One has only to furnish you with money, my Beppo," said Vittoria, complimenting his quick apprehensiveness.
I can hear nothing of Carlo Alberto's victory," Beppo said; "no one has heard of it.
We were under a mutual oath to be silent, but if one has broken it the other cannot; so I confess it to you, dearest good brother.
One has heard of the corruption of courtiers; but believe me, the impudent prostitution of patriots, going to market with their honesty, beats it to nothing.
How happy I am that you have Mr. Chute still with you; you would have been distracted else with that simple woman; for fools prey upon one when one has no companion to laugh Them off.
I knew all the sorrows that had led them to this, for I know the deceitful infamy of life, and no one has felt it more than I have.
One exchanges heartfelt glances with the milliners just for fun, as one has no time to alight.
Jordan's History class is awfully difficult, because he always makes one find out the causes for oneself; one hasto learn intelligently!
That's true enough, but if one has satisfactory in anything then one can't get a 1 for diligence.
One has to be so frightfully careful not to give oneself away when one knows everything.
Afoot and in the open road, one has a fair start in life at last.
I love to hear dogs bark, hens cackle, and boys shout; one has no privacy with nature now, and does not wish to seek her in nooks and hidden ways.
If one has been a lotus-eater all summer, he must turn gravel-eater in the fall and winter.
All is well," began Cibo, "I will guarantee that no one has talked.
I give you my word of honor that no one, do you hear, no one has spoken of it to me.
If one has a perception one also feels an impulse, which one calls a feeling of duty to share it with others.
One has at most the same feeling for it as for a mirror in which one sees oneself reflected.
One has yet to see whether such a society of officers can produce a people, and if its thinkers and teachers could not lead it to a richer cultivation, and its poets to a higher ideal of duty.
Ah," cried the young man, "one has so many duties!
One has but to contemplate their present elevation, and remember the depth to which they descend in the ocean, to realize their tremendous altitude and the correctness of the description given by Plato.
In truth, I have almost left off making purchases: I have neither room for any thing more, nor inclination for them, as I reckon every thing very dear when One has so little time to enjoy it.
One has heard Of nothing else these seven months; and it requires some ingenuity to keep up the attention of such a capital as London for above half a year together.
When a woman is pretty, one recognizes her charms instantaneously; if one has to examine her closely, her beauty is doubtful.
When an honest man adopts a name which belongs to no one, no one has a right to contest his use of it; it becomes a man's duty to keep the name.
One has got to be put in the way of it, awakened to the truth.
One has not to wait long before he is mastered by its spell.
This manufacture of clouds in a clear, sunny day has an odd appearance; but it is easy enough, if one has such a laboratory as Vesuvius.
At the entrance the water is illuminated, and there is a pleasant, mild light within: one has there a novel subterranean sensation; but it did not remind me of anything I have seen in the "Arabian Nights.
One has refused to baptize an infant whose parents were only married civilly.
One has only to open one's eyes to detect "in all its extent" the plot they have hatched, "the frightful system of destruction of public morality.
The above list will hopefully provide you with a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "one has" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this group of words.