Sentence for stories | Use stories in a sentence

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

  • Wrote stories did she? (8)
  • You told me wild stories. (12)
  • He listens to her stories. (10)
  • He told me some dreadful stories. (8)
  • The stories are false, for the time. (10)
  • Yes; I know stories of those Minnesingers. (10)
  • Stories of Lord D. and Mrs. W. whipped the hot pursuit. (10)
  • The stir to his name roused pestilential domestic stories. (10)
  • Each told different and conflicting stories to the Indians. (19)
  • The terrible stories one hears of a power of fascination almost . (10)
  • So much that I could burrow in it as in a heap of precious stories. (12)
  • Of this inland sea Vignau may have heard stories {36} from the Indians. (19)
  • The wildest stories are floating around both at home and here in Berlin. (12)
  • To this day he still fed himself on stories of rebellions and fine deeds. (8)
  • Plenty of stories are current still of his fame as a four-in-hand coachman. (10)
  • He began to tell stories of the different young men he had had in his employ. (9)
  • My fancifulness he commended as something to be turned to use in writing stories. (10)
  • I am sure I do not merely fancy the auroral light in a group of stories by another poet. (9)
  • A rectangular house of two stories was designed in a quadrangle round a covered-in court. (8)
  • Stories may succeed, but they are doubtful, and not to be trusted, coming after cookery. (10)
  • The equestrian director tells of the circus as it used to be, and all enjoy his stories. (21)
  • I have heard strange stories of them: and so will you in your time to come, but not from me. (10)
  • I must not fail to own the great pleasure that I have had in some of the stories of Auerbach. (9)
  • They are what we see in the stories which, perhaps, hold the first place in American fiction. (9)
  • One hears tremendous stories at Boston of the rate of living among the swell students in Cambridge. (9)
  • Jackson was in high spirits, telling Irish stories, a social gift which he had recently cultivated. (13)
  • Its eight stories towered loftily above the other houses and apartment buildings in the neighborhood. (13)
  • These unexcelled short stories really revealed Stevenson as the narrator, his path lay clear before him. (2)
  • Nothing in nature, only gruesome German stories will fetch comparisons for the yoke of this Law of yours. (10)
  • His idea of a house was a brown-stone front, four stories high, and a French roof with an air-chamber above. (9)
  • It was not the best of his stories, by any means, and it would not be too harsh to say that it was the poorest. (9)
  • He was much interested in spiritualism, and he had several stories to tell of his own experience in such matters. (9)
  • Under his own eye and of conscious purpose a circle of imitators grew up in the fabrication of Christmas stories. (9)
  • Few of us sit down in cold blood to write our first stories; we have something in us that we feel we must express. (8)
  • Now he could hear the roar of the flame as it swept through the upper stories and streamed out into the dark night. (13)
  • To back this she told him stories of blooming dames of good repute, and poured a little social sewerage into his ears. (10)
  • He could take no stock in those stories, Niels Heinrich answered; no, not if he was to be hanged, drawn, and quartered. (12)
  • It was not for the plot that she cared; she had read too many stories to care for the plot; it was the problem involved. (9)
  • The building rose sheer and massive, six stories above their heads, with rows of unglassed windows like sightless eyes. (13)
  • One had caught on the sloping roof of a line of bay windows, and clung there desperately seven stories above the ground. (13)
  • He asked feverishly who they were, and looked his best simplicity, as one who was always interested by stories of lovers. (10)
  • I was able to talk of foreign cities and could tell stories, and I was, besides, under the immediate protection of Heriot. (10)
  • The jokes, flings, stories, confessions are too numerous about the easy and empty assumptions of omniscience by the press. (16)
  • There were current in her set stories about the man which would not have tallied altogether with his appreciative remarks. (13)
  • With a running fire of such stories, it may be supposed how difficult was my task in getting any thing done upon the stage. (6)
  • That was what made Mrs. March like his stories so much more than the stories of some people who wrote better. (9)
  • We can all recall by name many characters out of comedies and farces; but how many characters out of short stories can we recall? (9)
  • Even the power of writing short stories, which we suppose ourselves to have in such excellent degree, has spread from New England. (9)
  • Accurate tidings could not be obtained, though the whole course of the vale was full of stories of escapes, conflicts, and captures. (10)
  • In one of his many long voyages he heard stories of a Spanish galleon filled {136} with gold and silver sunk off the Island of Cuba. (19)
  • Young Crossjay betrayed anxiety about his false position, and begged for the stories of Mary Ambree and the others who were English. (10)
  • Donacona and the other chiefs, on hearing this, did their utmost to dissuade him by inventing stories about the dangers of the river. (19)
  • For Turgenev expressed himself in stories that must be called romances, and Stevenson employed almost always a naturalistic technique. (8)
  • Many stories are told of this redoubtable Edinburgh burglar, but the one I have in my mind most vividly gives the key of all the rest. (2)
  • The bath-house keeper had many wonderful stories to relate of her remarkable wisdom, with which even highly educated men could not vie. (5)
  • First, stories for mere entertainment that deal with events of little or no news-value must not be allowed to crowd out significant news. (16)
  • It has rather worked the vein of interviews, personal adventure, popular science, useful information, travel, sketches, and short stories. (9)
  • And when we were all coming over on the steamer together Mr. Libby and Mr. Maynard were together the whole time, smoking and telling stories. (9)
  • He told two or three stories verging on the improper, a concession to the company, for his stories were not used to verging. (8)
  • He poured out stories of his American wanderings, including a tale of a murderous lonely inn, kept by Scots, whose genius tended to assassination. (2)
  • And certainly the hearing of naughty stories of us by the light of a grievous and vexatious instance of our misconduct must produce an impression. (10)
  • Diana had often to divert him from a too intent perusal of her features with sparkles and stories current or invented to serve the immediate purpose. (10)
  • At least three-fifths of the literature called classic, in all languages, no more lives than the poems and stories that perish monthly in our magazines. (9)
  • And later days by firelight in the drawing-room, roasting chestnuts just before evening church, and telling ghost stories, and trying to make Daddy eat his share. (8)
  • By the newspapers, the syndicate conceives, and perhaps justly, that something sensational is desired; yet all the serial stories it has placed cannot be called sensational. (9)

Also see sentences for: storing.

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