Sentence for fiction | Use fiction in a sentence

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

  • These Englishwomen are a fiction! (10)
  • Of fiction it is part. (10)
  • Or was that always a fiction? (8)
  • I tell you no poetic fiction. (10)
  • Will these simple facts do for fiction? (9)
  • But that was only a diplomatic fiction. (19)
  • Her fiction of the headache pained her no longer. (10)
  • The war has never fully panned out in fiction yet. (9)
  • You have been reading too much fiction and verse. (10)
  • At what moment did our fiction lose this privilege? (9)
  • The fiction of her being free could not be sustained. (10)
  • The fiction which followed the war was yet all to come. (9)
  • It has been flattened out and savours of cheap fiction. (12)
  • We ourselves create the demand for bad and false fiction. (8)
  • That is to say, his fiction is to the last degree dramatic. (9)
  • Fiction, and especially foreign fiction, he did not care for. (8)
  • The story of Diana of the Crossways is to be read as fiction. (10)
  • The Public then is not to blame for the supply of bad, false fiction. (8)
  • Other traits are much more characteristic of our life and our fiction. (9)
  • Percy had not a common interest in fiction; still less for high comedy. (10)
  • Chorus was a pretty fiction on the part of the thrilling and topping voice. (10)
  • The most popular works of fiction, such as leave nothing to our imagination. (8)
  • If I read fiction, let it be fiction; airier than hard fact. (10)
  • Shun those who cry out against fiction and have no taste for elegant writing. (10)
  • For lunch she drank some beef tea, keeping up the fiction of her indisposition. (8)
  • The funny part of it is our finding it in books of fiction composed for payment. (10)
  • He imagined a fiction dealing with the situation as something already accomplished. (9)
  • For a number of years I read them again and again without much caring for other fiction. (9)
  • They are what we see in the stories which, perhaps, hold the first place in American fiction. (9)
  • She claims the being a good friend to fiction in feeding popular voracity with all her stores. (10)
  • This is what makes a love intrigue of some sort all but essential to the popularity of any fiction. (9)
  • The art of fiction has, in fact, become a finer art in our day than it was with Dickens and Thackeray. (9)
  • I was reading right and left in every direction, but chiefly in that of poetry, criticism, and fiction. (9)
  • Honourable will fiction then appear; honourable, a fount of life, an aid to life, quick with our blood. (10)
  • Living in a world where demand creates supply, we writers of fiction furnish the exception to this rule. (8)
  • I do not think the fiction of our own time even always equal to this work, or perhaps more than seldom so. (9)
  • It is not quite so clear as to when and where a piece of fiction ceases to be a novella and becomes a novel. (9)
  • Here he was almost as fine as in his poetry, and only less fine than in his more fortunate essays in fiction. (9)
  • He was at a loss what to invent to detain him, beyond the stale fiction that his father was coming to-morrow. (10)
  • In fact, the charge of narrowness accuses the whole tendency of modern fiction as much as the American school. (9)
  • His work took the shape of scholarship, fiction, criticism, but poetry gave it all a touch of grace and beauty. (9)
  • This question came up in my mind lately with regard to English fiction and its form, or rather its formlessness. (9)
  • History without her is the skeleton map of events: Fiction a picture of figures modelled on no skeleton-anatomy. (10)
  • He used to read the modern novels I praised, in or out of print; but I do not think he much liked reading fiction. (9)
  • That fiction of vested rights is the stock corporation under the genius and authority of the Common Law of England. (18)
  • When the pain was easier he muffled himself in the idea of her jealousy of Laetitia Dale, and deemed the wish a fiction. (10)
  • With this great book and with Esmond and The Newcomes, he gave a name eminent, singular, and beloved to English fiction. (10)
  • Fiction and verse appeal to a besotted public, that judges of the merit of the work by the standard of its taste: avaunt! (10)
  • His laughter and his talk sung about her and dispersed the fiction; he was the very sea-wind for bracing unstrung nerves. (10)
  • It does not avail to say that the daily papers teem with facts far fouler and deadlier than any which fiction could imagine. (9)
  • So far as it goes, though, it ought to stop the mouths of those who complain that fiction is enslaved to propriety among us. (9)
  • They deal, to be sure, with the office of Criticism and the art of Fiction, and so far their present name is not a misnomer. (9)
  • But it does mean that Balzac, when he wrote it, was under the burden of the very traditions which he has helped fiction to throw off. (9)
  • It must be as hard to think up anything new in that kind as in romanticistic fiction, which circus-acting otherwise largely resembles. (9)
  • There is also a sentimentality, or pseudo-emotionality (I have not the right phrase for it), which awaits full recognition in fiction. (9)
  • We must make concessions to him, not in this respect only, but in several others, chief among which is the motive for reading fiction. (9)
  • Fiction implores you to heave a bigger breast and take her in with this heavenly preservative helpmate, her inspiration and her essence. (10)
  • But there is no such positive and obvious necessity, I am sorry to say, for fiction, or not for the higher sort of fiction. (9)
  • I found that the Italians had no novels which treated of their contemporary life; that they had no modern fiction but the historical romance. (9)
  • Whatever in my mental make-up is wild and visionary, whatever is untrue, whatever is injurious, I can trace to the perusal of some work of fiction. (9)
  • In the theatre we have conjectured how and why this may be, but the privilege, for less obvious reasons, seems yet more liberally granted in fiction. (9)
  • The riches in this shape of fiction are effectively inestimable, if we consider what has been done in the short story, and is still doing everywhere. (9)
  • He was disposed to excuse the formal look of his bookcases, which were filled with sets, and presented some phalanxes of fiction in rather severe array. (9)
  • He was probably most at odds with me in regard to my theories of fiction, though he persisted in declaring his pleasure in my own fiction. (9)
  • But if the humanitarian impulse has mostly disappeared from Christmas fiction, I think it has never so generally characterized all fiction. (9)
  • Is it not preferable to be the pretty idiot, the passive beauty, the adorable bundle of caprices, very feminine, very sympathetic, of romantic and sentimental fiction? (10)

Also see sentences for: anecdote, fable, falsehood, legend, lie, novel, romance.

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