Sentence for liked | Use liked in a sentence

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

  • I never liked her. (8)
  • She had liked him. (10)
  • I liked the young man. (8)
  • He liked her resistance. (10)
  • I liked it the other day. (8)
  • Jeff liked the style of this. (9)
  • My mistress liked her voice. (10)
  • Mary Fellingham liked Annette. (10)
  • The Countess would have liked to. (10)
  • Sybil was asked how she liked him. (12)
  • He had intended it, and he liked it. (9)
  • He liked her well: he promised to come. (10)
  • Lord Romfrey liked her calm resignation. (10)
  • Well, I liked that little pocket piece fine. (8)
  • Perhaps the Bazins knew how much I liked them? (2)
  • She blessed it, and liked the youth the better. (10)
  • He told me he would take me to Italy, if I liked. (10)
  • She liked him too little to care for his approbation. (4)
  • Provisionally, she was very much what she liked to be. (9)
  • She liked him as emigrants the land they are leaving. (10)
  • She would have liked to know how he felt as to a meeting. (4)
  • She liked to have people talk as they do in genteel novels. (9)
  • No, I should hardly think they were liked; respected, and all that. (8)
  • She liked to see him on the steps, with young Crossjay under his arm. (10)
  • In which case, the earl should be worthy of our friendship; he is liked. (10)
  • She unhesitatingly owned that she liked no one better, and he consented. (10)
  • I liked the town, and especially the walks in its neighborhood, very much. (14)
  • At least she would have liked to run a bodkin into her, and make her scream. (10)
  • He gave them liberty to go to Australia, Canada, the Americas, if they liked. (10)
  • He liked her kindness, and he was wroth at the projected return of his gifts. (22)
  • Individually, he liked his fellow-guests, but he found himself observing them. (8)
  • Mystical Lowell was, as every poet must be, but I do not think he liked mystery. (9)
  • Lord Adderwood liked the lines of division to be strictly and invitingly definite. (10)
  • She liked his build and easy carriage of a muscular frame: her Ned was a heavy man. (10)
  • Did you think I liked the cruel things, with their dead birds and their hideous colors? (9)
  • But he could have said very distinctly, if he had needed, why he liked the books he did. (9)
  • A right good unimpulsive gentleman: the same that she had always taken him for and liked. (10)
  • He liked to wander dreamily in lonely paths, with his large, dark eyes fixed on the ground. (5)
  • Nobody is more liked than Mr. Willoughby wherever he goes, and so you may tell your sister. (4)
  • Apparently she was beginning to do with him just as she liked, herself entirely unconcerned. (10)
  • To be both generally blamed, and generally liked, evinces a peculiar construction of mortal. (10)
  • He would have liked to hate them, too, since she did; but they had only seemed to him amusing. (8)
  • I began to go for her as soon as I saw that she wanted me to, and that she liked the excitement. (9)
  • Irene laughed as if she liked to have her sister take his praises in that way rather than another. (9)
  • She would not have missed it on any account; but she liked to get all she could out of her emotions. (9)
  • There was one whose colour he liked, a dove-grey, but to imagine Megan clothed in it was beyond him. (8)
  • She would have liked to be wafted to her chamber in a veil, so shamefully unveiled did she seem to be. (10)
  • That woman, whose face he had rather liked, was too thin-skinned by half; she gave Jo a bad time he knew! (8)
  • At one time, she liked Mrs. Marsett best absent: in musing on her, wishing her well, having said the adieu. (10)
  • I liked the scenery, and the wine, and what I supposed to be the habit of the gentlemen here to dress in silks. (10)
  • He had made it himself, nearly every penny; he could leave it where he liked, allow himself this little pleasure. (8)
  • In those days he liked Mrs. Vostrand very much, and at twenty he considered her at thirty distinctly middle-aged. (9)
  • She was very trenchant and definite in these estimates of them; she liked to ticket them, and then ticket them anew. (9)
  • He liked her deeds; he disliked the position in which the young woman placed herself to perform them; and he said so. (10)
  • Lady Dunstane spoke with an emphasis, for the man liked Diana, and would be moved by the idea of forfeiting her esteem. (10)
  • She reflected how much more she liked the sketch Jackson had made of a little club-house for the Oak Hills Country Club. (13)
  • As he looked at them now he liked to fancy something weird and conscious in them as the silent witnesses of a broken life. (9)
  • Every one who knew him, knows how young he was in heart, and how he liked to have those that were young in years about him. (9)
  • He was a lover of the things he liked, and full of a passion for them which satisfied itself in reading them matchlessly aloud. (9)
  • My enforced residence on the island was, however, too brief to enable me to master the whole subject as I should have liked to do. (7)
  • He was reserved to the last, for very enigmatical adieux: he would hear the whole story from Emma; must be left to think as he liked. (10)
  • In any case, they might make capital marriages; and the farm estate should go to whichever of the two young husbands he liked the best. (22)
  • He liked coming to Boston, especially for those luncheons and dinners in which the fertile hospitality of our publisher, Osgood, abounded. (9)
  • He liked the German beggars least, and the Italian beggars most, as having most savair-faire; in fact, we all loved the Italians in Cambridge. (9)
  • Westover doubted him, for he had found that Jeff liked to give himself credit for woodcraft by discovering an escape from the depths of trackless wildernesses. (9)
  • They liked better staying there than wandering about in the evening with their parents, whose excursions seemed to them somewhat aimless, and their pleasures insipid. (9)

Also see sentences for: disliked.

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