He had little doubt, of course, but that he should succeed; but it is to his credit that he did have some slight doubts.
He had little or nothing to do with the men who had rescued him.
But he had little desire to enjoy the beauties of nature at this time.
From this point we were distant several miles, and that distance necessarily rendered objects indistinct; though we had little difficulty in perceiving the ruins of extensive fortifications.
I had little time to answer this very singular sort of reasoning; for, just then, Herman Mordaunt appeared among us, and gave us serious duty to perform.
A comedy came first, and I had little difficulty in following the story by the pantomime alone.
We went there in carriages and wagons and on horseback, and as we shivered around a fire built by the Cossacks near an open work cabin, we had little appearance of a pleasure party.
Thoughts of being devoured by wild beasts haunted me, though in truth I had little of this fate to fear.
Though apparently he had little sentiment in his nature, yet the memory of his wife was like his religion.
Her curiosity was much greater than her timidity, and she justly reasoned that she had little to fear.
He had little suppleness, little power to adapt himself to varied conditions of life.
What he did was to gather round his table men of talent and worth who would have had little chance of meeting but for his kindly and hospitable intervention, and many a lifelong friendship has thus been begun beneath his roof.
I do not know who the member of the Cabinet was who was responsible for this manoeuvre, but whoever he may have been--and I have my suspicions upon that point--he had little reason to congratulate himself upon the result of his strategy.
We had little meat; what we had was bacon, and prepared meats of the lunch variety.
The hour was late, however, and we had little hopes of its success as a picture.
The papers made the most of these things, and the stories that came out had little semblance to our original statements.
He had little idea we would be along for two or three days and naturally was much surprised.
We had little trouble in this section to find sufficient driftwood for fires.
As it was, we had little prospect of getting in before night.
We had now got hardened to Cape weather, the vessel was under reduced sail, and everything secured on deck and below, so that we had little to do but steer and to stand our watch.
The officer was walking the quarter deck, where I had no right to go, one or two men were talking on the forecastle, whom I had little inclination to join, so that I was left open to the full impression of everything about me.
We had little enough to eat that day, and insufficient water to drink.
The man's errors were due to causes over which he had little control; his noble character was due to himself and his faith in God.
But we had little chance to observe or think of anything except the enemy just below us.
I had little chance of arresting the course of one obviously determined not to be spoken with; but that little chance was lost by my stumbling and falling before I had made three steps from the column.
And it had also happened, that, the book being the receptacle nearest to my hand, I had occasionally jotted down memoranda which had little regard to traffic.
As he dwelt upon this thought, his reflections grew more and more gloomy, and he had little to say till he reached the turn where the two men still awaited them.
Deborah, therefore, had little to fear from her daughter's eye, only from the sensitiveness of her touch and the quickness of her ear.
As it had been his first week of robbing, and his last too, he had little confession to make in that respect.
When abroad, his adventures were not many, because he had little opportunity of going on shore, yet one happened in Sicily which made a very great impression upon him, and which it may not therefore be improper to relate.
He was born of but mean parents, had little or no education, and when he grew strong enough to labour, would apply himself to no way of getting his bread but by driving a wheelbarrow with fruit about the streets.
But of that we had little fear; our galley was one of the finest boats that ever swam, and we felt as secure as if we were on board of a three-decked ship.
He knew that if he could once get rid of him, he had little to fear from any of the others; and as he thought hard for a plan, the king, who had for some time been fast asleep, suddenly solved the difficulty.
The above list will hopefully provide you with a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "had little" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this group of words.