Sentence for temple | Use temple in a sentence

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

  • I cried to Temple. (10)
  • Temple gazed abashed. (10)
  • Temple, imitating me, was sugar-sweet. (10)
  • Temple was blotted out. (10)
  • Temple must have shared it. (10)
  • Temple had tears in his eyes. (10)
  • You are my home and my temple. (10)
  • Temple laid his cheek on his hand. (10)
  • Temple hurrahed rather breathlessly. (10)
  • Temple blamed him for leaving Calypso. (10)
  • Temple thanked him for the compliment. (10)
  • Temple thought she tried me too cruelly. (10)
  • Temple breathed, in pain at such allusions. (10)
  • I fetched Temple into the box to introduce him. (10)
  • Temple, to judge by the expression of his features, was thinking. (10)
  • The head of the statue turned from Temple to me. (10)
  • He was obliged to stretch out his hand to Temple. (10)
  • Temple thanked her for the kindness of the offer. (10)
  • I sacrificed my dog to bring Temple to his senses. (10)
  • Mr. Rippenger seized little Temple, and flogged him. (10)
  • Temple declared he was a blackguard if he said that. (10)
  • Temple shared the painful impression produced on me. (10)
  • Temple had previously made discovery of Janet Ilchester. (10)
  • There he sits at his Temple Chambers hatching epigrams . (10)
  • To revive his good humour, Temple uncorked a bottle of champagne. (10)
  • Temple declared old Rippenger was better than this canting rascal. (10)
  • But, when they did pour out, they were tremendous, as Temple found. (10)
  • Temple had become that radiant human creature, a working man, then? (10)
  • Temple, with averted face, asked me whether I meant to return to Riversley that day. (10)
  • In an agony of alarm, he called a cab, and drove hotly to the Temple. (22)
  • Her voice was like the change for the swing of a door from street to temple. (10)
  • Temple stood humping and agitating his shoulders like a cat before it springs. (10)
  • Snows of early Spring were on the pinewood country I had traversed with Temple. (10)
  • With Heriot I went on a sad expedition, the same I had set out upon with Temple. (10)
  • Did you ever see a lad lie in his coffin with a little black wound in his temple? (12)
  • Temple and I followed him out of the house, fascinated by his manners and oddness. (10)
  • Temple declared he could not sit after seeing the statue descend from its pedestal. (10)
  • Temple and I left the general closeted with my father, and stood at the street-door. (10)
  • Temple tossed him a pint bottle of beer, with an injunction to him to shut his trap. (10)
  • Temple and I tried to meet, but did not accomplish it till next morning at breakfast. (10)
  • Temple denied it, and a devil seized him to perceive some comicality in the dialogue. (10)
  • I reminded Temple of a saying of the Emperor Charles V. as to a knowledge of languages. (10)
  • Then, the remembrance of his rooms at the Temple broke in on that vision, and shattered it. (8)
  • Temple declared there was no feeling we were in a foreign country while he was our companion. (10)
  • They forgot the presence of Temple and me, but spoke as if they thought they were whispering. (10)
  • His allusion to the humming of the tune of the mice gave Temple a fit of remorse, and he apologized. (10)
  • The princess had invited Lucy Heddon to Sarkeld to meet Temple, and Temple to meet me. (10)
  • The tall bare pine stems rose up all round like columns in a temple roofed with the dark boughs and sky. (8)
  • Coming home over the downs, just upon twilight, Temple and I saw Saddlebank carrying a long withy upright. (10)
  • Temple punned on the loss of my watch, and excused himself for a joke neither of us had spirit to laugh at. (10)
  • He made his way into the Temple, left the book at his Chambers, and passed on down to the bank of Mother Thames. (8)
  • The little old green-house temple of his early masterpieces was still extant, used now to protect watering pots. (8)
  • My dear friend Temple was at sea, or I should have had one near me to detect and control the springs of nonsense. (10)
  • Temple and I argued the case with him, as of old on our voyage, on board the barque Priscilla, quite unavailingly. (10)
  • Temple and I stared hard at a big man with a bronzed skin and a rubicund laugh who expected to receive valentines. (10)
  • But Temple spoiled my triumph by depriving him of the use of his lower limbs after the fall, for he was a heavy man. (10)
  • The entire stupendous edifice of popular government, temple and citadel of fallacies and abuses, had crashed to ruin. (7)
  • But whoever, or whatever, may have been the divinity whose ends they shaped, unto Him, or It, they had builded a temple. (7)
  • Temple started and reddened like a little fellow detected in straying from his spelling-book, which was the window-frame. (10)
  • General Goodwin touched Temple on the shoulder kindly, in marked contrast to his treatment of me, and wished us good-night. (10)
  • In his form, Zola is classic, that is regular, symmetrical, seeking the beauty of the temple rather than the beauty of the tree. (9)
  • Temple related that I fell, and was carried all the way from the cricket-field home by Heriot, who would not give me up to the usher. (10)
  • A bullet had clipped a groove in his skull, above the temple; from this the brain protruded in bosses, dropping off in flakes and strings. (7)
  • Temple did not say your father was here, but grandada must have suspected it when he consented to our coming, and said he would follow us. (10)
  • For that while, the temple was not only emptied of all the other idols, but I had a richly flattering illusion of being his only worshipper. (9)
  • She must be teaching Temple to skate figures in the frost, with a great display of good-humoured patience, and her voice at musical pitches. (10)
  • So it was with Miltoun when he reached this temple, three days after that passionate night, having walked for hours, alone and full of conflict. (8)
  • And getting into her cab at the Temple Station, she had looked back at him with a little half-mocking smile of challenge and comradeship and promise. (8)
  • Temple hardly helped me, though his solid sense was dead against the notions entertained by my father and Jorian DeWitt, and others besides, our elders. (10)

Also see sentences for: church, fane, sanctuary.

Definition of temple:

  • temple, tem’pl, n. an edifice erected to a deity or for religious purposes: a place of worship: in london, two inns of court, once occupied by the knights templars. (0) | temple, tem’pl, n. the flat portion of either side of the head above the cheekbone. | adj. tem’poral, pertaining to the temples. (0)

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