Sentence for houses | Use houses in a sentence

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

  • He warms her, and she houses him. (10)
  • All the new houses are better built. (9)
  • No houses were in sight, and no camps. (7)
  • She passed houses which had been wrecked. (8)
  • You take my position in most business houses. (9)
  • The houses became branded with silver arrows. (10)
  • Tumult arose from the public houses at the corners. (12)
  • Dead and wounded Milanese were taken into the houses. (10)
  • The early English houses were built of heavy oak-trees. (17)
  • A number of private houses were also looted and destroyed. (19)
  • The architecture of the houses was a party to the illusion. (9)
  • How many houses of modern Colonial style have ugly dormers! (17)
  • How could she forbid his entry to the houses she frequented? (10)
  • The street now ended in a wide road formed of little low houses. (8)
  • Nevertheless there were groups of people in front of the houses. (12)
  • The stables at Monkland Court were as large as many country houses. (8)
  • Victor wished the Houses of Parliament to catch the beams of sunset. (10)
  • A B These two houses are ugly as sin, yet are considered very practical. (17)
  • Chairs in profusion were found only in the houses of the most substantial. (18)
  • The actual loss must be even greater than this, for not all houses are insured. (17)
  • There was a ladder leaning against one of the houses in repair near the school. (10)
  • I saw the princely arms and colours on various houses and in the windows of shops. (10)
  • There are the same greasy public houses and the same faces, always the same crowd. (12)
  • He must have walked many blocks on this avenue between the monotonous small houses. (13)
  • There was quiet under the grey November sky, save for a hum from the public houses. (12)
  • This was the hamlet of Fouzilhic; three houses on a hillside, near a wood of birches. (2)
  • Then she will be in beauty, for she will open one of the best houses in Wimpole Street. (4)
  • They passed the whitewashed houses, and village church with its sentinel cypress-trees. (8)
  • Gardens were in front of the houses; or, to speak more correctly, strips of garden walks. (10)
  • No wonder there were men in both Houses of Parliament who were shocked at this treatment. (19)
  • The circus people gaze longingly across the empty fields where are houses snug and tight. (21)
  • He had not been able to discover what houses Bosinney had built, nor what his charges were. (8)
  • High above all neighbouring houses, she was almost appalled by the majesty of what she saw. (8)
  • Some of the houses had ragged plants on the window-sills; in one window a canary was singing. (8)
  • The movement of the footings by frost is another evil that is noticeable in many old houses. (17)
  • At the houses of themselves and their friends I did most of my dining; and, heaven be praised! (7)
  • It had escaped the screen of trees and houses, and, creeping through some chink, had quivered in. (8)
  • The cab sped on, and in mechanical procession trees, houses, people passed, but had no significance. (8)
  • Everything seems to be piled into the street; old houses made over, and new ones going up everywhere. (9)
  • Indeed, apart from antique houses, it is curious how much description would apply commonly to either. (2)
  • I could only go by those delightful, silent houses, and sigh my longing soul into their dim interiors. (9)
  • The exteriors of most houses are painted with white-lead or zinc-white pigments mixed with linseed-oil. (17)
  • Tin or galvanized-iron shingles or imitation tiles are often seen applied to the roofs of small houses. (17)
  • In these unfurnished houses, without steam or elevator, March followed his wife about with patient wonder. (9)
  • They all belonged to Christian and were pictures of friends, of landscapes and houses, of dogs and horses. (12)
  • Between the houses on the very top, they passed at a slow trot; and soon began slanting down the other side. (8)
  • He had slept in one of the houses of the valley, and spoke of having had the intention to mount to Copsley. (10)
  • They measured the distance between Cronidge and Moorsedge, the two houses, as for half an hour on horseback. (10)
  • Some architects believe these group houses are the only economical solution of the problem of the small house. (17)
  • But there has been a feud between the houses, and another brother, to prevent the marriage, kills the bridegroom. (3)
  • Ridge-poles are constructed with a sag to resemble the settlement which is often observed in picturesque old houses. (17)
  • They are destined for each other by the voice of every member of their respective houses; and what is to divide them? (4)
  • In Cambridge the houses to be let were few, and such as there were fell either below our pride or rose above our purse. (9)
  • It seemed quite a shame, especially considering how many houses there are where fine instruments are absolutely thrown away. (4)
  • There [in England] the collection of libraries has also diminished very much, but is still large in country houses and so on. (14)
  • The dormer-windows used in the old Colonial houses were narrow and high, and in those proportions were their charming appeals. (17)
  • Their defenders entered the houses right and left during the cannonade, waiting to meet the charge; but the Austrians held off. (10)
  • It was sunset, and along the riverbank the houses stood out, unsoftened by the dusk; the streets were full of people hurrying home. (8)
  • It is a goodly-sized place, with the usual castle, an unusual church, and red-tiled houses, many of them elaborately half-timbered. (20)
  • On examination of the insurance reports upon this question, we find that 96 per cent of all the fires originate inside of the houses. (17)
  • Within the ramparts a few blocks of houses, a long row of barracks, and a church, figure, with what countenance they may, as the town. (2)
  • In the early Colonial houses the wooden frames were built of heavy oak timbers which were hewn into shape and dressed down with the adze. (17)
  • A plot which had all the conditions demanded the year before may be the foundation of many houses when the show arrives on its next visit. (21)
  • It is one of two evidently designed by the same architect who built some houses in a characteristic taste on Beacon Street opposite the Common. (9)
  • The lower casements of the houses were furnished with mirrors set at right angles with them, and nothing which went on in the streets was lost. (9)
  • There was no answer for a moment; and from those tall houses, whose lighted windows he had apostrophized, Miltoun turned away towards the river. (8)
  • You know they represent great commercial houses in London, and they think that they would be ruined to cut off their condition of agent and hireling. (18)
  • Examples of early brick houses show a taste for good brick, which later died out on account of the introduction of the first American machine-made bricks. (17)
  • Strange enough it was to see it showing houses regaining their solidity of the foregone day, instead of still fields, black hedges, familiar shapes of trees. (10)
  • It was a dull, respectable, middle-class district, quite unfamiliar to him, and he stared inquiringly at the monotonous blocks of brick houses and cheap apartment buildings. (13)
  • Here were outbuildings, houses with broken windows, houses with windows boarded up, fried-fish shops, low public-houses, houses without doors. (8)

Also see sentences for: farm-houses.

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