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Example sentences for "must always"

  • Those who are intrusted with the care of kingdoms in another hemisphere, must always be trusted with power to defend them.

  • The possession of this extraordinary and scarcely expressible power, then, must always be borne in mind through all that follows.

  • When I was there, he would frequently stop in his readings and comments, to ask my opinion, and he seemed to expect that I must always concur in what he said.

  • And those who attempt to prove that the Bible is such a book, as these false theological theories of divine inspiration would require it to be, must always be beaten, in a fair fight, with an able and well-informed infidel opponent.

  • They exist to offer themselves for use as required, and it must always be left for judgment to decide whether they are suitable or not.

  • From this it follows that the disarming or overthrow of the enemy, whichever we call it, must always be the aim of Warfare.

  • Still, it must always be regarded as one of the natural causes which may bring action in War to a standstill without involving a contradiction.

  • It must always be remembered that in realizing the especial demands of woman's nature, we do not commit ourselves to the belief that higher education is unfitted for a woman.

  • This is as it should be, for whatever our criteria of the worth of feelings and of conduct, it must always be of use to us to know what exactly are the feelings of people and how those feelings tend to affect their conduct.

  • Sterne, again, declared that he must always have a Dulcinea dancing in his head, yet the amount of his intimate relations with women appears to have been small.

  • Must always be placed in dry, accessible places, and be grouped as far as possible.

  • Panel boards, unless located in the immediate vicinity of the main switchboard, and where they are enclosed in a compartment, must always be placed in standard metal cabinets.

  • It must always be carefully borne in mind that a propeller is nothing more nor less than a particular form of aeroplane specially designed to travel a helical path.

  • It must always be most carefully borne in mind that a fan (ventilating) and a propeller are not the same thing.

  • How could the universal doubter be born with a specific knowledge or a specific programme of anything, when the definite or fixed, the specific in any quarter whatsoever, must always be a possible object of doubt?

  • Any religious reform, or reform of any sort, must always bring an unscrupulous lawlessness with it, and the great Reformation was by no means an exception to this rule.

  • We must always bear in mind in the present that we have to provide for the future.

  • We must always adopt in good time those measures which are seen to be necessary for the future, even though they make heavy financial calls on our resources.

  • Sport, which is spreading more and more amongst us too, must always remain a means of recreation, not an end in itself, if it is to be justified at all.

  • War, nevertheless, must always be a violent form of political agent, which not only contains in itself the danger of defeat, but in every case calls for great sacrifices, and entails incalculable misery.

  • It must always be kept in mind that a State is not justified in looking only to the present, and merely consulting the immediate advantage of the existing generation.

  • It must always be remembered that at the worst the defeat of such a great organization as the railway system does not involve its disappearance until a long period has elapsed.

  • It must always be remembered that the railway train, as against the motor, has the advantage that its wholesale traction reduces the prime cost by demanding only one engine for a great number of coaches.

  • But it must always be kept in mind that, in the absence of a certain amount of competition, such a policy cannot be taken wholly for granted.

  • The solidarity which it would impart to American society would have its basis in feeling and its results in good fellowship; but it must always remain a promise and constructive ideal rather than a finished performance.

  • Before the sculptor appeared in Niccola Pisano, he was already a famous architect; and it must always be remembered that he and his school subordinated the plastic to the constructive arts.

  • It must always remain a matter of profound regret that his project was so far altered as to sacrifice the effect of the dome from the piazza.

  • We must always be careful to distinguish the importance of an artist considered as the exponent of his age from that which he may claim by virtue of some special skill or some peculiar quality of feeling.

  • It seemed as if it must always be like this--that lances and cavalry and emperors would never cease to ride by.

  • I must always be near to watch, even if I am not close by you.

  • Besides being extremely like, it is such a good painting that it must always be appreciated.


  • The above list will hopefully provide you with a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "must 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:
    each town; fourteen days; heard himself; must also; must bear; must begin; must certainly; must confesse; must contrive; must die; must endeavour; must insist; must meet; must mention; must now; must pray; must speak; must stay; must talk; must think; must trust; must understand; remained till; scarcely less; similar fashion; tender years