I'll go see the "babes" to night, as there is nothing else in the city that is worth seeing that I haven't investigated.
However, I'm sick of it but there's nothing else to talk of.
They are so poor, that I believe it is my eight francs a day keeps them going; nothing else is in sight.
In their strong feeling on this point, they, who agreed in nothing else, all concurred as one mind.
Our wounds, if nothing else, should make him see that we are mortal men, whom he commands, subject to the same pains and sufferings as other human beings.
His beautifully shaped hands were exposed, and his face; nothing else.
We live on nothing else, returned Double-fee; and all who live in this place must come through my hands.
Above the lattice were written these verses for his device: To leap and dance, to sport and play, And drink good wine both white and brown, Or nothing else do all the day But tell bags full of many a crown.
And if my journey to London led to nothing else of advancement, it took me a hundred years in front of what I might else have been, by the most simple accident.
However, I was now so curious, that I thought of nothing else; and scarcely could believe at all that Uncle Ben was quite right in his head.
However, although much moved by her, he vowed that he durst do nothing else.
But now my own affairs were thrown into such disorder that I could think of nothing else, and had the greatest difficulty in hiding my uneasiness.
At length we were reduced to two small hams; nothing else except a little tea.
There is nothing else in all the world,' she said, 'that would have wrung denial from me.
No, nothing else, except an old birdcage (I wonder how that ever came there!
With an impotent ferocity he raged at Edith, and hated Mr Dombey and hated himself, but still he fled, and could do nothing else.
Yes; there is a house empty that belongs to me, which I can put you into till it is let, and then, ifnothing else turns up, perhaps I shall have another.
Moreover, the sentence is spoken in all the familiarity of the local dialect--a dialect that puts any two people at once upon equal terms as nothing else can do it.
Nor does this blank behaviour seem savage to those who are used to nothing else.
The touches of her passing, as close as dreams, or the utmost vanishing of the forest or the ocean in the white light between the earth and the air; nothing else is quite so intimate and fine.
His wife and daughter have spent their lives, not in selling, but in buying; and they, on their side, know how to do nothing else.
Ah, yes, he can steal; but I think there is nothing else, is there?
He has spent his whole life in buying and selling; he knows how to do nothing else.
The above list will hopefully provide you with a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "nothing else" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this group of words.