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Example sentences for "certainly very"

  • The verse is certainly very difficult; it constitutes a famous crux interpretum.

  • It is certainly very difficult to separate it from the rest.

  • It is certainly very hazardous to use Gnosticism, a post-Pauline phenomenon appealing to Paul as one of its chief sources, as a witness to pre-Pauline paganism.

  • The whole effect of the steeple, transept, and nave is certainly very noble, and they are marked by an entire absence of any of those foreign peculiarities which usually strike an English eye.

  • It is made in parqueterie of coloured woods arranged in patterns with gilt pendants, and the cornice is of blue and white majolica, inlaid in the walls: the combination of the whole is certainly very effective.

  • The cusped arch of the lower of these stages is certainly very pretty, but the common form of trefoiled Moorish arch enclosed within it seems to me to be the most frightful of all possible forms.

  • He is certainly very handsome; and yet more, there is an openness in his manner that must be highly prepossessing, and I am sure she feels it so.

  • There is a spirit of irritation which, to say nothing worse, is certainly very ill-bred.

  • Your brother is certainly very much to be pitied at present; but we must not, in our concern for his sufferings, undervalue yours.

  • The Grand-Duke is certainly very fond of music, and spends considerable sums of money upon it; but this love of it is one sided, egotistical, and is limited solely to Theatrical music.

  • When executed besides in so masterly a manner as they are by Fraeulein von Goldner, the effect is certainly very great.

  • The very commencement is a straining after effect, and as introduction to a Te Deum, certainly very unsuited.

  • Unable to catch the sense, which however is certainly very plain, he actually interprets the words to mean 'living under the sway of king Dhigdanda.

  • The discipline followed by Reciters is certainly very superior.

  • To whatever cause it may be due, this frame of mind is certainly very difficult of attainment.

  • The view of the west front is certainly very striking.

  • The composition of this tower is certainly very good.

  • The war is certainly very popular, but I don't think its popularity will last long when we begin to pay for it, unless we are encouraged and compensated for our sacrifices by some very flattering successes.

  • He is certainly very popular, and there is a high idea of his diplomatic skill and vigour.

  • The Emperor is certainly very anxious to make peace, and when he is bent upon a thing he generally does it, and my own opinion and hope is that he will refuse to give way to us now as he did last May.

  • As to the advice you desire me to give him, it is certainly very salutary; but I fancy neither I nor any other of his friends will ever venture to mention it.

  • But the fault lies not in the piece, which is certainly very acute; but in the subject.

  • It's certainly very good in the abstract," he added, with a glance at the daughter, as if the sense must be hers.


  • The above list will hopefully provide you with a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "certainly very" 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:
    apply the; are about; body politic; certainly not; certainly true; certainly very; certainly will; certainly would; certainly would; desert life; different lengths; erect attitude; errant knight; fair proportion; grassy plain; keep awake; lowed thet; mountain ranges; navicular disease; past days; pretty sight; profound obeisance; readily recognized; remained till; right shoulder; single card