Classification of the arts:--its true principle is expression.
Often, while ignorant of its true object, it asks whence comes that fatal disenchantment by which all its successes, all its pleasures are successively extinguished.
Its true subject is the universal and absolute reason.
The mussel is crooked inside and rough outside ยท it is only when we hear its deep note after blowing into it that we can begin to esteem it at its true value.
Philologists now feel that when these prejudices are at last refuted, and antiquity depicted in its true colours, the favourable prejudices towards them will diminish considerably.
I can never avoid depicting this want of education inits true colours, especially in regard to those things which ought to be learnt from antiquity if possible, for example, writing, speaking, and so on.
When it emerges in its true form it never enfeebles life, but strengthens it and ever renews its freshness and health, when, left to its own resources, it has become weak and diseased.
I am seeking something that will lift my soul into the sphere of the divine, leading it to its true home; I do not want information about the human being and world-processes.
By this means the soul learns to know itself in its true, inner, independent being.
But for that noble provision of the Constitution of the Federal Government, his estate would infallibly go for one-half of its true value.
Those two gentlemen would have the resolution of annexation just as it is, without amendment; and they voted for it just as it is, and their eyes were all open to its true character.
They fight doggedly for the Union, but I believe they would prefer a real Home Rule to a half-measure, and in making that choice they would show their virility and courage at its true worth.
For how could the Son of God be tempted with evil--with that which must to him appear in its true colours of discord, its true shapes of deformity?
At first sight it might seem as if an eye looking along those curved beams would see the lighthouse slightly out of its true position; but it is not so.
That is to say a spectrum line will not be seen in its true place, but will appear to be shifted by an amount almost exactly imitative of a real Doppler effect--the imitation being correct up to the second order of aberration magnitude.
An eye looking at the source will not look tangentially along the beam, but will look along A S, and will see the source in its true position.
When we laid before the public the motives which had rendered this rupture inevitable, the King attributed the conduct of the Republic to its true cause, viz.
But on the contrary to behold and consider all things according to their true nature, and to carry myself towards everything according to its true worth.
For all these things, what are they, but fit objects for an understanding, that beholdeth everything according to its true nature, to exercise itself upon?
Thus the origin of language, that is, its true nature, has several times been placed in interjection.
If it be spiritual, what is its true nature, and in what way does it differ from art and science?
In place of employing so lengthy a phrase, we shall here avail ourselves of the vulgar terminology, since we are henceforward aware of its true meaning.
The spirit which desires itself, its true self, the universal which is in the empirical and finite spirit: that is the formula which perhaps defines the essence of morality with the least impropriety.
But he soon learns to see the situation in its true light; he condemns his deed and offers to make amends.
For law is the objectivity of Spirit, volition in its true form.
The above list will hopefully provide you with a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "its true" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this group of words.