White helps made toexpress the act, and at the same time it denotes the quality attributed to the wall as the result of the act.
Queen helps made to express the act, and at the same time denotes the office to which the act raised Victoria.
Oh thou joy, comfort, and pride of my life, how cold is that word to express the fervency of my approbation!
Let A be your carriage; and let B stand for six hundred thousands of besoms, which suppose to express the value of your carriage in that article at this present moment.
But I had an answer from Mr. Wordsworth before I was eighteen; and that my letter was thought to express the homage of an enlightened admirer, may be inferred from the fact that his answer was long and full.
Your majesty may imagine, a great deal better than I am able to express the astonishment of the caliph at this dreadful spectacle.
I am very glad, said he to the jeweller, to find in you a reparation of my loss: I want words to express the obligations I am under to you.
No words are sufficient to express the joy of Bedreddin when he saw his mother and his son.
When servants are spoken of in connection with mere property, the terms used to express the latter do not include the former.
It is impossible for me to express the sentiments of esteem and gratitude for the unremitting and zealous exertions with which your excellency on every occasion has been pleased to promote the interest of my sovereign and country.
He concludes his letter thus: "I take this opportunity to express the satisfaction it affords me to have it in my power to comply with your wishes," &c.
The unremitted marks of friendship and regard shown to the fleet under my command in the different ports in Sweden have excited my highest gratitude, and I have not failed to express the same to my government.
I draw this figure (a young shoot of oak) in outline only, it being impossible to express the refinements of shade in distant foliage in a woodcut.
This noble desire was not usually accompanied by artistic discrimination, and the land is filled with monuments and statues which express the gratitude of the people.
But what would have been his feelings if he could have known that almost three centuries after these lines were penned, they would be used to express the emotion of an unsentimental traveler in the primeval forests of the New World?
It would be difficult for me toexpress the satisfaction we felt on landing at Angostura, the capital of Spanish Guiana.
It is, however, included in order toexpress the intention.
Language is not vituperative enough to express the effect of its downward elongation.
I would wish to express the, same thing which is big at my heart, but I know not how to do it without indelicacy.
For your encouragement, I express the conviction, that such exercises as yours, are a conflict that must ultimately prove successful.
So said the Christ, multiplying perfection into itself twice--two sevens and a ten--in order to express theidea of boundlessness.
To modify or qualify with respect to quantity; to fix or express the quantity of; to rate.
The use of more words than are necessary to express the idea; a roundabout, or indirect, way of speaking; circumlocution.
Efforts of those who have experienced Cosmic Consciousness to express the experience; the strange similarity found in all attempts.
One passage from the doctrines of Gauranga is almost identical with many others who have sought to express the feeling of security, of deathlessness which comes to the soul which has realized cosmic consciousness.
For, "mind" and "intellect" express the power of understanding.
The above list will hopefully provide you with a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "express the" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this group of words.