He, however, says nothingof hare’s fur being employed to line clothes.
The Arabian physician, Ebn Baithar, who collected in the thirteenth century all that Eastern nations knew about medicinal plants, says nothing about it.
He says nothing as to its wild nature, but the care with which he points out in other cases plants cultivated or perhaps escaped from cultivation, leads me to think that he regards these specimens as wild.
A tautology follows from all propositions: it says nothing.
Thus the reason why 'Socrates is identical' says nothing is that we have not given any adjectival meaning to the word 'identical'.
He says nothing suggestive of a sacramental theory of the blood as apt "to pollute the earth or even cry for vengeance.
Now Eumelus, in what we have of him, says nothing of Circe, but makes Aietes the son of Helios and Antiope, not of Perses as in Homer.
To his companion he says nothingto explain this apparently eccentric manipulation, leaving Jack to guesses.
He says nothing, therefore; but, bending to his oars, pulls on up the byway.
He says nothing, therefore; but, bending to his oars, pulls on up the bye-way.
The first passage our author has apparently overlooked, for he says nothing about it.
Not only is it maintained that A knows nothing of B, because he says nothing of B; but it is further assumed that A knows nothing of B, because C does not say that A says anything of B.
Of Montanism, of the Paschal controversy, of the developed Gnostic heresies of this period, it says nothing.
The above list will hopefully provide you with a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "says nothing" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this group of words.