I am solicitous about your figure; convinced, by a thousand instances, that a good one is a real advantage.
Thus under our constitution, the oath has to be taken by every defendant, who is not permitted even to state his defence until he swears that he resists the plaintiff's claim because he believes that his cause is a good one.
And thus the description of the robber as an audacious thief is a good one.
He declined to follow our advice, being confident, as he said, that his cause was a good one.
The plan was really a good one; only Blangin ought not to have claimed the honor of inventing it: the idea came from his wife.
The bed was no doubt a good one; but the idiot had taken off the mattress and the blankets, and lain down in his clothes on the straw bed.
I've paid my money; you have no right to keep the lease any longer, whether it is a bad one or a good one.
I'll go on before you, and speak to those I am acquainted with, and tell them you are going to set up a new character, and that you hope to make it a good one.
The scheme is a good one, Sir Gervaise, though full of danger and difficulty.
I think that your suggestion is a good one, and will follow it, at any rate.
Oh, there he is, --paddling about like a good one!
The idea was a good one; we were not making much progress toward finding any treasure, and the beach certainly looked like a good place for a swim.
Tis the surest heirship to the block to be the chip of a good one.
Being under parole to Master Stickles, I only went out betwixt certain hours; because I was accounted as liable to be called upon; for what purpose I knew not, but hoped it might be a good one.
But Master Stickles assured her that the King's writ often had that effect, and the symptom was a good one.
There's a chance for a good stenographer there, and I'm sure you are a good one.
He had his speech all made up, and it was a good one, too.
I know you said you had a reason, but are you sure it's a good one?
He invested this ten thousand on Rodgers Warren's word that the investment was likely to be a good one.
We also know that this is not accomplished by suppressing that habit, but by putting a good one in its place.
BEING A BOY By Charles Dudley Warner BEING A BOY One of the best things in the world to be is a boy; it requires no experience, though it needs some practice to be a good one.
The habit of saying right out what you think of everybody is not a good one, and the record of such opinions and impressions, while it is not so mischievous to the public as talking may be, is harmful to the recorder.
If you are telling a lie at all, you may just as well make it a good one, so I told him she was really wonderfully well, only a little exhausted after the illness, as was natural, and that I expected to have her up before him.
He did not consider the bar of gold simile a good one.
We agreed that the moral of MacShaughnassy's story was a good one.
The lady reflected upon the idea, and it struck her as a good one.
Close attendance to the business of the House will soon give you the parliamentary routine; and strict attention to your style will soon make you, not only a speaker, but a good one.
When I was younger than you are, I resolved within myself that I would in all events be a speaker in parliament, and a good one too, if I could.
Joe Williams using electric lights on his farm--that's a good one, Al.
I can see that John White's argument for concrete roads is a good one.
That may be just as you say," said he, "but a business that is full of that kind of tricks is a good one to get out of.
The idea is a good one, and you may send your boy up and get the best suit of clothes I've got, but I'm going to figure on rifles before I order.
The above list will hopefully provide you with a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "good one" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this group of words.