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Example sentences for "sometimes quite"

  • When the outer surface is preserved, it is generally ribbed longitudinally, but is sometimes quite smooth.

  • If the Hippocratic writers knew that this coiling is sometimes quite innocuous, they did not in any place state the fact.

  • The accumulation of urine in cases of ischuria is sometimes quite excessive.

  • Infant-vitality is sometimes quite remarkable, a newly-born child sometimes surviving extreme exposure and major injuries.

  • The size of a tapeworm in a small child is sometimes quite surprising.

  • It grows in damp woods and is sometimes quite common.

  • The color of the pileus is sometimes quite dark.

  • The pileus is sometimes quite large, eccentric, covered with stiff hairs, margin thin, white.

  • In the maniacal conditions, the rapidity of the pulse, which is sometimes quite marked, must probably be explained in the same way, as due to the mental excitement under which the patient is laboring.

  • This cardiac irregularity is sometimes quite marked, and yet in 24 hours, as a consequence of the emptying of the stomach, will disappear, so that only slight intermittency remains, which eventually subsides.

  • It needs to be explained to such patients that this slight weakness, sometimes quite distinct, however, on the side opposite that which is most affected is extremely {524} common.

  • To decide whether a given case is neurotic or epileptic, however, is sometimes quite out of the question until long and careful study of it has been made.

  • Mother, I am very well--have some cold in my head and my ears stopt up yet, making me sometimes quite hard of hearing.

  • Pheasants are sometimes very noisy and sometimes quite silent in roosting, and this is just one of those differences which might be thought to depend on the weather.


  • The above list will hopefully provide you with a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "sometimes quite" 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:
    absolute space; deep brown; imperative duty; short account; should ever; sometimes added; sometimes applied; sometimes employed; sometimes even; sometimes followed; sometimes found; sometimes given; sometimes necessary; sometimes omitted; sometimes quite; sometimes reddish; sometimes referred; sometimes represented; sometimes said; sometimes spoken; sometimes used; sometimes very; sometimes written; straight ahead; together again; where busy