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Example sentences for "sometimes also"

  • It sometimes also | gives off a trace of water.

  • Forms a thick incrustation of zinc, sometimes also of [.

  • In all the strata below 13 feet we meet with quantities of implements of diorite, and quoits of granite, sometimes also of hard limestone.

  • Sometimes also, when the composition of the ore requires it, lime, sand, or fluor spar is added; and particularly the last fluxing article.

  • It is sometimes also called a spreading machine.

  • Common window and mirror glass; silicate of soda and lime; sometimes also of potash.

  • Its form is commonly ovate or ellipsoidal, sometimes also lentelliptical or nearly spherical.

  • In several other #Plectoidea# the calymma seems to include numerous small vacuoles, sometimes also pigment-granules.

  • This increased number is commonly the result of an intercalation of new spines between the three or four primary spines; it is sometimes also effected by stronger development of branches of the latter, which become independent.

  • Pyramidal shell with six radial main beams (sometimes also five or seven, as individual varieties).

  • Whether Choice Is Only of the Means, or Sometimes Also of the End?

  • Whether choice is only the means, or sometimes also of the end?

  • Sometimes also he has broken out, and has worried some that I loved; but I take all at present patiently.

  • Some other and any, are most frequently denoted by te tahi, and its plural e tahi; sometimes also by the preposition i; (vid.

  • Sometimes also ma is in the same sense postfixed to appellatives; e.

  • Sometimes also, in animated description, ko will follow the verb; e.

  • Sometimes also applied to the long-eared owl.

  • A hard concretion or incrustation which forms upon bones attacked with rheumatism, gout, or syphilis; sometimes also, a swelling in the neighborhood of a joint.

  • Sometimes also, after having been distinctly felt, these motions will altogether stop for a long time, and then appear again.

  • Sometimes also, it does not attain its full quantity till some days after its commencement.

  • Johnson terms it, "a sign of the optative mood:" though none deny, that it is sometimes also a principal verb.

  • But would is sometimes also a principal verb; as, "What would this man?

  • Sometimes also, as in the figured specimen, the length of both polar spines is somewhat different.

  • Sometimes also in haruest time it sendeth downe such store of water, when the wind bloweth in the same quarter, that it drowneth all their grasse and corne that groweth in the lower grounds neere vnto the bankes thereof.

  • Sometimes also we are threatned with a Melius inquirendum, as if our liuings were not racked high inough alreadie.

  • Sometimes also a servant would act as a go-between between the nuns and the outside world, smuggling in and out tokens and messages and sundry billets doux[429].

  • Sometimes he describes reforming prioresses or other nuns, who did good work in their houses[2156]; sometimes also he mentions the assistance given by a wise confessor or custos.


  • The above list will hopefully provide you with a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "sometimes also" 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:
    farre from; forked tail; greenish yellow; had before; international arbitration; must marry; nolens volens; nuclear weapons; sometimes added; sometimes also; sometimes applied; sometimes called; sometimes even; sometimes find; sometimes followed; sometimes known; sometimes more; sometimes nearly; sometimes necessary; sometimes reddish; sometimes represented; sometimes said; sometimes slightly; sometimes spoken; sometimes used; sometimes written