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Example sentences for "each"

Lexicographically close words:
dyuerse; dyvers; dyverse; eable; eache; eaded; eadem; eademque; eager
  1. If Henri felt that each life lost was lost by him wasn't the same true for her?

  2. You have no other duties of course; so each day you shall buy in the market place at Dunkirk, with American money.

  3. Once or twice in the early morning a German plane, flying so low that one could easily see the black cross on each wing, reconnoitered the village for wagon trains or troops.

  4. The ladies of the Methodist Church were going to collect a certain amount each month to support a soup kitchen as near the Front as possible.

  5. As for Sara Lee, instantly two pictures flashed through her mind, each distinct, each clear, almost photographic.

  6. They dined together every night, very modestly, sitting in some crowded restaurant perhaps, but seeing little but each other.

  7. And they went to the Zoölogical Gardens, where he gravely named one of the sea lions for Colonel Lilias because of its mustache, and insisted on saluting it each time before he flung it a fish.

  8. What would happen if America entered the struggle and the papers were filled, as were the British and the French, with long casualty lists, each name a knife thrust somewhere?

  9. Now let's talk about something interesting--for instance, how much we love each other.

  10. Each held a bowl of hot soup, and--that being a good day--a piece of bread.

  11. Much that they felt about Sara Lee they did not express even to each other.

  12. Now and then a rifle shot, thin and sharp, rang out from where, under the floating starlights, keen eyes on each side watched for movements on the other.

  13. Throughout all the years of Austrian domination the citizens of Sebenico remained loyal to their Italian traditions, as is proved by the medallions ornamenting the façade of the cathedral, each of which bears the image of a saint.

  14. The idea is to leave each country with as little as possible of that country's currency in your possession.

  15. Slovenia and Croatia each have their aristocracies, with titles and estates and traditions; Serbia's population is wholly composed of peasants, or of business and professional men who come from peasant stock.

  16. In crossing Southern Hungary we passed at least half-a-dozen of them, they being readily distinguished by a Swiss flag painted on each car.

  17. Towering above the red-tiled roofs of each of these Venetian plain-towns is its slender campanile, and, as each campanile is of distinctive design, it serves as a landmark by which the town can be identified from afar.

  18. A few men with Father Mullane's resource, tact, and sense of humor would do more than all the diplomats under the roof of the Hotel Crillon to settle international differences and make the nations understand each other.

  19. As they passed I could see quite plainly, flaunting from each taffrail, a flag of stripes and stars.

  20. Our brother Rhenus in the meantime had a vision, in which he saw several of the prisoners going out of the jail with a lighted lamp preceding each of them, whilst others, who had no such lamp, stayed behind.

  21. Each wished to claim the body for his church.

  22. But the enemy of mankind, sowing between them the seeds of discord, their friendship was succeeded by the most implacable hatred, and they no longer accosted each other when they met in the streets.

  23. The brothers Sigebert and Chilperic were engaged in bloody wars with each other.

  24. The Xoguno having once explicitly declared himself opposed to their religion, the inferior monarchs, as a matter of course, vied with each other in their efforts to uproot it.

  25. In the morning they parted, to see each other no more in this life.

  26. That is why I say that people who are proposing to marry because their life SEEMS to them to be full must more than ever set themselves to think and make clear to their own minds for the sake of what each of them lives.

  27. I remember his first arrival, and I have always retained the impression that from the first words they exchanged he and my father understood each other, and found themselves speaking the same language.

  28. Each of us would have his spoils in the saddle-straps now, and we would begin to hope for a fox.

  29. There's no one to hear us, and we can't see each other, so we shall not feel ashamed.

  30. Of course when he talked to the peasants he asked each of them if he remembered Turgenieff and eagerly picked up anything they had to say about him.

  31. Turgenieff himself said that when they first came to know each other my father dogged his heels "like a woman in love," and at one time he used to avoid him, because he was afraid of his spirit of opposition.

  32. I shall never cease to love you and to value your friendship, although, probably through my fault, each of us will long feel considerable awkwardness in the presence of the other.

  33. Each loved the other with such poignant affection, each was suffering all the time on the other's behalf, and then this terrible ending!

  34. We shall lead the life we led in the old days; I shall work in the mornings, but we shall meet and see each other almost all day.

  35. To the right a swarm of huge and huddled figures seems gathering with moan or menace behind a veil of frozen air, a mask of hardening vapour; and from each side the bitter light of ice or steel falls grey in cruel refraction.

  36. Of the technical theology or "spiritualism" each man who cares to try will judge as it may please him; it goes at least high and deep enough to draw down or pluck up matter for absolution or condemnation.

  37. In the next and longest division of the book, direct allegory and imaginative vision are indivisibly mixed into each other.

  38. Without forgiveness of sins, the one thing necessary, we lapse each man into separate self-righteousness and a cruel worship of natural morality and religious law.

  39. This song is the song of Time, sung to the four harps of the world, each continent a harp struck by Time as by a harper.

  40. Neither can or (unless in some fit of fugitive insanity) need wish to become valuable or respectable to the other: each must remain, on its own ground and to its own followers, a thing of value and deserving respect.

  41. Only let none conceive that each separate figure in the swarming and noisy life of this populous daemonic creation has individual meaning and vitality.

  42. Upon each of these the prophet, as it were, lays hand, compelling the thing into shape and speech, constraining the abstract to do service as a man might.

  43. The worship of God is: Honouring his gifts in other men, each according to his genius, and loving the greatest men best; those who envy or calumniate great men hate God, for there is no other God.

  44. Full instructions accompany each outfit and the amount of pressure for which the regulator should be set depends upon the design of the torch and the amount of oxygen contained in the storage tank.

  45. As will be apparent, it consists of a central body portion having guide members to keep the die pieces from falling out and levers at each end in order to permit the operator to exert sufficient force to remove the metal.

  46. The essential parts of such a system and their relation to each other are shown in diagrammatic form at Fig.

  47. In the Anzani the method followed is to provide each connecting rod big end with a shoe which consists of a portion of a hollow cylinder held against the crank-pin by split clamping rings.

  48. There are three grooves machined in each crank disc and three connecting rod big ends run in each pair of grooves.

  49. Theoretically each phase of a four-cycle engine begins and ends at a center, though in actual practice the inertia or movement of the gases makes it necessary to allow a lead or lag to the valve, as the case may be.

  50. Therefore for each pound of oxygen one needs to burn hydrogen or carbon four and one-half pounds of air must be allowed.

  51. If two cylinders are used, it is possible to balance the explosions in such a way that one will occur each revolution.

  52. Obviously the same type of engine is not universally applicable, because each class of work has individual peculiarities which can best be met by an engine designed with the peculiar conditions present in view.

  53. It gives many examples of pattern work, each one fully illustrated and explained with much detail.

  54. Great care is taken in the casting and machining of these cylinders, to have the bore and walls concentric with each other.

  55. Less than half a dozen shots from each of five Winchesters had been enough, combined with darkness, to utterly rout the mass of rioters.

  56. Each had his ticket for Chicago, where they were to change for Denver.

  57. With a leg broken just above the knee, poor Shiner went down, and without so much as a word, with only one glance into each other's eyes, Long Nolan and Geordie swooped down to the rescue.

  58. Each had a money belt and a modest sum in currency.

  59. Nolan was to care for the wounded and guard the outward approach, and all three were in close support of each other.

  60. It had been give and take 'twixt him and Toomey ever since the discovery that each had served in the cavalry.

  61. Each had his hopes of rescuing something if not all of the imperilled property, and neither had even a vague idea of the peril, difficulty, and treachery he was destined to encounter.

  62. Aloft on each side were precipitous slopes affording but slight foothold.

  63. Why had not some one suggested it would be wise to search, individually, each brave before conducting him to the line?

  64. Thorny balls, each three in one, The chestnuts throw in our path in showers!

  65. So now is come our joyful feast; Let every man be jolly; Each room with ivy leaves is drest And every post with holly.

  66. Days lengthen a cock's stride each day after Christmas.

  67. Take which you will, speckled, blue, yellow, Each in its way has not a fellow.

  68. Come buy, come buy my mystic flowers, All ranged with due consideration, And culled in fancy's fairy bowers, To suit each age and every station.

  69. Thaw'd are the snows, and now the lusty Spring Gives to each mead a neat enamelling.

  70. Thus in each of the three great departments of State, Executive, Judicial, and Legislative, is Popular Sovereignty disowned.

  71. On that day, in pursuance of an order of the House, the Clerk called the roll of members, when each responded viva voce with the name of the person for whom he voted, as follows.

  72. On reaching Newton Street, on Blackstone Square, a long line of beautiful young ladies was ranged upon the pavement on the south side, each holding a bouquet, to present to Senator Sumner.

  73. As there is a nobler law above, so there is a meaner law below, and each is felt in human affairs.

  74. Men slaughter each other with almost perfect impunity.

  75. Now, as Christian was walking solitarily by himself, he espied one afar off, come crossing over the field to meet him; and their hap was to meet just as they were crossing the way of each other.

  76. To these things they gave him no answer; only they looked upon each other, and laughed.

  77. We related to each other our war reminiscences and soon began to love each other like brothers.

  78. The lizard was doing his best to widen out the opening which he had forced through, while the snake with an evil meaning and aggressive hissing hastened to occupy each newly opened little crack.

  79. They already loved each other, sire, when thou didst first see her.

  80. No other idol can compare with him, because each of us puts on his best garment to-day and holds a flag in his hand as a sign of joyousness.

  81. In front of each child lay a fresh lavash (roll), on which Zenobi had thoughtfully piled up a large amount of rice.

  82. Evidently these were two persons in love with each other, and I had nothing to fear.

  83. To the young people days, weeks, and months went by with extraordinary rapidity, they were perfectly happy and for a long time could not imagine how they had become so dear to each other.

  84. To this request he joined the wish to have many priests, in order to send them out not only into all provinces, but also to each single city of his government to educate, enlighten, and baptize the people all over Georgia.

  85. And how beautiful she looked on this rare sunny day, all shining with soft sweet rays, separated from each other by a large number of various colored shades, one more perfect and exquisite than the other.

  86. Looking over now the books in which Moses teaches us: "each one who on earth calls himself God shall be put to death!

  87. And taking each other's hand, brother and sister ran on the road with what they had found by accident.

  88. Each had done his worst, pope and emperor; and had Henry stood his ground as he might, for he would have had ample support from his people, it would have been a gain of centuries for Europe.

  89. Each of these men was striving to enlist Henry VIII.

  90. A confederation of states was formed, with Austria as its chief, each to be represented at a general Diet, held at Frankfort; and for fifty years such was the condition of Germany.

  91. What if each of those little lamps was growing into a big lamp, and after being a big lamp for a while, had to go out and grow a bigger lamp still--out there, beyond this out?

  92. Chinese men do not paint their faces, either on the stage or elsewhere, but in Japan actors in certain plays are painted on the face with bright streaks of red paint, put on usually on each side of the eyes.

  93. Sue and Charlie had meant to give a glorious war-whoop and shout, but their voices would not come, and when they looked at each other the tears came welling up from their tender little hearts.

  94. For protection, the screen is covered by two leather flaps, fastened one at the bottom and one at the top of the bag, which overlap each other, and are secured by steel clasps.

  95. So we each tried a pig, and--well, I would never eat roast pork or fried ham again if I thought real pigs were shaped like ours.

  96. They were all marching slowly out in long lovely file, one after the other, each taking its leave of her as it passed!

  97. Father and son exchanged looks, and each saw in the countenance of the other that the proposal was a good one.

  98. More than fifty distinct branches are comprised in the various departments, and each workman, on the average, earns about three shillings a-day.

  99. The next day it should be again beaten, and the two operations ought to be repeated alternately during ten days, care being taken to turn the meat each time.

  100. Here they assemble to dance and regale in the best manner their circumstances and the place will afford; each man treats his sweetheart with a ribbon or favour.

  101. Doric columns to a large and elegant staircase of stone, and on each side of the staircase are retiring rooms of convenience for gentlemen.

  102. In each case there is a stirring tee-shot from a high tee, and if that be well struck we may then pitch easily home, although the greens are very well protected, and should have a comfortable string of fours.

  103. To turn from the scenery to the golf, there is a very clearly-marked distinction between the two rounds of nine holes, each of which begins and ends near Fixby Hall, which is used as the club-house.

  104. Each of the five has devoted adherents who will maintain its merits against the world in heated argument, but there can be little doubt which has the right to come first.

  105. Some courses impress themselves very quickly on the memory so that each hole stands out quite distinctly, while others leave only a vague and blurred recollection, nor is it merely a question of the holes being absolutely good or bad.

  106. At the eleventh, however, we come to a really splendid hole, at which each shot has infinite terrors.

  107. Prospective members by the score jostled each other eagerly on the waiting list, and parliamentary golfers distinguished the course above its fellows by cutting their divots from its soft and yielding mud.

  108. The holes cross and recross each other and everybody aims at his own particular hole in a light-hearted, pic-nicking frame of mind, and perfectly regardless of the lives of others.

  109. To-night, when our dead bodies lie here upon the cross, you and I shall live and know each other as the two men who hung dying together on Calvary.

  110. We should think of each other and remember each other and sympathize with each other and pray for each other.

  111. You think of your boy as serving at one side of the veil, and you at the other; each in the presence of Christ.

  112. Nay, shall we not know each other there far more thoroughly than we do here?

  113. Rejected still He pursues each one: "My child, what more could thy God have done?

  114. Ask yourself, each one, what do you mean by "I"?

  115. We should tell our Lord so much about each other.

  116. If His words meant anything surely they meant we shall be conscious of each other, we shall know each other as the two friendless ones who hung on the cross together.

  117. And if even our poor love for each other on earth is such a happiness think what joy may come from dwelling in that unutterable Love of God.

  118. Amen to that," said Anstice solemnly; and as the two men shook hands silently each rejoiced, in his individual fashion, that Chloe Carstairs had come into her own at last.

  119. He spoke slowly, a pause between each word.

  120. Having been forced, by an unkind Fate, into a position in which each saw in the other a possible rival, any neutrality was out of the question.

  121. On their side the Waynes found him, each in his and her own degree, an agreeable companion.

  122. Now I teach my children Each melodious measure.

  123. Nothing loth, Cherry obeyed, and stood beside him attentively while he opened a small leather case and took out a pair of earrings each consisting of a tiny, pear-shaped moonstone dangling at the end of a thin platinum chain.

  124. Henceforth they must be all in all to each other.

  125. In spite of the languid interest she took in everything, hope grew stronger each day in the care of her watchful friend.

  126. She has neither grace nor refinement, such as most women have in common with each other, whatever may be their position in life.

  127. She was content to be forgotten, and let those who were eager for the strife, crowd and jostle each other for the empty honors, for which she did not care to put in a claim.

  128. Only six hours of work each day, and I can have so much time to spend with mamma.

  129. She had ample time, now, to give to little Ruth, and her love for the child became stronger each day, as always happens when we deny ourselves for others.

  130. I have forgotten how to love, but each day (and I have conned the lesson well) I learn better how to hate.

  131. The little patient watcher grew each day paler as hope died out, and, notwithstanding the remonstrances of the elder woman, she only left Clemence's bedside for her daily walk to the graveyard.

  132. I must call round and visit each one of them, to enjoy their discomfiture.

  133. If my wardrobe needed replenishing I had to tell him the exact amount it would take for each article.

  134. The girl felt, sometimes, as she looked at the drooping, attenuated figure, each day growing more ethereal, that her burden was greater than she could bear.

  135. They were all in all to each other, this gentle invalid and her only child.

  136. The stations were each in a community of Covenanters, .

  137. Each succeeding year witnessed the influx into Canada of a larger number of colored emigrants from the South.

  138. But what would be the fate of the running slave was a matter with which, after all, private principles and sympathies, and not merely constitutional provisions, would have a good deal to do in each case.

  139. The settlers had built for themselves small log houses, and cleared from one to five acres each on their heavily timbered land, and raised corn, potatoes and other garden vegetables.

  140. He was in the habit of entering in his book the name of the master of each fugitive, the fugitive's own name and his age, and the new name given him.

  141. By way of penalty, to break up the practice of helping runaways, this law provided that persons guilty of the offence were to be fined twenty pounds of tobacco for each night's hospitality.

  142. The evidence above quoted has the well-known value of two witnesses, examined apart, who corroborate each other; and it also illustrates the way in which the pieces of underground routes may be joined together.

  143. He sent with each company a note to a Cleveland merchant, Mr. Joseph Garretson, saying: "Please forward immediately the U.

  144. Not only this, but every scribe was required to know from memory exactly how many letters of each kind there should be in his sheet before he began to write.

  145. For a real understanding of the Prophets' Books it is necessary to know something of the circumstances under which each man lived and wrote.

  146. Every sheet of parchment must contain an equal number of lines, and the breadth of each column had to be thirty letters wide.

  147. We have seen that most nations in those old times had their books, and we know that each nation had always one book that it valued more than the rest.

  148. But though their faces grew pale as death, and they quivered with anguish to see their loved one suffer, they gazed steadfastly at each other.

  149. How great a joy to read the words carved on temple walls, or in palace halls; and to find with each word read how exactly the Egypt of ancient days is described in the Bible!

  150. God chose the men best fitted to write each part.

  151. I will hold four daisies," said Peggy, "and each of you may take one.

  152. Each day one child may tell the other children about his pet.

  153. She filled the pans with water and put a piece of soap in each pan.

  154. Each ball had a long rubber fastened to it.

  155. We have stuck by each other for over fifty years.

  156. Before milking time was over each little girl held her cup and had it milked full of fresh, new milk.

  157. Then each little girl took a tin cup and followed Mr. White and Billy to the pasture where Bonny-Belle and Bess stood waiting.

  158. So the moss table was set with leaf plates, and on each plate were a ripe, red strawberry and a fairy-size piece of cake.

  159. The children said good-bye to each other and to Miss West.

  160. If you four children will find her nest I will pay you ten cents for each egg in it.

  161. She hoped a little in the Emperor; but the Emperor at that time could do no more than he was already doing; he was giving three hundred francs a year to each child from his privy purse, besides the scholarships.

  162. He wanted everything he saw, but abandoned each thing for the last thing.

  163. Left orphans and very poor, and devoted to each other, the brother and sister had seen life such as it is in Paris.

  164. Roused by much gossip and various rumors, the town of Issoudun expected a mortal combat between the two men, who, we must remark, mutually despised each other.

  165. Between persons who are perpetually in each other's company dislike or love increases daily; every moment brings reasons to love or hate each other more and more.

  166. The two priests went downstairs together, each armed with a huge folio which they laid on one of the side tables in the dining-room.

  167. You would each be more tranquil in mind if you were not at variance with morality and the laws.

  168. All three were silent, and avoided looking at each other; but the next moment, by an almost frantic gesture, Agathe laid her finger on her lips as if to entreat a secrecy no one desired to break.

  169. The organization was strict, like that of an army; each province having a provincial at its head, with a general over all.

  170. Almagro and Pizarro fell out with each other, and the former was defeated and beheaded.

  171. Each individual had his own protecting genius.

  172. Each of them combined with an iron will and revolting cruelty a taste for science and poetry, and the genius of a ruler.

  173. The municipality or commune of Paris was divided into forty-eight sections, each with an assembly which served as a theater for demagogical harangues.

  174. Each state was to have six senators, and to be represented in the lower house in proportion to its population, although no state was to have fewer than five representatives.

  175. Besides smaller sovereignties, as Saxony and Bavaria, there were two hundred and fifty petty principalities, fifty imperial cities, and several hundred knights, each with an insignificant domain subject to him.

  176. The attendance of these knights now began to be regular; but besides the two knights from each county, who were like the county members of our own time, Simon caused each city and borough to send two of their citizens, or burgesses.

  177. The Asian Greek cities were each allowed its own municipal rulers, but paid tribute to the Persian master.

  178. Not seldom two knights joined together in a brotherhood in arms, pledging themselves to sustain each other in every peril.

  179. They made a compound of Christianity, Judaism, and heathen religion and speculation, each Gnostic sect giving to one or the other of these ingredients the preponderance in the strange and often fantastic medley.

  180. Each of the seventeen provinces had its own constitution.

  181. But Perdiccas soon found that each general was disposed to be in fact a king in his own dominion.

  182. A brief sketch will be given of each of these states down to 1447, when Nicholas V.

  183. Rival claimants for the Spanish crown after Charles II, the elder brother of each having resigned his pretensions.

  184. Four regiments of about seven hundred each were on the ground, and never, perhaps, did any force only a few weeks in the field look more like soldiers, march more steadily in line, or present a better appearance in the ranks.

  185. This forest is the uncleared land, extending for a considerable way back, which each planter hopes to take into culture one day or other, and which he now uses to provide timber for his farm.

  186. The secessionists, however, stop short with their universal remedy at the borders of each state, and do not admit the right of separation to any portion of a state unless it be in their own favor.

  187. Each man maddens his neighbor by desperate resolves, and threats and vows.

  188. In the rear of each gang stood a black overseer, with a heavy-thonged whip over his shoulder.

  189. As a general rule, it might be said that the goodness of the cottages was in proportion to the frontage of each plantation toward the river, which is a fair index to the size of the estate wherever the river bank is straight.

  190. In small camps of fifteen or twenty tents each the Tennessee troops were scattered, for health's sake, over the plateau, and on the level ground a few companies were engaged at drill.

  191. Well, sir, I was one of the two sergeants that were permitted to leave in each regiment on the close of the war, and I came away.

  192. The fact is, that the introduction means nothing; you are merely told each other's names, and if you like, you may improve your acquaintance.

  193. We bowed and smiled, paid mutual compliments, congratulated each other on the importance of the occasion.

  194. Though the two sexes can never really understand each other's point of view, because no imagination can cross the gulf of fundamental difference, yet I am certain that women understand men far better than men understand women.

  195. She was little more than a child then, intensely sensitive; and when she sat in the old bark school she fancied that the other children were thinking or whispering to each other, "Her brother's in prison!

  196. I guessed they'd been down fishing for each other before.

  197. We waste too much time looking after each other.

  198. They sat on the beds opposite each other for two or three minutes, in something of the atmosphere that pervades things when conversation has petered out and the dinner-bell is expected to ring.

  199. Jimmie moved promptly after each death, and left the evil one in possession, and built another mia-mia--each one being less pretentious than the last.

  200. A plank-table, supported on stakes driven into the ground, stood in the middle of the room, and two slab benches were fixtures on each side.

  201. They were too far apart to speak to each other as yet.

  202. All of which sounds strange, considering that Maoris are very kind to each other.

  203. We had broken a new pair of shears digging out those grubs from under the bark of the she-oaks, and had each taken a blade as his own especial property, which we thought was the best thing to do under the circumstances.


  204. The above list will hopefully give you a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "each" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this word.
    Other words:
    all; any; aside; each; per; respectively; severally


    Some related collocations, pairs and triplets of words:
    each battalion; each brigade; each cell; each chapter; each class; each commune; each copy; each day; each foot; each instrument; each like; each line; each meal; each parish; each place; each player; each portion; each school; each second; each separate; each session; each single; each soldier; each species; each station; each step