It was in 1898 that he first came across an account of Lilienthal; the reading of it impressed him as deeply as it impressed the Wrights.
How deeplythe threat of the Zeppelins had impressed the public imagination and the minds of those who were responsible for the Royal Naval Air Service may be seen by this--that all four naval raids were directed against Zeppelin sheds.
They were deeply impressed by the evidence of large expenditure, direct and indirect, on aerial preparation, and the systematic manner of that expenditure.
By the end of the century, three years before flight was achieved, those who were most deeply concerned in the attempt knew that success was near.
Monsieur did not even hear me, he was so deeply absorbed in what he was doing.
They had stopped under the vacillating light of a gas jet and appeared to be both bending over a paper held by Mademoiselle Stangerson, reading something which deeply interested them.
I could not but observe that Monsieur Darzac was deeply moved; and I suspected that Rouletabille's confident assertion was not pleasing to him.
It was remarked that the jurors appeared to be deeply interested in a rapid conversation which the manager of the "Epoque" was having with Maitre Henri Robert.
If there had been a man on the bicycle, the wheels would have sunk deeply into the soil.
The Incredible Body I bent in great anxiety over the body of the reporter and had the joy to find that he was deeply sleeping, the same unhealthy sleep that I had seen fall upon Frederic Larsan.
Already, at that time, the learned world was deeply interested in the labours of Professor Stangerson and his daughter.
And yet the public attention was so deeply interested in the details of the trial that the occurrence of a ministerial crisis was completely unnoticed at the time.
You are just on the threshold of life, you have only known this girl two months, and however deeply you think you love her, I appeal to you to break it off at once.
Deeply conscious of the unaesthetic nature of her condition, she was convinced that she could no longer be attractive to one so easily upset in his nerves, so intolerant of ugliness.
Jolyon could see that Irene was deeply affected by this simple forgiveness.
She had retorted with decision "If you like to so dignify the simpler word 'weak'" He had become very rigid at that, biting deeply into his moustache.
The truth is, my dear, we both have pasts, which it is now my task to make known to you, because they so grievously and deeply affect your future.
This time, however, the mountain was going to Mahomet; for he felt by now more deeply civilised than Paris, and perhaps he really was.
When I was your age, I remember feeling it deeply that I was not allowed to risk the lives of others.
Surely Agnes had felt at least as deeply as himself the utter solemnity of marriage!
He had pursued her very tenaciously and to do him justice was deeply in love with her.
But in Derek it roused a peculiar feeling, such as a man might have gazing at the shores of a native country, out of which he had been thrown for no fault of his own--a yearning deeply muffled up in pride and resentment.
And as if answering for all that depended on Worsted Skeynes, the spaniel John deeply wagged that which had been left him of his tail.
He was onlydeeply chagrined, as was his mother, that the American ladies should have been subjected to such treatment in Japan.
If it had been Mary or Elinor who had risen at dawn to read the prayer book, Billie would not have been in the least surprised, for one was deeply religious, and the other also, though she never talked much about it.
Habitual wranglers regard quarrels as mere ripples on the surface and soon forget about them, but the two girls were unaccustomed to such scenes and their feelings were deeply lacerated.
Her nature was deeply tinged with sympathy and sweetness, but she was not yet old enough to feel tolerant with Nancy for growing up and craving beaux and flattery.
Apparently all present were toodeeply engrossed to waste time in conversation.
None of the players were aware of what had happened; all were too deeply engrossed.
His lip twitched--I had seen it twitch like that before, when he was deeply moved.
Dulcie, I saw to my dismay, was not merely playing, but was deeply engrossed in the game.
But he was a plucky little chap, and tried hard not to show how deeply the news had affected him.
So deeply occupied were their thoughts, seemingly, that they appeared not to notice Albeury, Dulcie and myself as we stepped aside to let them pass.
For fully ten minutes she had not addressed me, so deeply engaged had she been in conversation with Lord Cranmere.
My thoughts were too deeply engrossed, however, to allow me to focus my attention on the printed page.
Would she, I wondered, ever come to understand how deeply she had stolen into my heart?
I had always known her to be very partial to the old gardener, who remembered her as a baby, but until after his death I had not realized how deeply attached to him she really had been.
Rose, deeply impressed by the high honor to which her kinsman had arrived.
It will do him a world of good and deeply oblige Your ever loving AUNT CLARA.
He was not at all of a reckless disposition, and, notwithstanding the desultory way in which he had spent time, he had strong mental and moral fiber, and was capable of feeling deeply and enduringly.
John leaned out of the buggy and looked back along the road, as if deeply interested in observing something which had attracted his attention, and David's face worked oddly for a moment.
Now leave me, sir, and I trust that your future life will show that you deeply regret the outrage which in your greed for my husband's lands you were tempted to commit.
His own lands are thrice as broad as mine, though men say that he has dipped deeply into them and owes much money to the Jews.
The stories are deeply interesting in themselves, and have a moral charm that emanates from the principal characters; they teach without preaching, are of lively interest throughout, and will win the hearts of all girl readers.
Walter boweddeeply and murmured some words of thanks, and was then led off by the marshal.
Her slender and burnished body, more brightly and deeply blue than the deep blue sky, glistened in the sunbeam; and her net-like wings laughed at the flowers because they could not fly, but must stand still and abide the wind and the rain.
As a temporary measure, the building may be converted into a smoke-house by placing the fires in pits sunk deeply into the ground, and effectively screened above by iron baffle plates.
It would appear in such instances that either the coagulum was too thin and soft, or that the grooves had been cut too deeply and sharply.
I value him much," he observed, "and should have grieved deeply had he lost his life.
Just as the manatee was disappearing under the water, the harpoon flew with unerring aim from Naro's hand, and was buried deeply in its body.
It stopped on seeing us approach, and turned its round short head, with deeply sunk eyes and a large nose, to look at us.
It admits that our country is deeply affected by the war in Cuba and that its desires for peace are just.
These elements of danger and disorder already pointed out have been strikingly illustrated by a tragic event which has deeply and justly moved the American people.
They become deeply interested in one picture because it alludes (in a manner which seems to them intelligent) to something they know by books, and they pass with indifference better works that have no literary association.
I was talking about this with a rich old French gentleman about ten days ago, and he deeply deplored it; he said he felt more respect for common workmen than for the idle young men in his own class.
Though not yet in my teens, I had an intense delight in architecture, and deeplyenjoyed the noble old building, one of the finest of its class in England.
I was also deeply impressed by the grim, old Tower of London, and only regretted that I did not know which cell the unlucky Sir Stephen had occupied during his hopeless imprisonment there.
He was deeply interested, and said they seemed to him most important works, giving him views about art which had never entered his mind before.
The reader will hardly believe that the death of so hard a father could have been felt otherwise than as an inexpressible relief, and yet I was deeply affected by his loss.
I deeply regret not to have seen much more of him.
The load upon the cart, when we were all together, was found excessive for the animal, and my husband, who was always deeply concerned about the welfare of dumb creatures, decided to have a bigger and stronger donkey.
Meanwhile these clergymen are deeply respected, whilst honest men whose opinions are not one whit more heretical are stigmatized as 'infidels,' and excluded from 'good society.
What you say about priests and women interests me deeply as a clergyman.
Being at that time deeply interested in France, I was delighted to find a man like M.
Of no people is it more deeply true than of Americans that "each man has two countries: his own and Italy.
Michael Angelo was then deeply absorbed in painting his "Last Judgment," in the Capella Sistina.
She is a connoisseur in art; she has a most intelligent interest in science; she is a critical lover of literature; she is a wise and judicious and deeply sympathetic leader in all philanthropic work and purposes.
Pica, the mother of Francis, is said to have been of noble origin and of a deeply religious nature.
He was a quiet, sagacious, middle-aged man who evidently thought deeply about whatever he had in hand.
Mr. Collins was deeply affected with the apparent ingenuousness with which I expressed my feelings.
Emily felt deeply the trick that was played upon her.
Having much kindness in his disposition, he soon became deeply interested in the unhappiness of his relation.
By his side stood a young woman, his sweetheart, extremely agreeable in her person, and her looks testifying how deeply she interested herself in the fate of her lover.
Mr. Falkland was deeplyaffected with this expostulation.
My coming is a pledge how deeply I am myself impressed with what I have to communicate.
It was a part of the singularity of my fate that it hurried me from one species of anxiety and distress to another, too rapidly to suffer any one of them to sink deeply into my mind.
The thought of what was reserved for me by my persecutors sickened my very soul; and the more intimately I was acquainted with oppression and injustice, the more deeply was I penetrated with the abhorrence to which they are entitled.
Either the ignominious execution of a man whom I had once so deeply venerated, and whom now I sometimes suspected not to be without his claims to veneration; or a confirmation, perhaps an increase, of the calamities I had so long endured.
He was too deeply pervaded with the idle and groundless romances of chivalry, ever to forget the situation, humiliating and dishonourable according to his ideas, in which he had been placed upon this occasion.
He saw no reason why a peasant, with certain advantages of education and opportunity, might not be as eligible a companion as a lord; at the same time that he wasdeeply impressed with the venerableness of old institutions.
The Indian loved for the first time, and this first love, which is so sharp that at a later date all other loves grow pale at the mere remembrance of it, had sunk deeply into his heart.
The maiden, who was deeply affected, and whom the Indians had not accustomed to such happiness, yielded to the intoxication of joy.
Oh, that will be delightful," exclaimed the young girl; and then she blushed moredeeply than ever at having betrayed her pleasure.
He looked down into the beautiful face trembling with emotion; he had never seen her when she looked so fair as then, because he had never seen her when her feelings were really so deeply touched.
He loved deeplyand he hated fiercely, and his poetry was the voice of his love and his hate.
When at last Si'Wren dared to lean once more into the deeply recessed window sill for a peek, for the stone of the fortress wall was exceeding thick, her delight was turned to dismay.
This is indeed a far-fetched tale," mused a deeply frowning Borla in his customarily heavy, foreboding tone of voice.
She felt deeply overawed, that she should be given such unprecedented favor in her Emperor's eyes as to blaspheme his gods so freely and treat them all as false.
He had, she saw, two arrows in hisdeeply corded neck muscles.
Deeply disturbed by all that she had seen, and still pondering the madness of it, Si'Wren hesitantly approached the sobbing mother.
We must have the assistance of God, that we may break our chains; we are too deeply in love to free ourselves.
Your words, your oaths, are deeply graven in my heart.
She was now pale and deeply affected by his tone and manner.
As he entered upon the subject the old gentleman looked away from him, and as he proceeded Edward could see that he was deeply affected.
It was vibration simply that affected Gerald so deeply last night; a rhythm co-ordinating with his heart.
When it developed that he was deeply interested in her she was astonished and then touched.
I was deeply absorbed in thought and perfectly oblivious to my surroundings, I suppose.
But the flavor, the spectacular effects, linger only in the memory of the rapidly lessening number who mingled deeply in ante-bellum politics.
Manhood had stamped its lines more deeply on the brow since last they parted.
His hand had been deeply burned--so deeply that the pain had produced fever.
Minutes passed in perfect silence, and Mary began to wonder what correspondent could so deeply interest him.
It was with this purpose that she sent a note to Lady Houstoun, requesting an interview with her on a subject deeply connected with the honor of her family and the happiness of her son.
The above list will hopefully give you a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "deeply" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this word.