Sentence for these | Use these in a sentence

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

  • These are enough. (12)
  • Awkward these hoops! (8)
  • These ten ages at least. (4)
  • No lady did these things! (8)
  • Ah, these merchant-princes! (10)
  • But these luckily eluded him. (19)
  • Look at these grinning wretches! (9)
  • My lady told me to give you these. (8)
  • What had passed from these things? (12)
  • These recollections will not do at all. (4)
  • These are the numbers of the notes he had. (8)
  • Soames noted these and other peculiarities. (8)
  • For these, blame, then, the American people. (16)
  • In these cases, the one thing to do is to make a stand. (10)
  • In these schools some of the most capable students enroll. (16)
  • He was naturally timid, and these words made him doubly so. (18)
  • I wonder when Englishmen will learn these hospitable graces. (2)
  • These last remarks were unintelligible to the withdrawing ladies. (10)
  • He wondered why it was so, and whether these were symptoms of fear. (1)
  • In these days, the net is an element of safety in all mid-air feats. (21)
  • But we thumbed our charts on these evenings with the blankest unconcern. (2)
  • In one of these sallies St. Martin, one of their bravest men, perished. (19)
  • We had a jubilant fortnight in working the particulars of these things out. (9)
  • But not one of these grave reflections troubled the tranquillity of Catherine. (4)
  • These things touch a man of the great world more than a mere man of the world. (14)
  • By placing two of these trees together, a perfect end was formed for the house. (17)
  • These simple pleasures sufficed them, but what could lovers really care for them? (9)
  • At these words Miss Cotton boldly drew off her gloves, and put them in her pocket. (9)
  • I am sorry to say my somber news affected these sinners in a way that was shocking. (7)
  • Mr. Gardiner did not attempt to conceal these particulars from the Longbourn family. (4)
  • And they fret themselves not overlong for husbands that are gone, these young beauties. (10)
  • These instruments bore a bewildering number of names, the exact meaning of which is lost. (3)
  • There were two main types among these tribes: a yellow, black-haired people, and a red type. (3)
  • These and other devices were experimented with and worked out by the Gallo-Belgic composers. (3)
  • And yet how small were these troubles around him compared with what he himself was suffering! (10)
  • An eagle of the poetic becomes a mere squat toad through one of these pretty material strokes. (10)
  • These were hung from the top, and when opened were held in position with a prop on the outside. (17)
  • More dimly, my lord and the Welsh gentleman were put to the trial: a tough one for these two men. (10)
  • He repeated these words with an interjection, and decided in his mind that they were merely silly. (10)
  • We ought to have left the past alone; we shall only mar our memories of all these beautiful places. (9)
  • Pleasant people, thought I, these must be, with whom such a line is advisable, much less practicable. (6)
  • These papers constitute beyond question the greatest provincializing influence in metropolitan life. (16)
  • What business had he to come amongst these people so strange to him, just for the sake of seeing her! (8)
  • At the station something happened which touched them even more than these last attentions of the hotel. (9)
  • These letters had gone into the waste basket, as mere cowardly attacks from some disgruntled contractor. (13)
  • She could not tell her friend Agnes of these feelings while her feelings were angered against her friend. (10)
  • Take this to the chemist and get him to make up some of these cachets quick, and bring them back yourself. (8)
  • Beauchamp was intimate with these delicately-cut features; he would have shuddered had they chilled on him. (10)
  • We often see very beautiful houses set up for moving-picture plays, but these are built of flimsy stage scenery. (17)
  • These two presented such a noticeable contrast, side by side, that the ladies had to send a message to separate them. (10)
  • These quartets and quintets were followed by a festival overture, a piano concerto, and three symphonies in succession. (3)
  • Why, hundreds before us have paced the identical way homeward at night under these lamps between the mansions and the park. (10)
  • She looked forward to these with intense eagerness, and pushed everything that interfered with preparation into the background. (8)
  • One of these was very useful in making the mutinous take their medicine; another was liked apparently because he was so likable. (9)
  • Still undaunted by these terrible reverses, next year the Marquis de la {178} Jonquière made another attempt with another fleet. (19)
  • These two men were bitter and upright and narrow, like the worst of Scotsmen, and indeed, upon my heart, I fancy they were worse. (2)
  • But all had felt from the tone in which he spoke these words, how serious was the position in the eyes of that experienced campaigner. (8)
  • For if good-looking, a sister must resemble these handsome features here, quiescent to inspection in their marble outlines as a corse. (10)
  • These things looked new, and contrasted absurdly with the stained, checked trousers which, for some reason, he did not change for others. (12)
  • She sank on the floor of the room, conceiving with much strangeness of sentiment under these hard stripes of misfortune, that reality had come. (10)
  • During these last few words the half of an irritated look on the faces of the soldiers changed to fragments of an indulgent and protective expression. (8)
  • The chief difficulties are to properly ventilate these rooms under the roof, and to give them good lighting without making too many and too large dormers. (17)
  • Both of these were introduced into polite society, chiefly as small house instruments of limited compass, varied sizes, and frequently with elaborate decoration. (3)
  • From his recognition of these old schoolfellows Shelton turned to look at Halidome, who, having cleared his throat, was staring straight before him at the curtain. (8)
  • Physical pain is the most glaringly omnipresent of these motifs; it is counted upon invariably to amuse the average humanity of our so-called Christian civilization. (16)

Also see sentences for: thermometer, they.

Definition of these:

  • these, th_z, demons. pron._, pl. of this_. (0)

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