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Example sentences for "highly interesting"

  • Such a repository will not only be highly interesting, considered as an object of public curiosity, but it will be really useful, and will doubtless contribute very powerfully to the introduction of many essential improvements.

  • The subject, though it is so highly interesting to mankind, has not yet been investigated with that success that could have been wished.

  • This meeting took place in the apartments, which are ornamented with a highly interesting collection of arms and utensils, which the General had procured on his extensive travels with Captain Lewis.

  • While the chief value of the present work lies in its ethnological significance, it is highly interesting as an historical description of natural conditions west of the Mississippi, seventy years ago.

  • As the country about Delaware Gap was highly interesting to me, we remained here on the following day, the 24th of August.

  • To a thriving agriculture and the improvements related to it is added a highly interesting extension of useful manufactures, the combined product of professional occupations and of household industry.

  • Our attitude is highly interesting as relates to other powers, and particularly to our southern neighbors.

  • Our relations with the numerous tribes of aboriginal natives of this country, scattered over its extensive surface and so dependent even for their existence upon our power, have been during the present year highly interesting.

  • It was anticipated at an early stage that the contest between Spain and the colonies would become highly interesting to the United States.

  • It is highly interesting thus to find the inhabitants of Nineveh fetching their rare and precious woods from the same spots that king Solomon had brought the choicest woodwork of the temple of the Lord and of his own palaces.

  • The fragment is highly interesting as corroborating the accuracy of the interpretation of the inscriptions.

  • A highly interesting collection of relics, comprising inscribed clay tablets, glazed pottery, ornaments in metal, and engraved gems, had been obtained by that gentleman during his short residence among the ruins.

  • This is a highly interesting illustration of the work in Solomon's palaces.

  • It is highly interesting to inquire into the conditions of human phenomena, and examine the forces which man opposes in his intelligent character to the physical agents around him.

  • A highly interesting memoir on this subject is inserted in the thirty-fifth volume of the Annales de Chimie, the intention of M.

  • These differences, indeed, constitute a highly interesting topic of inquiry, and perhaps deserve more attention than they have hitherto received in any treatise with which I am acquainted.

  • There are yet remains of a cloister which may have belonged to the early church of this monastic house, and as such is highly interesting, and withal pleasing.

  • It is by no means a great architectural achievement as it stands to-day, but is highly interesting because of its antiquity.

  • In a medical point of view, I consider these facts as highly interesting; showing as they do, under what circumstances, and how speedily, disease may be produced.

  • It would be highly interesting to ascertain in what way the bees become informed of the loss of their queen.

  • It is highly interesting to see in what way the supernumerary eggs of the queen are disposed of.

  • The latter started on a highly interesting excursion to the kingdom of Adamowa, while the former was exploring Lake Tsad.

  • It is, however, a highly interesting monument, bearing unmistakable marks of the decline of art; yet distinguished for much of that quality of beauty which gives so peculiar a character to the architecture of the Greeks.

  • This speech, recently published, is said to be highly interesting, as giving the characteristics of both the eulogist and the deceased, each of them men whose names will henceforth be inseparably allied in the history of German learning.

  • This involved a highly interesting comparison of Newton’s theory of the tides, long generally accepted, but not taking enough account of the planet’s rotation, and that of Sir George Darwin based upon the effect of such rotation.

  • Mr. Darwin has now in the press a highly interesting work on the habits of earth-worms.

  • But the most conclusive evidence on this latter point is afforded by a highly interesting observation of Mr. Bates on the sand-wasps at Santurem, which may here be suitably introduced, as the insects are not distantly allied.

  • In this work are many curious particulars of the Indian trade at this time; and it is highly interesting both on this account, and from the clear-sighted speculations of the author.

  • The Netherlands are barren to both these travellers; yet in some respects it is a highly interesting country: and the interest it excites, chiefly arises from circumstances peculiar to it.

  • The foregoing deductions will be found to have a highly interesting application in relation to the origin of two ancient European races, the Basques and the Celts.

  • On the subject of the immediate effects of the Norman conquest, it is highly interesting to observe that Dr.

  • With all its air of prosperity and providence, Muenchen-Gladbach is not a highly interesting town in which to linger.

  • It resembles somewhat the parish churches seen in the country-side in England, and is in no way remarkable or highly interesting, if we except the tall central tower.

  • St. Barthelemy's might have been a highly interesting example of a Romanesque church had it not been desecrated by late Italian details.

  • She is represented as an affectionate wife, full of innocence and simplicity, and her distress at the suspicions of the real Amphitryon is highly interesting.


  • The above list will hopefully provide you with a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "highly interesting" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this group of words.


    Some common collocations, pairs and triplets of words:
    another creek; cannot see; cubic miles; east passage; good cause; highly civilized; highly dependent; highly developed; highly educated; highly improbable; highly inclined; highly magnified; highly respectable; highly respected; highly satisfactory; highly seasoned; highly sensitive; highly specialized; highly variable; keeps well; large farm; made only; often accompanied; proper attention; swing she came about; the sons