With the black bow that you have," and she pointed to the case that leaned against the table, "it has come down in my family for many generations.
Well, I am a god also and the same thought has come to me, although as a fact I have only had two legitimate sons and the others are of no account.
King Huaracha," I went on, "I see that you are a soldier and the lord of armies, and it has come into my mind that perchance you dream of war.
It has come down to me from my fathers, Hubert, that it was never the fashion of the women of the north to keep their men to shield them when duty called them otherwhere.
It is sad that the phrase divine service has come so generally to mean public worship instead of 40:30 daily deeds.
Now can I reveal the wicked deed of the marshal, as it has come to light without my connivance, for he wrung from me a promise to be silent.
He has come down to see a few trees now, poor fellow.
It has come into my hands now because Aglaya Ivanovna has just returned it to me.
She was like the man whose horse has been broken-winded and lame so long, that hehas come almost to think that every horse is a screw.
It is only by fits and starts that the poor drunken wretch, living in a garret upon a little pittance allowed him by his relations, who was once a man of character and hope, feels what a sad pitch he has come to.
I need hardly add that the world has come round to the great physician's way of thinking, and that mummy is not included in the pharmacopoeia of modern days.
I do believe that, like the liar who has told his story so long that he has come to believe it at last, there are persons who have stolen the thoughts of others so often and so long, that they hardly remember that they are thieves.
Agonising In art, never try to find out anything, or try to learn anything until the not knowing it has come to be a nuisance to you for some time.
When ithas come to the knowledge of good and evil it is stronger, but we care less about it.
He has come up to teach us music since Miss Manning left; mamma said that we ought not to lose our lessons.
Headthelot expected you would be at West Lynne days past, and he has comeup in an awful rage.
It has come to light that you were here before, disguised as a farm laborer.
That is no new result; but it has come to light in greater degree of recent years, notably through Sir W.
The history of Aegina, as it has come down to us, is almost exclusively a history of its relations with the neighbouring state of Athens.
But why should the boy be nurtured in the current notion that he is to be really happy only when he has finished school, when he has got a business or profession by which money can be made, when he has come to manhood?
But it is, and one of the certain marks that second childhood has come to a man on a farm is, that he is asked to turn the grindstone as if he were a boy again.
It has cometo this, that the newspaper furnishes thought-material for all the world, actually prescribes from day to day the themes the world shall think on and talk about.
He immediately begins to put out his moral feelers into the unknown and the infinite to discover what sort of an existence this is into which he has come.
For this straggling and stumbling band the world is young again: it has come to the beginning of things; it has cut loose from tradition, and is free to make a home anywhere: the movement has all the promise of a revolution.
The latest automatically written book which has come under my notice is "Zertouhem's Wisdom of the Ages," by George A.
I have always had a hope that some day I might have an opportunity of fulfilling it, and now it has come.
Behold him advancing thus, though no one noticed him until he came forward with the words: "I wish to know which is the man who is so foolish and proud a numskull that he has come to this country and intends to cross the sword-bridge.
But now he has come where he is welcome, and where he will be treated honourably, and where he will do well to stay.
She greets him at the entrance of the tent, and strives to make him welcome, well knowing for what purpose he has come.
I well deserved this woe, and now ithas come upon me.
Lady, the dwarf I bring you here: he has cometo surrender to you at discretion.
He was the father of those politicians in the States who have since taken the name of Democrats, and in accordance with whose theory it has come to pass that everything has been referred to the universal suffrage of the people.
This necessity for taxation, and for taxation at so tremendous a rate, has come suddenly, and has found the representatives of the people unprepared for such work.
To us, as I conceive, the science of taxation, in which we certainly ought to be great, has come gradually.
This has come of universal suffrage; and seeing that it has come in spite of the Constitution, and not by the Constitution, it is very bad.
This bread, such as it is, is an object of savage greed; "it has come to this, that it is impossible to distribute it except through wickets.
Men cannot be persuaded with impunity that the millennium has come, for they will want to enjoy it immediately, and will tolerate no deception practiced on their expectations.
This pain is to be warded off, before it has come.
An epoch of life, that of man the animal, has come to an end; a new epoch, that of the spiritual man, is opened.
He who knows the seed, knows the seed-pod or ear it has come from, and the plant that is to come from it.
He has come home to Heidelberg with a retinue of Jesuits about him; to whom the poor old gentleman, looking before and after on this troublous world, finds it salutary to give ear.
A very rough Document, giving Friedrich Wilhelm's regulations on this subject, from his own hand, has come down to us.
The above list will hopefully provide you with a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "has come" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this group of words.