Sentence for very | Use very in a sentence

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

  • Very well, sir. (8)
  • I am very happy. (4)
  • They are very hot. (8)
  • It is very natural. (8)
  • She is very French. (10)
  • Very good of you, Mayor. (8)
  • Very desirous to see it! (10)
  • Daphne Wing grew very pink. (8)
  • It does make me so very anxious. (8)
  • His heart began beating very fast. (8)
  • The future must be very uncertain. (4)
  • The very idea was ghastly, futile! (8)
  • Men were very queer about such things! (8)
  • The doctor looked at him very gravely. (8)
  • Mrs. Chump was this morning very late. (10)
  • He was sick of his very teeth and hands. (12)
  • You seem to have become very conscientious. (8)
  • The very young men and the old are our hope. (10)
  • A very few words between them were sufficient. (4)
  • The meeting was very satisfactory on each side. (4)
  • On the verandah she stopped very suddenly again. (8)
  • Mrs. Price was greatly obliged and very complying. (4)
  • That young man (speaking lower) is very thoughtless. (4)
  • They told me at your place you wens very likely here. (8)
  • As to the incident we have to note, it was very slight. (10)
  • I believe I can tell the very moment I began to love him. (8)
  • His contributions to musical literature are very important. (3)
  • He has known him for years, and knows that he is very wicked. (10)
  • I am sure Miss Bertram is very much attached to Mr. Rushworth. (4)
  • It seemed to me that it might lead to a very early usefulness. (12)
  • But rock is the very picture of beautiful Gorgon, haggard Venus. (10)
  • The money you speak of was put out to the very highest interest. (10)
  • They were very fine ones, as Emilia said, and they hit him hard. (10)
  • Her hot hand came out from under the bedclothes, and clutched his very tight. (8)
  • He always speaks to the purpose; open, straightforward, and very well judging. (4)
  • To the young lady, at least, in each family, it brought very different feelings. (4)
  • Very different from you, miss, when you first began, six years ago come next Easter. (4)
  • I am certain it would make him very happy, and happiness of any kind he needs so much! (10)
  • It is, as the reader will anticipate, a feeble beverage, but very pleasant to the taste. (2)
  • She has privily sung to her Pericles, and ser, and if I wake not very late on Judgement. (10)
  • It seemed to him very likely that if he asked these men questions they would tell him lies. (9)
  • And, as we went, we wondered why we had not been told before that Mrs. Herd was so very ill. (8)
  • In this blankness he stood passing his handkerchief over hands and lips, which were very dry. (8)
  • He was very sensitive to criticism, especially from those he valued through his head or heart. (9)
  • This principle of Imitation is the very foundation of the later complicated polyphonic system. (3)
  • I leave Blackburn Tuckham here, with a friend of his; a man who seems to be very sweet with Mrs. (10)
  • Had she noticed how all the mountains in moonlight or very early morning took the shape of beasts? (8)
  • But he did not force them upon our notice, nor urge us to read them, and I think this was very well. (9)
  • Down in the very middle of the avenue, a small, white figure was standing, as if looking out for him. (8)
  • Elizabeth was pleased; though when she asked herself the reason, she had very little to say in reply. (4)
  • Her little brown spaniel, very old, who seemed only to have held on to life just for her return, died. (8)
  • After very little farther discourse, it was finally settled that the invitation should be fully accepted. (4)
  • Here was a young man who could be the very kindest of friends to the woman rejecting him to wed another. (10)
  • Moreover, the heat was very dry and unpleasant, so that water-jars had to be set about to moisten the air. (17)
  • She could hear a distant rumbling, very low, travelling in that grass, the long mutter of the Flanders guns. (8)
  • The keys were very large, having a deep fall, and required the whole force of the hand to press down a single one. (3)
  • To his wife he was very little otherwise indebted, than as her ignorance and folly had contributed to his amusement. (4)
  • Flora, not of course in the swim of those happenings at Joyflelds, could not be got to take the matter very seriously. (8)
  • For that matter, Jane was her own mistress and could very well take care of herself; he had confidence in her wisdom. (10)
  • He knew very well those men would wait, and gladly wait, till the morning, and that the whole affair was in his hands. (9)
  • Of very important, very recordable events, it was not more productive than such meetings usually are. (4)
  • After all, it was rather a simple-hearted thing of Westover to have either hoped or feared very much for the Vostrands. (9)
  • I charged her to write to me very often, and to remember that if she were in any distress we should be always her friends. (4)
  • Do not involve yourself or endeavour to involve him in an affection which the want of fortune would make so very imprudent. (4)
  • The eulogies of her beauty, a possession in which he did not consider her so very conspicuous, irritated him in consequence. (10)
  • He was very polite and tender with her at first, and ended by making a joke with her, to which Penelope responded, in her sort. (9)
  • They are very good friends, and respect each other; Dan has a great admiration for the old man, but the attraction is Pasiance. (8)
  • They were nearly all little fellows, and very dark, though here and there a six-footer towered up, or a blond showed among them. (9)
  • Well, when your cousin comes back, he will find Mansfield very quiet; all the noisy ones gone, your brother and mine and myself. (4)
  • Sometimes he laughed at her, and sometimes he scolded, but they were very good comrades, as elderly married people are apt to be. (9)
  • He saw her too; yet he looked grave, and seemed irresolute, and only by very slow degrees came at last near enough to speak to her. (4)
  • How very refreshing to think that there are nobles in your England as romantic, as courteous, as delicate as our own foreign ones! (10)
  • The English have shown themselves very generous victors; perhaps nothing could be alleged against them, but that they were victors. (9)
  • A very important economical consideration should be noted in laying out the arrangement of the bathroom fixtures in this connection. (17)
  • From the recesses of her pocket she drew forth her purse, took from it three shillings, and placed one in the very centre of each palm. (8)
  • In taking the other corner of the window-sill, the thought passed through his mind that Freeland was really a very fine-looking fellow. (8)
  • They lived far more unpretentiously than they used, and I think with a notion of economy, which they had never very successfully practised. (9)
  • He had to be in London every other night, and there were tales current of intrigues against him which had their sources from very lofty regions. (10)
  • Fanny, being always a very courteous listener, and often the only listener at hand, came in for the complaints and the distresses of most of them. (4)
  • She was very different from Noel; not quite so tall, but of a stronger build; with dark chestnut-coloured hair, clear hazel eyes, and a broad brow. (8)
  • Approvers could not be found; and so perfectly organized were the secret associations, that few beyond the very ringleaders knew any thing of consequence to communicate. (6)

Also see sentences for: actual, excessively, extremely, greatly, highly, identical, real.

Definition of very:

  • very, ver’i, adj. true (now used chiefly in an intensive sense): real (so in b._): actual | sometimes used in superlative form ver’iest. | adv. in a high degree. | in very deed, of a truth, certainly. (0)

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