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Example sentences for "means always"

  • For Crabbe, though by no means always at his best, is one of the most curiously equal of verse-writers.

  • His Life contains (what is infinitely desirable in all such Lives and by no means always or often furnished) a complete list of his contributions to the Edinburgh Review, and his works contain most of them.

  • While the removal of the cause of illness by no means always effects a cure, yet the importance of a knowledge of this cause as an aid to diagnosis, prognosis, and therapeutics is so evident as to require no proof.

  • The healthfulness of a place is usually estimated from its mortality reports, but the reliability of these is by no means always what it should be.

  • These convulsions, like others occurring at the commencement of acute diseases, are by no means always fatal, even when they are general.

  • Cessation of vomiting in these cases is by no means always a favorable symptom.

  • Cicatrization of the ulcer is by no means always cure in the clinical sense.

  • It is by no means always easy to determine whether an existing tumor belongs to the stomach or not, and even if there is proved to be a tumor of the stomach, there may be difficulty in deciding whether or not it is a cancer.

  • Of course such factors often-though by no means always-enter in.

  • These disastrous consequences are, of course, by no means always incurred.

  • And in numberless ways a host of heroic men and women have practiced and are daily practicing unrewarded self-denial in the name of love and service, self-denial which by no means always brings a joy commensurate with the pain.

  • A further realization of the inadequacy of the intuitive theory comes when we observe that conscience is by no means always clear in its dictates.

  • They generally, but by no means always, contain bubbles of air.

  • The following singular phenomenon sometimes, but by no means always, occurred.

  • Not only the tentacles, but the blade of the leaf often, but by no means always, becomes much incurved, when any strongly exciting substance or fluid is placed on the disc.

  • Popular and general scientific opinion is also by no means always in harmony.

  • As Stanley Hall notes, children are fond of biting, though by no means always as a method of affection.

  • Again, in ordinary routine practice I have observed that, though married women show no ticklishness during auscultation and percussion of the chest, this is by no means always so in young girls.

  • An additional point of importance is the fact that in the Bible sexual topics are handled in a way which is by no means always delicate.

  • It is true that in many persons of genius premature sexual passion has been observed, and such manifestations are by no means always confined to the contrectation impulse.

  • Influences of these two classes may co-operate simultaneously, or may pass one into the other; and, speaking generally, it is by no means always easy to maintain a sharp distinction between them.

  • The system of under-secretaries, therefore, is by no means always used in order to give a representative to the department in both Houses.

  • As a matter of fact such posts are by no means always filled by promotion, and persons are sometimes selected for them who are outside of the service altogether.

  • But the ability to do a thing superlatively well is by no means always implied in the knowledge of how it ought to be done.

  • Honor was a religion; politeness and courtesy were the current, though by no means always genuine, coin of unselfishness and amiability; the amenities stood in the place of an ethical code.

  • But the diversions were by no means always grave or literary.

  • His feeling is by no means always according to knowledge, but it has to be taken into account as an essential part of his emotional state.

  • Moreover, women by no means always agree in the statement of their experience.

  • But if applied to women, this statement is by no means always accepted.

  • How can the fact be explained that larval and imaginal families by no means always coincide; or that the larvæ can only be formed into families whilst the imagines partly form sharply defined groups of a higher order?

  • The latter is certainly our only measure of blood-relationship, but those who maintain the assertion that form- and blood-relationship are by no means always synonymous, are undoubtedly correct.

  • Consequently the science of plant pathology is much concerned with the direct action of external causes, which are probably less obscure than in the case of animals, though by no means always obvious.

  • Such teratological conditions are however by no means always pathological: that is to say, they may be variations which do not threaten the existence of the plant.


  • The above list will hopefully provide you with a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "means always" 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 aspect; another group; ceteris paribus; curious sensation; each regiment; good intention; great practical; growing varieties; her parents; means always; means certain; means confined; means disposed; means easy; means inclined; means literally; means that; means uncommon; means untried; poor things; release from; something analogous; states that; though somewhat; thousand guineas; will exalt