In general, the demand for political equality, in a broad sense, seems to the eugenist to be the most praiseworthy part of the feminist program.
As far as hereditary potentialities are concerned, it can be said that all their deaths were due to accident, using that word in a broad sense to include all non-selective deaths by disease.
Religion is referred to those things one exhibits to one's human kindred, if we take the term religion in a broad sense, but not if we take it in its proper sense.
Now facere may be taken in two ways, in a strict sense, and in a broad sense.
Ambrose takes fortitude in a broad sense, as denoting firmness of mind in face of assaults of all kinds.
The point of view in regard to progress, at least as a working hypothesis, becomes an educational one, in a broad sense.
It is demanded of any school that hopes to play a large part in the affairs of the world that, in a broad sense, its whole spirit be religious.
We use this term in a broad sense, including agriculture and commerce as well as manufacturing.
The word industry is used here in a broad sense, including agents of psychic income not usually so classed, such as public parks.
In a broad sense, a crisis is a decisive moment or turning point; hence, in industry, a collapse of prosperity.
The proposition that in the long run the value of imports must equal the value of exports, while the fundamental truth in the theory of international trade, must be understood in a broad sense.
The above list will hopefully provide you with a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "broad sense" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this group of words.