No doubt the presence of the Nautilus, even more fearsome than itself, and which it couldn't grip with its mandibles or the suckers on its arms.
So it was now urgent to renew the air in our prison, and no doubt the air in this whole underwater boat as well.
But aside from this occurring, I didn't doubt the possibility of our making contact with them.
The letter N was no doubt the initial of the name of that mystifying individual in command beneath the seas!
In short, it had not entered my mind to doubt the existence of Jeanie and Effie Deans, and their father, and Reuben Butler, and the others, who seem as real as historical persons in Scotch history.
No doubt the tension of emotion, which had lasted for many hours, had worn them out; but, if weariness had weighed down their eyelids, love should have kept them open.
No doubt the Cross, in so far, was pain and suffering.
No doubt the explanation of their defeat which most naturally suggested itself to these disciples would be that somehow or other--perhaps because of Christ's absence--they had lost the gift which they knew that they once had.
I said this to see if she had any reason to doubt the future.
The fear was too undisguised and the grief too natural for me to doubt the genuineness of either.
No doubt the magazines of the carbines were packed with those neat brass capsules which carry doses of potential death; but the guards, except for the moral effect of the thing, might just as well have been bare-handed.
No doubt the re-enforcements of reserves that hurried into it to strengthen the regular garrison counted themselves lucky men to have so massive and stout a shelter from which to fight an enemy who must work in the open against them.
Less than three per cent of those who get back to the base hospitals will die," he said with a snap of his jaw, as though challenging me to doubt the statement.
I do not conceive, however, that because I doubt the fact, I am under obligations to account for the fallacy.
A person on being informed of the first discovery of this art, and of its being practiced, in the first place, with separate wooden types, might be disposed to doubt the ignorance of men in those times.
But if, amidst difficulties and disappointments of no common description, I was led to doubt the wisdom of Providence, I was wrong.
Notwithstanding the magnificent sheet of water we were now resting near, I began thus early to doubt the character of this creek.
These are no doubt the Singpho, Bor and Bor-abor tribes who inhabit the mountains of upper Assam.
I collected, in the dry bed of a stream near it, a curious white substance like thick felt, formed of felspathic silt (no doubt the product of glacial streams) and the siliceous cells of infusoriae.
One element of his success was no doubt the change in the charter of 1609.
He begins to doubt the wisdom of reliance upon that worn apothegm about absence conquering love.
I began to doubt the value of the "culture" that blunts the natural instincts.
How could he doubt the superiority of the grand brother, whom he had beheld in the green and gold uniform of the dragoons of the Guard, commanding his squadron on the Champ de Mars?
About this time, she began to doubt the honesty of the government, and declared it was capable of keeping the three numbers in the urn, so as to excite the shareholders to put in enormous stakes.
If she did not marry a third time it was no doubt the fault of the times.
Whilst we have no right to doubt the sincerity of the British Government in their construction of the treaty, it is at the same time my deliberate conviction that this construction is in opposition both to its letter and its spirit.
But even these, I believe, would be disappointed in the result if a course should be pursued which will keep in doubt the value of the legal-tender medium of exchange.
No doubt the rooms on this floor were the abode of the chief who built it, and his principal followers; the others would be above.
No doubt the stone of which it is built is the same as that of the cliffs.
This cleft is undoubtedly very narrow--no doubt the result of an earthquake.
Now it seems scarcely possible that such matter should have any direct mechanical power; but if through some molecular change it were to occupy less space than it did before, no doubt the cell-walls would close up and contract.
The distinction is a difficult one, and nodoubt the word is occasionally misapplied.
No doubt the narrative I have given is plainer and more coherent for the questions my father put; but it loses much from the omission of one or two parts which she gave dramatically, with evident enjoyment of the fun that was in them.
Allow me to say that I doubt the propriety of your being here so much.
Footnote 9: In this mood he no more understands, and altogether doubts himself, as he has previously come to doubt the world.
The above list will hopefully provide you with a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "doubt the" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this group of words.