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Example sentences for "quite clear"

  • What Mr. Belfield told me makes it quite clear that it's no use.

  • I've slept on it, and I'm quite clear about it.

  • I'm quite clear that it wouldn't be fair to the business--and not fair to you either.

  • Moreover, it is quite clear that he was still thinking, in 1875, of dictatorship by this immense majority as a temporary measure.

  • From this it is quite clear that, regardless of this or that particular decree or proclamation, the Bolsheviki look upon the continuous and permanent suppression of their opponents’ right to hold meetings as a fundamental policy.

  • It is quite clear that, instead of being dominated by the generous idealism of Socialism, they were mastered by hatred and a passion for revenge.

  • Mind, I don't suspect Evgenie of anything, be quite clear on that point; but the thing is a little suspicious, nevertheless.

  • It's quite clear we must treat the impudent creature's attempt with disdain, and redouble our courtesy towards Evgenie.

  • It is quite clear that he did not eat them all at once, but in a space of fifteen or twenty years: from that point of view the thing is comprehensible and natural.

  • It is quite clear that, from a very early age, Bunyan was a man of a strict life and of a tender conscience.

  • The course which Mr. Croker ought to have taken is quite clear.

  • It is quite clear, as Mr. Southey most justly remarks, that Bunyan never was a vicious man.

  • Now, it would seem to be quite clear that if there existed some other mode of employment that would find a demand for the surplus labour of the neighbourhood, all would be benefited.

  • Now, it is quite clear that if the consumer and he stood face to face with each other, he would receive all that was paid, and that while the one bought at lower prices, the other would sell at higher ones, and both would grow rich.

  • And now you have made everything quite clear.

  • I thought I had made it quite clear already," she said, with the least suspicion of coldness, "that we can be nothing more to one another than friends.

  • But first of all we must be sure whether he is quite clear in his head.

  • When nature has strengthened him enough his mind will be quite clear.

  • The Domesday Survey speaks only of villains and 'bordarii,' and it is quite clear that it calls villains the predecessors of the 'bond socmen' of the Hundred Rolls.

  • The opposition is quite clear, and entirely suited to the list of questions addressed to the jury.

  • It's quite clear that I cannot show him any attentions.

  • It is quite clear, then, that the tariff had no influence in depressing the progress of Virginia as compared with Pennsylvania.

  • Indeed, it is quite clear that, so far as the Tariff had any influence, it was far more unfavorable to New York than to Virginia, New York being a much greater agricultural as well as commercial State.

  • It is quite clear, then, that the Tariff had no influence whatever in depressing the progress of Virginia as compared with New York.

  • Such a false idea is sometimes given, and it seems to me quite clear that it is sometimes useful.

  • This is the meaning of my question, so far as I have hitherto explained it: and I hope this meaning is quite clear.

  • But, allowing for them, his principle is, I think, quite clear.

  • That all the corrections must be carried out on grounds of ample justification and in the most discreet way is quite clear.

  • So it is quite clear, that not only the personal character but also the profession or occupation of the writer influences very considerably the value and trustworthiness and the character of the information given.

  • That the facts of aggregation are of the highest importance in sociology appears also to be quite clear.

  • Quite clear," said he, "and very satisfactory.

  • That's quite clear," said the archdeacon.

  • It is quite clear to a careful observer that the technique of the Albani picture differs from that of the triptych in the National Gallery, for example; but the difficulty is then only stated.

  • What is quite clear is that the company of St. Guiseppe received, as Mariotti records, the grant of a subsidy for an altar-piece; but Professor Adam Rossi states that up to November 1500 the picture had not been commenced.

  • It is quite clear that in that year Perugino was in Venice,[K] and it is more natural to believe that he painted the picture in Cremona itself.

  • But it is quite clear that a critical comparison of the two works is urgently needed, both in the interests of Arthurian tradition and of German literature.

  • It is quite clear, I think, that such a story can be in no way ascribed to the invention of a poet living towards the end of the twelfth century, but must be of very much earlier date.


  • The above list will hopefully provide you with a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "quite clear" 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:
    lowered voice; other creatures; physical matter; quite capable; quite common; quite distinct; quite easily; quite gone; quite happy; quite large; quite like; quite naked; quite possible; quite recent; quite safe; quite simple; quite soft; quite still; quite straight; quite sufficient; quite understand; quite variable; quite well; quite willing; slow step; this series