Sentence for sense | Use sense in a sentence

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

  • There was no sense in it. (10)
  • All felt a sense of discomfort. (12)
  • Do you detect a gleam of sense? (10)
  • Ashurst never had much sense of time. (8)
  • She had no sense of superiority then. (4)
  • I have some primitive sense of honour. (8)
  • She had a sudden sense of deep abasement. (8)
  • The sight infringed his sense of justice. (8)
  • Plain sense, as from gentlemen to gentlemen. (10)
  • They had, in the spiritual sense, frail hearts. (10)
  • A sense of coming defeat and bereavement was on him. (8)
  • I know I can rely on your sense, if you will rely on it. (10)
  • Hippias, when he could forget himself, did not lack sense. (10)
  • I have still a sense of exhaustion from it in our own case. (9)
  • Lord Valleys felt once more that uncanny sense of insecurity. (8)
  • And he returned to his own room with a curious sense of peace. (8)
  • Appeal and fear were in it, and a sense of personal grievance. (8)
  • The sense of triumph and renewed possession swelled within him. (8)
  • I had a queasy sense that I wore my last dry clothes upon my body. (2)
  • I took you for a woman of too much sense to mix in that foolishness. (13)
  • A dog is vastly braver, and is besides supported by the sense of duty. (2)
  • Well might common sense cower with the meaner animals at the picture. (10)
  • English to the backbone, he could not divest himself of a sense of guilt. (8)
  • You reproach us with lack of common sense, as if the belly were its seat. (10)
  • She is such an honest, wholesome creature, and so bright and full of sense. (9)
  • He would call it an offence against common sense, and have no mercy for it. (10)
  • This was disconcerting, being, in a sense, a disorderly way of seeing things. (8)
  • But a sense of the distinction between camps and courts restrained the soldier. (10)
  • Quite a new sensation; terribly delightful, bringing a sense of completed manhood. (8)
  • And, behind it all, the deep tribal sense that they stood together in trouble, grew. (8)
  • Elizabeth tried to be diverted by them; but all sense of pleasure was lost in shame. (4)
  • And, slowly taking up his glass, Shelton drank; the sense of well-being was upon him. (8)
  • And shaking his head with quite a sentimental sense of injury, he departed unrefreshed. (2)
  • So long as he had not to meet inquiries or face tears, he enjoyed the sense of security. (10)
  • To have been caught thus gazing at himself would have jarred on his sense of what was right. (8)
  • From such a perception of her humanity, it was natural that his livelier sense of it should diminish. (10)
  • So they met in the park; Mrs. Mount whipped past him; and secresy added a new sense to their intimacy. (10)
  • Nothing more, but the look, the voice, were everything; and while I live they cannot pass from my sense. (9)
  • The ladies, perhaps from a deficient sense of humor, listened with undisguised displeasure to this speech. (9)
  • But he could not, though a smile from his sense of the absurdity of their seriousness hovered about his lips. (9)
  • Her sense of hearing was now afflicted in as gross a manner as had been her sense of smell. (10)
  • The consideration that one is pursued by fate, will not fail to impart a sense of dignity even to the meanest. (22)
  • Harmony always existed, in a limited sense; but it did not take on a scientific development until the Middle Ages. (3)
  • He deserves a little credit for seeing that Emilia never could be his mistress, in the debased sense of the term. (10)
  • He was watching, with a teasing sense of familiarity, a tall, shabbily dressed, elderly man, who had just come in. (9)
  • The clamor and excitement and gross delight of living had numbed his sense of the fine, the noble, the restrained. (13)
  • Without compunction, or a sense of incongruity, she abused her brother and assisted the fulfilment of his behests. (10)
  • With his faith, whatever its tenets may have been, was implicated his uneasily active conscience; his sense of duty. (2)
  • Fiery words of lightning sense Down the hollows thunder; Forest hostels know not whence Comes the speech, and wonder. (10)
  • I could not even make her share my sense of my own culpability, a thing she was only too willing to do in most matters. (9)
  • Drink the sense the notes infuse, You a larger self will find: Sweetest fellowship ensues With the creatures of your kind. (10)
  • And he did not feel any special sense of obligation toward his employer, who had never displayed any great confidence in him. (13)
  • Miss Crawford need not have urged secrecy with so much warmth; she might have trusted to her sense of what was due to her cousin. (4)
  • But Bob Pillin was gone, leaving the lawyer with a very red face, a very angry heart, and a vague sense of disorder in his speech. (8)
  • I am going to-morrow where I shall find a man who has not one agreeable quality, who has neither manner nor sense to recommend him. (4)
  • I felt so intensely sensitive, that the very idea of a snore gave me tremours and qualms: it was associated with the sense of fat. (10)
  • Irish anecdotes are always popular in England, as promoting, besides the wholesome shake of the sides, a kindly sense of superiority. (10)
  • She was less handsome than her brother; but there was sense and good humour in her face, and her manners were perfectly unassuming and gentle. (4)
  • When I read his version my sense aches for the rhyme which he rejected, but my admiration for his fidelity to Dante otherwise is immeasurable. (9)
  • The new warmth and singing in her heart had not destroyed, but rather heightened, her sense of the extraordinary interest of all things that be. (8)
  • In such men there is little or none of that fluid sense and continuity of feeling known under those vague terms, speculation, poetry, philosophy. (8)
  • Then he remembered noticing them, and started with a sense of recognition, which he verified by the hotel register when he had finished his meal. (9)

Also see sentences for: drollery, feeling, flavor, import, meaning, perception, recognize.

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