The answer is clear enough; and, indeed, the case against the Nonjurors is nowhere so strong as on its political side.
The significance of the command to wear the girdle, but not to put it into water, seems to be clear enough.
The connexion between the parts of this first portion of the discourse is clear enough.
That the nucleus is a most important vital centre is clear enough, but it is equally clear that nucleus and cell substance must be together to constitute the life substance.
The reason why congenital variations are needed for the evolution of the living machine is clear enough.
The theoretical answer to this question in terms of the law of the conservation of energy is clear enough, but it is by no means so easy to answer it by experimental data.
The following remarks of Goethe's, reported by his secretary Riemer, will give the reader a picture of what Goethe meant by this term, clear enough to allow us to use the German word.
What we have previously said will make it clear enough that in these words of a modern physicist we meet once more the two fundamentals of Hume's philosophy.
To provide insight into this upper frontier stage, of which neither Howard nor Goethe was at that time in a position to develop a clear enough conception to deal with it scientifically, is one of the aims of this book.
The young person left in haste, that's clear enough," remarked Hood, balancing one of the pumps in his hand.
Frontispiece "The young person left in haste, that's clear enough," remarked Hood.
But the avowal, though it is by way of allegory and grows up out of the imagery of the poem as naturally as a blossom from its stem, is clear enough.
Not that she would mind, presumably; the title of her book is an avowal, clear enough at a second glance, of its point of view.
Here the impulse is clear enough, but sometimes it takes a subtler form, and then it occasionally betrays the poet into a solecism.
It is clear enoughto me that no one set the house on fire.
We shall not make our trip to-day--that is clear enough.
What was not understood before was clear enough now.
T is a yawn Of sheer fatigue subsiding to repose: The statue 's 'Somnolency' clear enough!
The way of the author, therefore, who takes this subject in hand, is clear enough at the outset.
Our answer would be clear enough, as I have tried to suggest, if we could see in the form of the novel an image of the circling sweep of time.
It is rather a complicated story, but the beginning is clear enough, and the direction which it is to take is also clear.
One thing is clear enough," said Alfred; "they discovered that they had lost the battle, and they have abandoned the field.
You are all right," he said, "that is clear enough; you are as infatuated as a Goddess could require.
It was not for me to be certain yet, played with as I had been by visions that cry advantage of the brain, when even a pennyweight thereof is gone; neither was I clear enough to indulge in bright aerial doubt, as adolescent genius may.
All that is clear enough, but the one thing I can't make out for the very life of me is, why the dickens did she send us that scamp, whose real name is Hisar, under the name of Hafer?
The above list will hopefully provide you with a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "clear enough" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this group of words.