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Example sentences for "another sense"

  • Augustine there when he speaks of “servum potius quam liberum arbitrium” does so in another sense, though Luther saw fit to borrow the expression for the title of his own later work of 1525: “De servo arbitrio.

  • That such a process must exist can hardly, it seems to me, admit of question; in fact, I believe that those who speak of doing away with competition use the word in another sense than is here intended.

  • In another sense, the variability of the savage is indicated by the comparative data afforded by certain psychological investigations.

  • In that one, however, we recognize a law which is universal also in another sense; it is co-extensive with the entire field of successive phenomena, all instances whatever of succession being examples of it.

  • It occurs in ratiocination in two ways: when the middle term is ambiguous, or when one of the terms of the syllogism is taken in one sense in the premises, and in another sense in the conclusion.

  • But, in another sense, to have a right to do a thing is the opposite of having no right to do it, i.

  • It is of course possible to use a distinction of 'pure' and 'mixed' in another sense.

  • Original Christianity was, though in another sense, a religion of redemption.

  • While in some respects we find sympathy more complete the nearer home we remain, in another sense there is no true companionship except with the universe.

  • But in another sense it is the effect; for it is the motor activity that maintains it, and, once this activity disappears, consciousness dies away or rather falls asleep.

  • The phrase 'process of induction' is often used in another sense, namely for the inference or judgment by which such propositions are arrived at.

  • Darkness and light are both alike to thee,” says David in another sense, Psal.

  • Another sense may be—Thou hast suffered us to consume in our iniquity, thou hast given us up to the hand of our sins.

  • The juggle of sophistry consists, for the most part, in usig a word in one sense in the premise, and in another sense in the conclusion.

  • In another sense of the term, nation describes those who are descended from the same stock; and in this sense the Germans regard themselves as one nation, though politically subject to different forms of government.

  • In another sense, by these terms is intended the divines of the former Dispensation, who live in the days of the subsequent Revelations, and who hold the reins of religion in their grasp.

  • It knows instinctively that grief, terrible as it is, is yet, in another sense, an invaluable possession.

  • It certainly astonished him, and in another sense it shocked him.

  • Yet, in another sense, his possession was incomplete because a part of her still lay unawakened.

  • In another sense he felt he knew them already.

  • In another sense, too, the word is commonly misused, as, "He has quit the town.

  • Stop is frequently misused for stay in another sense of the latter word: "He is stopping at the hotel.


  • The above list will hopefully provide you with a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "another sense" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this group of words.


    Some common collocations, pairs and triplets of words:
    another animal; another boat; another case; another chapter; another consideration; another country; another good; another group; another hymn; another kind; another lady; another letter; another man; another manner; another name; another nation; another object; another order; another picture; another poem; another similar; another time; another version; another while; dissenting voice; shortly before