Sentence for has | Use has in a sentence

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

  • He has confessed. (1)
  • It has been done. (8)
  • Willoughby has it. (10)
  • Has Emma read it all? (4)
  • And she has lost flesh. (8)
  • She has been very unwell. (22)
  • It has saved me from much. (22)
  • It has not been many times. (10)
  • Has any one begged of you to-day? (8)
  • So her father has a firm hand too. (8)
  • Never has he failed in generosity. (10)
  • Red of heat, its shape has passed. (10)
  • What is the gain if he has been smart? (10)
  • He has little character for the moment. (10)
  • In either case, she has been badly used. (10)
  • But look here, I say, this has been opened! (8)
  • Mr. Blancove has nearly quitted this sphere. (10)
  • He has got rid of one to take up with a viler. (10)
  • It is my lord who has had the chief influence. (10)
  • Verrian joined the group that Bushwick has left. (9)
  • He has to be careful not to smell of his office. (10)
  • He has taught at the Paris Conservatory since 1897. (3)
  • He has had his punishment, gentlemen, you may depend. (8)
  • All danger is not yet over, but hope has good grounds. (14)
  • He says he has business there, but will not tell me what. (4)
  • It has been said that the Board is only part of a machine. (8)
  • That scheme wants two to carry it out: she has no courage. (10)
  • Mr Elliot has sense to understand the value of such a woman. (4)
  • He has not said, has not shown, he loves me. (10)
  • It has to be excluded: on certain points they must not think. (10)
  • He has not been near the Bank since that day; nor to his home. (22)
  • Twice has she condescended to give me her opinion (unasked too!) (4)
  • No Latin Quarter welcomes him, for this community has no centre. (16)
  • She has only to kill him and say that he wronged or insulted her. (7)
  • On first seeing her he gasped like one who has recovered a lost thing. (10)
  • The Miss Webbs all play, and their father has not so good an income as yours. (4)
  • As I have hinted, it is but a little while that he has had any standing at all. (9)
  • Capital, whereat Diana Warwick aimed her superbest sneer, has its instant duties. (10)
  • Why does she refuse the monstrous sums which his family has offered her to leave him? (12)
  • One reason has been the lack of demand by the public for the old-time partisan journal. (16)
  • But could she give more loyal guarantee Than wooing Wisdom, that in her a soul Has risen? (10)
  • I do not believe Isabella has any fortune at all: but that will not signify in your family. (4)
  • A fresher national song of a beautiful incident of our country life has never been written. (10)
  • Louisa de Saldar has changed his opinion, and much impressed this eccentric young gentleman. (10)
  • Yet there, too, we find, that character has its problems to solve; there are shades in salt. (10)
  • He is there to guard that part of the coin and bills which has not been expressed to New York. (21)
  • Nowhere on the Continent has a work of equal importance of so early a date been brought to view. (3)
  • He has sloughed off his former skin, and the coin in which he pays to-day is of another mintage. (12)
  • He is in his eight-and-sixtieth year, and he has never received anything but obloquy for his pains. (10)
  • Nine-and-twenty years ago you gave a singing-lesson in my house: the pest has been in it ever since! (10)
  • No plea, however piteous, will force her to disgorge, they know, until the last stand has been played. (21)
  • This half and half business, the half and half manners of this generation, has brought all this upon us. (8)
  • Vernon took him from his father to instruct him, and he has a right to say what shall be done with him. (10)
  • Her star has foundered in eclipse, The shriek of madness on her lips; Shreds of her, and no more, we see. (10)
  • The rhinoceros has always been a problem to animal keepers, for captivity generally results in early death. (21)
  • I can understand that she has lost her will and distinct sight; but you are clear-sighted, and can estimate. (10)
  • She has no shame, and thus, believing in, she never violates, nature, and offends no law, wild as she may seem. (10)
  • The result has been the promise of gratuitous official favors and almost invariably a reduced rate for permits. (21)
  • This life, so refined, so intelligent, so gracefully simple, I do not suppose has anywhere else had its parallel. (9)
  • On that day I took him to club, where he saw many old friends (he has not been here for twenty years, poor fellow!) (14)
  • I shall deliver it when he recovers and watch my opportunity to learn its contents after he has broken the seal himself. (18)
  • Mr. Radnor has genius; I have watched him; it is genius; he shows it in all he does; one of the memorable men of our times. (10)
  • Now, fellow-citizens, it cannot be denied that the Republican party has suffered by too long and too easy a tenure of office. (14)
  • Passive despair comes later; it has nothing to do with mental action, and is mainly a corruption or degradation of our blood. (10)
  • Should he ever propose to me (which I have very little reason to imagine he has any thought of doing), I shall not accept him. (4)
  • I meditate over the past, here in my loneliness, and wonder if mine is not a career which no other circus animal has equalled. (21)
  • His silk hat has a date no earlier than the year before the last, and his boots, scrupulously polished, are innocent of patches. (1)
  • Our sharp Monmouth air provokes her to walk briskly when she is out, and the exercise has once or twice given colour to her cheeks. (10)
  • In this article, which has not been reprinted, Lowell considers briefly the possibility of disunion through the action of the South. (14)
  • We are masters of the river; no succour can reach you from France; General Amherst with a large army has sailed to the southern frontier. (19)
  • He has a grandnephew in want of a school: visited the dormitories, refectory, and sheds: tasted the well-water, addressed me as Mr. Matthew. (10)
  • Nevertheless he does read his English; he has, too, the fatal tendency to the bringing forth of Bills in the manner of Jove big with Minerva. (10)
  • So, then, Japan has decided to renounce its language, for the adoption of the language it may choose among the foremost famous European tongues. (10)
  • The very fact that the book has no mixed audience removes from Literature an element which is ever the greatest check on licentiousness in Drama. (8)
  • Lesley is at present but five and twenty, and has already given himself up to melancholy and Despair; what a difference between him and his Father! (4)
  • Her astonishment congealed into hauteur, and then dissolved into the helplessness of a lady who has been offered a rudeness; but still she did not speak. (9)
  • The inclemency of heaven, which has thus endowed the language of Scotland with words, has also largely modified the spirit of its poetry. (2)
  • Between himself and Countess Lena there had been tender dealings about the age when sweetmeats have lost their attraction, and the charm has to be supplied. (10)
  • He has written to her vehemently, has called a second time, has vowed publicly that Mrs. Levellier shall have her warning against Lord Fleetwood. (10)

Also see sentences for: harz, hassan.

Definition of has:

  • has, haz, 3d pers. sing. pres. ind. of have_.(0)

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