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Example sentences for "are led"

  • Thus out of the brooding melancholy of this secondary grief we are led to a distinct confession of sin on the part of the people.

  • We are led to look in this direction by the startling thought with which the previous triplet closes.

  • But in mind there is a precise resemblance and analogy between the conceptions we are led to entertain respecting other men, and what we know of ourselves.

  • By the whole of the above statement we are led to a new and a modified estimate of the duration of human life.

  • From this view of the history of man we are led by an easy transition to the consideration of the nature and influence of the love of fame in modifying the actions of the human mind.

  • The vast majority of the people of this country, if they were questioned, would assert a belief in God; but a surprising number of them are unmoved by that belief, are led by it to no action.

  • As many as are led by the Spirit of God, they are the sons of God.

  • To extend such suppositions to other worlds would be a proceeding so arbitrary and fanciful, that we are led to consider whether the alternative supposition may not be more admissible.

  • But yet, by such a supposition, on further consideration, we find ourselves introduced to views entirely different from those to which we are led by the supposition of mere animal life, existing in other worlds than the earth.

  • This place is too much in the interior of the city, and we are led to believe that, in the time of Jesus, it was comprised within the circuit of the walls.

  • On the one hand we are led to think these creations too impersonal; we attribute to a collective action, that which has often been the work of one powerful will, and of one superior mind.

  • As to Jesus, we are led to believe that he knew of the treachery of Judas, and that he suspected the fate that awaited him.

  • I have also endeavoured to point out to you, in what manner we are led to believe, that we explain the sequence of two events, by stating some intermediate event.

  • Every moment we pass instantly from men's perceived actions to the motives implied by them; and so are led to formulate these actions in mental terms rather than in bodily terms.

  • In short, we are led to the remarkable conclusion that in all cases we must contemplate exclusively the end and must disregard the means.

  • Here, then, we are led to the conclusion that the life called moral is one in which this maintenance of the moving equilibrium reaches completeness, or approaches most nearly to completeness.

  • Then we are led to ask: Was this the recompense which they sought?

  • From the whole context of the Scriptures, however, we are led to believe that only oral charges were preferred against Jesus.

  • Now at this point we are led to ask: Were these rules applied in the trial of Jesus in any sense either for or against the accused?

  • When we come to summarize, we are led to declare that if the Gospel historians be not worthy of belief we are without foundation for rational faith in the secular annals of the human race.

  • Accepting, provisionally, the theory of the cycadophytic origin of Angiosperms, it is interesting to see to what further conclusions we are led.

  • At last the ground was cleared and we are led to the final conclusion.

  • Comparing these conflicting arguments we are led to believe that the first is the stronger.

  • The general conclusions to which we are led by a consideration of the fossil record of the Vascular Cryptogams are still very hypothetical, but may be provisionally stated as follows: The Ferns go back to the earliest known period.

  • Reading of these engagements, we are led to remember how Gelon smote his Punic foes upon the Himera, and Timoleon arrayed Greeks by the ten against Carthaginians by the thousand on the Crimisus.

  • Already on landing, we are led to remember that from this shore was loosed the galley bearing that great letter--verbosa et grandis epistola--which undid Sejanus and shook Rome.

  • And undoubtedly, if we argue from the predominant facts and from the linguistic evidence of parallel terms, we are led to assume that already before their separation the Aryans lived in a patriarchal state of society.

  • In the example taken we are led to suppose different origin because we are informed as to the motives of the external ceremony, and thus we are taught to look not only to bare facts, but to the psychological environment in which they appear.

  • Thus we are led to consider the patria potestas, so stringently formulated in Roman law, as an expression of a common Aryan notion, which was already in existence before the Aryan tribes parted company and went their different ways.

  • In like manner we are led to participate in the pleasures of others.

  • Every one has admired the extreme beauty of many butterflies and of some moths; and we are led to ask, how has this beauty been acquired?

  • In the book of Leviticus we are led on a step further.

  • We are led, therefore, to the conclusion that two sorts of variations exist, those which are due to the presence of specific factors in the organism and those which are due to the direct effect of the environment during its lifetime.

  • We are led, therefore, to suppose that an ovum carrying the yellow factor is unproductive if fertilised by a spermatozoon which also bears this factor.


  • The above list will hopefully provide you with a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "are led" 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:
    are accustomed; are always; are apt; are compelled; are given; are going; are informed; are led; are more; are not; are often; are ready; are still; are told; are unable; are used; asking them; colour painting; dull reddish; high wall; individual things; lay down their arms; material goods; political ideas; submarine cables; when their