Sentence for shows | Use shows in a sentence

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

  • That shows! (8)
  • But it shows you the man. (4)
  • It shows how we know ourselves! (10)
  • It shows the heights you live on. (8)
  • It shows the touch of age and dust. (1)
  • One thing he shows common sense in. (10)
  • But experience shows that it seldom is. (16)
  • A second part shows his sorrow and despair. (3)
  • However, now the lady shows herself crazed. (10)
  • Twilight best shows to the eye what may be. (10)
  • It shows how poverty-stricken life really is. (9)
  • Less strongly financed tented shows succumb. (21)
  • Other martial shows and noises were not so bad. (9)
  • The music shows a ripe mastery of dramatic power. (3)
  • Fast, sweet, and golden, shows the marriage-knot. (10)
  • Inquiry shows that such is the case in every rain-storm. (17)
  • Your perspective shows the affair in its true proportions. (9)
  • In either case he is, as Mr. Rosewater shows, a visionary. (16)
  • Through the open door, the first flush of dawn shows in the sky. (8)
  • I see that it shows its best feature, but is it the nobler for that? (10)
  • Perhaps it is wonderful that none of them shows anything of the kind. (9)
  • Our present sample shows her to be young: she is young and a foreigner. (10)
  • It shows a surprising advance over the simplicity of the Florentine operas. (3)
  • And that shows that you are only a man after all; in spite of your finessing. (9)
  • Thus, when the tail shows strongest decision of purpose, the head must follow. (10)
  • Its shape shows a change toward the pear-shaped body and narrow neck of the lute. (3)
  • Excerpt shows how strictly even this fragment is written and yet how musical it is. (3)
  • He is the teacher who shows where power exists: he is the leader who wakens and forms it. (10)
  • Nevertheless, he shows it, as he showed military power, unexpectedly, almost miraculously. (9)
  • The old Hindoo literature shows clearly the high regard in which the art of song was held. (3)
  • The vice-consul made none of those shows of authority which Mrs. Lander had expected of him. (9)
  • One of the relief decorations shows a festival procession in honor of the returning conqueror. (3)
  • Across the field in a shady and sheltered spot the ashen cloth of the circus barber shop shows. (21)
  • In your Parliament your House of Commons shows us real princes, your Throne merely titled ones. (10)
  • Figure 1 shows the principal melody, figure 2 shows the same at the fifth below. (3)
  • As thoroughly German as the latter, it shows more finish and greater elaboration of musical effect. (3)
  • He shows the greatest skill in handling instrumental color, an art for which the Russians are noted. (3)
  • His two string quartets are full of originality, and his choral and piano music shows the same quality. (3)
  • But the chin was firm, the mouth and nose were firm, the forehead sat calmly above these shows of decay. (10)
  • The light on us shed Shows dense beetle blackness in swarm, lurid Chance, The Goddess of gamblers, above. (10)
  • A comparison of the two treatments separated by forty-four years shows curious likenesses and differences. (14)
  • It shows that when we choose to get out of our rut we shall always find life as fresh and delightful as ever. (9)
  • A hat on the brows shows a man who can take more, but thinks he will go home instead, and does so, peaceably. (10)
  • In drawing number 6 is a very simple half-timber house which shows practically no attempt at all to decorate. (17)
  • When it is chipped the fracture shows the material below as white, and a drop of ink will not be absorbed by it. (17)
  • He shows a greater warmth of feeling and a tendency toward melody which they considered as a lowering of their ideals. (3)
  • It shows the force of his genius that he was able to make his works in the strict contrapuntal forms full of real feeling. (3)
  • 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)
  • But as a man shows himself to those often with him, and in his noted relations with other men, he showed himself without blame. (9)
  • Ay, and over every height Life for them shall wave a wand: That, the last, where sits affright, Homely shows the stream beyond. (10)
  • These representatives of the pig-sconces of the population judged by circumstances: airy shows and seems had no effect on them. (10)
  • He who sets deliberately about modifying nature, shows that he has not felt her beauty, and therefore cannot make others feel it. (9)
  • This fact shows that the influence of the church sonata and its rejection of a formal tune as unsuited to serious art was still strong. (3)
  • This shows that composers, doubtless through the military use of brass and drums, had accepted the latter as means for special effects. (3)
  • It shows the qualities which the womanhood of Canada possessed at a time of storm and stress, when their country was invaded by the foe. (19)
  • White and light-tint paints invariably fail on the south side of a house, before the paint on the other side shows signs of deterioration. (17)
  • If the prisoner be found guilty, and treated as though he were a criminal type, he will, as all experience shows, in all probability become one. (8)
  • A comparison of recorded dates shows that the Chinese were writing learned works on the science of music when the Pharaohs were building the pyramids. (3)
  • It is this overflow which marks this school as the greatest of the early polyphonic schools and shows why and how it acquired its emotional supremacy. (3)
  • The open shows many slabs and table tombstones; and all round the margin, the place is girt by an array of aristocratic mausoleums appallingly adorned. (2)
  • This is truly a remarkable work for that period, and shows that even then composers were beginning to observe the emotional power of chord relationship. (3)
  • The next three or four years were occupied, as the calendar of his published writings shows, with diligent excursions in letters, both in prose and verse. (14)
  • The history of mankind shows our painful efforts to find one, but they have invariably resolved themselves into asceticism, or laxity, acting and reacting. (10)
  • The first movement shows his vision of the beautiful maid Schwanhilde, appearing from celestial regions; but when he would claim her, she retreats, terrified. (3)
  • The dreadful creature insisted upon shows of maudlin affection that could not be accorded to her, so that she existed in a condition of preternatural sensitiveness. (10)

Also see sentences for: shown, showy.

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