Sentence for books | Use books in a sentence

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

  • The books were dummies. (8)
  • The books had costly bindings. (10)
  • But he was all form, ice, books. (8)
  • There he gave his ideas of books. (9)
  • Those books get out of print quickly. (14)
  • She is not spared in the Biggest of Books. (10)
  • He studies everything; he has written books. (10)
  • I do not know when the books happened in my hands. (9)
  • Books he could not read; thoughts were disturbing. (10)
  • This is the sort of thing you read of in books, John! (8)
  • He keeps all the books, and helps mother run the house. (9)
  • Out of his circle of attraction books were my resource. (10)
  • One came from her books, and the other from her toilette. (4)
  • Publishers of books complain that reviews do not help sales. (16)
  • After him came Arkadelt, who published several books of madrigals. (3)
  • Beaton rose too, and Fulkerson put the two books in his lax hands. (9)
  • Not a page of his books reveals malevolence or a sneer at humanity. (10)
  • In short, all private talk about books bears the stamp of sincerity. (16)
  • Just as she might have written to one of her friends about bonnets, and balls, and books! (10)
  • Mr. Clemens himself no longer offers his books to the public in that way. (9)
  • But now I devoured his books one after another as fast as I could read them. (9)
  • His glance had been resting on the table, which was covered with many books. (12)
  • There is no outlay for copying documents, or visiting libraries, or buying books. (9)
  • If the reference books suggested are available, additional reading should be done. (3)
  • Is it for an artist to conspire, and be carbonaro, and kiss books, and, mon Dieu! (10)
  • Rosamund noticed the peculiarity of the books he selected for his private reading. (10)
  • I had now the free range of the State Library, and I drew many sorts of books from it. (9)
  • Have books printed or build refuges or bury it or waste it; only take the burden from me. (12)
  • Over their books, Vernon had abruptly shut up a volume and related the tale of the house. (10)
  • The architect was smoking a cigar and carried in his arms a heavy bag of papers and books. (13)
  • He had not dismissed literature because he had collected his writings into a series of books. (14)
  • His published exercises in Satire produce a flush of the article in the Reviews of his books. (10)
  • I had to say just where I stood, and why, and I mentioned some books that helped to get me there. (9)
  • And Smither had told her more than once that she had picked books off the floor in doing the room. (8)
  • I do not think he has the slightest evidence on which to show you that it would make books dearer. (14)
  • Nelly read a great deal; she kept up with all the magazines, and knew all the books in his library. (9)
  • Perhaps you will do me the honour to retain for yourself any of my books that may give you pleasure. (8)
  • The room indeed had a worn carpet, a few old chairs, and was lined from floor to ceiling with books. (8)
  • But perhaps I liked the loft best because the books were handiest there, and because I could be alone. (9)
  • She sat there every morning catching those thoughts, and placing them in one or other of her little books. (8)
  • To us who have our lives so largely in books the material world is always the fable, and the ideal the fact. (9)
  • He had often dealt with such situations in his books, and now that one had come true was completely at a loss. (8)
  • Yet I cannot say that it was a passion of mine like Don Quixote, or the other books that I had loved intensely. (9)
  • Her look at him fed the school on thoughts of what love really is, when it is not fished out of books and poetry. (10)
  • She was in earnest so far as to send down to the library for medical books, and books upon diet. (10)
  • When he read those books something happened in him, and he went out of doors again in passionate quest of a river. (8)
  • When you and the Middletons are gone, we shall go on so quietly and happily together with our books and our music! (4)
  • As to their aesthetic merit I will not say anything, for I have not looked at either of the books for thirty years. (9)
  • I like every one of his books that I have read, and I believe that I have read nearly every one that he has written. (9)
  • I am, therefore, very busy at my books, the spinning, the weaving, the oversight of the dairy and the poultry-yards. (18)
  • His three books on French composers, and his many criticisms, have made him known in the domain of musical literature. (3)
  • He put the chairs in their places, cleared the table of his books, put the checked cover on it, and opened the window. (12)
  • There are many books on shelves, and on the floor, an overflowing pile, whereon rests a soft hat, and a black knobby stick. (8)
  • Nedda looked and saw a man, like Richard Coeur de Lion in the history books, with a straw-colored moustache just going gray. (8)
  • Summer and winter he sat there among his books, seldom stirring abroad by day except for a walk, and by night yet more rarely. (9)
  • She has been so much with books that she does not feel odd in speaking of them as if they were the usual topics of conversation. (9)
  • He has therefore not died, as some men die, the remote impersonal sort, but he is yet thrillingly alive in every page of his books. (9)
  • I spoke it even to the quaint character whom I borrowed his books from, and who might almost have come out of his books. (9)
  • Some color of my prime impressions has tinged the fictitious experiences of people in my books, but I find very little of it in my memory. (9)
  • Westover had taken to sending her books and magazines, and in thanking him for these she would sometimes speak of things she had read in them. (9)
  • But his Idea had been surpassingly luminous, alive, a creation; and this came before him with the yellow skin of a Theory, bred, born of books. (10)
  • Honest criticism addressed to the public, by writers who study how to interest it rather than how to flatter the producers of books, would educate. (16)
  • Naturally enough the books were written by a perfectly good woman, the wife of an English clergyman, whose friends were greatly scandalized by them. (9)
  • Even they who write books are not exempt; they must, or they feel that they must, deal gently with reputations commercially dear to their publisher. (16)
  • Likewise the married daughters, three plentiful ladies, prime cooks, Who bowed to him while they condemned, in meek hope to stand high in his books. (10)
  • For the first time it struck him with what majestic leisureliness they turned the pages of their books, trifled with their teacups, or lightly snored. (8)
  • Had the standard of the public taste been set in philosophy, and the national enthusiasm centred in philosophers, he would at least have worked at books. (10)
  • They listened gravely to Laura, who related that not only English books, but foreign (repeated and emphasized), had been supplied by Mr. Chips to Mr. Barrett. (10)

Also see sentences for: bookseller, booksellers.

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