Hwen he com to arudden | of deaðes rake oðre, | hwi deide he him seoluen?
Hwen evvery mute minnister waz supplied to' vocallity; dhe hardening gard ov g, at least, shood not hav been forgotten.
Hwen a consonant concludes dhe syllabel, after an open vowel; a servile must gard dhe vowel from dhe consonant, hwich else wood shut it.
Coarce, dhe ded boddy, dies no more in corpse; hwen dhus boren decently to' interment.
Hwot ar peopel tu do hwen langwej and pron[p]nsiashon chanje, hweil their speling iz deklared tu be [p]nchanjabel?
One of the men most deeply learned in Buddhist practices, the pilgrim, Hwen Tsang, who visited the peninsula in the seventh century and entered a long novitiate, relates having seen Buddha appear before him in a sacred grotto.
Of this ancient capital which, if we are to believe Hwen Tsang, was three miles in length, there remains not a stone to tell its history.
The kingdom of which it was the capital in the days of Hwen Tsang extended from Kashmir to Assam and from Nepal to the Nerbudda.
The above list will hopefully give you a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "hwen" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this word.