I believe the coat is supposed to be in the village.
Tain't reasonable to believe the trouble we has with them beggars.
There has been no real improvement since I have sat in Parliament in the government of India, and I believe the Bill of last year is not one whit better for purposes of administration than any that has gone before.
I believe the duties of the Governor-General are far greater than any human being can adequately fulfil.
There's not a landed gentleman hasn't laid by money in the barony but myself, and if you were to believe the newspapers, I'm the hardest landlord in the province of Leinster.
She is one of the oldest, I believe the oldest, friend our family has in the world.
The fact is, that you have got not merely to believe the bible; but you must also believe in a certain interpretation of it, and, mind you, you must also believe in the doctrine of the trinity.
Now, sometimes Mr. Swing talks as though he believed the Bible, and then he talks to me as though he didn't believe the Bible.
She looked at him with frightened eyes, finding it hard to believe the evidence of her ears.
Then, although she feared tobelieve the evidence of her ears, a knock was heard at the door.
I believe the gentleman to be respectable, and will accept his security.
I rack My fancy to believe the almanac, That speaks thee Twenty-One.
But if I do them, though you don't believe me, believe the works; that you may know and believe that the Father is in me, and I in the Father.
I believe the history of the world gives few such examples.
She was more than ready to believe the words of that poet who says that "a woman's heart is always girlish and youthful enough for a new love.
And he that is ignorant of this, is also ignorant of, and doth not really and effectually believe the Scripture.
For they that do not observe to learn this lesson themselves, will not teach others to believe the Word, nor to live a holy life; they will learn of them to show their shame, instead of learning to be holy.
If I may once more declare my sentiments, my lords, I believe the ministers do not so much wish to debilitate the bodies as the understandings of posterity, nor so ardently desire a race of cripples as of fools.
I know, my lords, how highly every man learns to value that which he has long contended for, and how easily every man prevails upon himself to believe the security of the publick complicated with his own.
I believe the explanation is not difficult, and that it is perhaps applicable to nearly analogous facts observed in other quarters of the world.
On the Cordillera of central Chile, I believe the snow-line varies exceedingly in height in different summers.
I am induced to believe the bed of the River Detroit is clay, from the fact that it affords good anchorage for vessels.
I believe the narrative is almost entirely fabulous.
Can I believe the heart-sick tale, That I thy loss must ever wail?
They had got wine for me, and I perceive live prettily, and I believe the woman a virtuous modest woman.
But I believe the contrary; and yet I told him I never go to the Duke alone, as others do, to talk of my own services.
Don't believe the Daily News when it says you have committed political suicide--that need not be a bit more true than that there was trickiness or treachery in your course, which it also asserts.
The King has taken the opportunity of Lord Spencer's death to turn out the Ministry, and there is every reason to believe the Duke of Wellington has been sent for.
I believe the prior's garden; but I have not seen them these two years.
I believe the state of my Mind has contributed to bring on a very weak and decaying body my present disorders.
Both he and I were resolved to believe the best, and to suppose you safe, but then we neither of us could approve of the cause in which you suffer.
The above list will hopefully provide you with a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "believe the" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this group of words.