)
  • It apparently does not affect the author directly, but it may reach him through the reader. (9)
  • The author wrathfully exclaims—but what he exclaims cannot be summarized, so various is it. (16)
  • This poet was Heinrich Heine, who dominated me longer than any one author that I have known. (9)
  • All this ought certainly to unmake the author in question, but this is not really the effect. (9)
  • To the public, neither the vanity nor the purse of the author is of the slightest consequence. (16)
  • For the Silent Bargain so works as to give to many an author an exaggerated idea of his importance. (16)
  • Only through honest, widespread, really representative criticism, can the author know these things. (16)
  • It will perish; and if he has not the root of literature in him, he will perish as an author with it. (9)
  • Does the author prefer to be fought in the open or stabbed in the dark?—that is really his only choice. (16)
  • If not that, he proposes that the author shall pay for the stereotype plates, and take fifteen per cent. (9)
  • He remained for nearly a year the only author I had seen, and I met him once again before I saw any other. (9)
  • Many good fellows suffered from my admiration of this author or that, and many more pretty, patient maids. (9)
  • But he held me by his potent spell, and for a time he dominated me as completely as any author I have read. (9)
  • Fair and candid criticism every one has a right to publish, although the author may suffer a loss from it. (16)
  • A great author through the process of growing great has become known to increasing numbers of his countrymen. (14)
  • But his experience as an author had not been very great, and such as it was it had hardened and sharpened him. (9)
  • For the author, no matter how disinterested, criticism is reputation—perhaps a reputation that can be coined. (16)
  • Forgivably enough, the author is of all persons the one most likely to be unjust to critics and to criticism. (16)
  • But I shut my heart to all such misgivings and went on reading him much more than I read any other German author. (9)
  • Now we begin to feel that human nature is quite enough, and that the best an author can do is to show it as it is. (9)
  • The author gives you a real sense of her beauty, her grace, her being always charmingly in a hurry and always late. (9)
  • He read it aloud to the author on the afternoon of the fourth day, with the satisfaction in his voice that he felt. (10)
  • It is not only interesting but valuable, and the character of the author, as it blinks out continually, most engaging. (14)
  • Our criticism is disabled by the unwillingness of the critic to learn from an author, and his readiness to mistrust him. (9)
  • All this ought certainly to unmake the author in question, and strew his disjecta membra wide over the realm of oblivion. (9)
  • I think that every author who is honest with himself must own that his work would be twice as good if it were done twice. (9)
  • The publisher is undoubtedly honest, however, and the author had better put away the comforting question of his integrity. (9)
  • Their dumb and passive need is apt only to manifest itself negatively, or in the form of weariness of this author or that. (9)
  • Violetta repeated it, as to herself, tonelessly; a method of making an old unkindness strike back on its author with effect. (10)
  • The opening scenes in the Pacific were like Paradise, as the author said, to dwellers in Brixton, or other purlieus of London. (2)
  • I suppose no great author was ever more visited by letter and in person than he, or kept a faithfuler conscience for his guests. (9)
  • One thinks first what the author may suffer when violent hands are laid upon his soul, and one recoils; but what of the public? (16)
  • This was held to exceed the limits of fair criticism, since it attacked the character of the author as well as the book itself. (16)
  • By the same right and on the same terms, another New England poetess, whom I met those first days in Boston, was a Boston author. (9)
  • But all that has been said assumes the cheerful sacrifice of the particular author who must stake his all upon his single talent. (16)
  • The court said that this, even though it implied that the author was at fault, was not a personal attack on his private character. (16)
  • When the author came to revise the material, he found sins against taste which his zeal for righteousness could not suffice to atone for. (9)
  • As an author, you will sympathize with me, while as editor, you will ask me blandly how flint-skins are quoted in the last prices current. (14)
  • Nor may the author argue more subtly that, until criticism is a science and truth unmistakable, he should be given the benefit of the doubt. (16)
  • The disappointed author turned critic may indeed be incompetent; but, if he is so, it is for reasons that his disappointment does not supply. (16)
  • It was disposed of to a bookseller, it was even advertised, and why the business proceeded no farther, the author has never been able to learn. (4)
  • An author who has long enjoyed their favor suddenly and rather mysteriously loses it, through his opinions on certain matters of literary taste, say. (9)
  • An author who has long enjoyed their favor, suddenly and rather mysteriously loses it, through his opinions on certain matters of literary taste, say. (9)
  • The young author who wins recognition in a first-class magazine has achieved a double success, first, with the editor, and then with the best reading public. (9)
  • Accurately to know it is of the first commercial importance for publisher and author, of the first public importance for the effective leaders of public opinion. (16)

Also see sentences for: creator, originator, writer.

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