Home
Idioms
Top 1000 Words
Top 5000 Words


Example sentences for "that sense"

  • Hearing which, that nameless agitation, that sense of collision with unknown and incalculable forces, seized hold on Honoria again, while Lord Shotover's features contracted and he turned his head sharply.

  • That sense of subdued excitement was upon him yet.

  • I don't mean meddlin' in that sense, of which there is enough, as all must allow.

  • Paley says, "A promise is binding in that sense in which the promiser thought at the time of making that the other party understood it.

  • And Paley expresses the opinion of all writers on morals, as well as the conviction of all honest men, when he says, "that a promise is binding in that sense in which the promiser thought at the time that the other party understood it.

  • If hired servants were the superior class--to bespeak the situation, savored little of that sense of unworthiness that seeks the dust with hidden face, and cries "unclean.

  • If hired servants were the superior class--to apply for the situation, savored little of that sense of unworthiness that seeks the dust with hidden face, and cries "unclean.

  • In that sense, it may be said that the Declaration of Independence represents the highest achievement of eighteenth-century philosophy, but of one aspect of that philosophy that could not develop fully in Europe.

  • The use of these words in that sense, in a constitution, under which all persons are presumed to be free, would involve no absurdity, although it might be gratuitous and unnecessary.

  • The traveling expenses are so small that the management can easily bear them; and if you agree, I shall answer the gentlemen in that sense as soon as they write to me.

  • In that sense I shall answer in case they apply to me.

  • The Hartels will finally agree to this, and I have spoken to them in that sense.

  • There are then no terms in the foregoing exposition which do not admit of a plain sense, and they are there used in that sense; and, moreover, that sense is what I have called real, for the words in their ordinary use stand for things.

  • That sense must be in some degree known to us; else, we do but assert the proposition, we in no wise assent to it.

  • A conviction in favour of a proposition may be exchanged for a conviction of its contradictory; and each of them may be attended, while they last, by that sense of security and repose, which a true object alone can legitimately impart.

  • In that sense, they are emergency measures.

  • In that sense we may regard it abstractly and historically, as we regard the most recent ice age or the long and painful record of large-scale chattel slavery.

  • In that sense, communication tends to become unique.

  • The proof, that our perception of extension by touch, is not an original and immediate perception of that sense, is altogether independent of the success of any endeavour which may be made, to discover the elements of the compound perception.

  • Fun is freedom; and in that sense is an end in itself.

  • It may be answered, with some show of truth, that the new American President represents a return to common politics; and that in that sense he marks a real rebuke to the last President and his more uncommon politics.

  • It concerns the man not as a worker but as a citizen, or even as a soul; and the soul in that sense is an end in itself.

  • Grosvenor, who was going to London, to speak to Hartington in that sense.

  • And for ought I know, the reason why he had no sense of his sins now was, because he profited not by that sense that he had of them before.

  • As a matter of fact, nothing is ever cast in that sense on board ship but the lead, of which a cast is taken to search the depth of water on which she floats.

  • That sense of a dungeon, that sense of a horrible and degrading misfortune overtaking a creature fair to see and safe to trust, attaches only to ships moored in the docks of great European ports.

  • And man's immense difference from Him, that sense of the immeasurable space between creator and created, is strangely contracted.

  • That sense of separateness is fundamental to the religious nature.

  • And in that sense that we are not is where the religious consciousness takes its beginning.

  • In that sense of responsibility is the confession of sin and in the confession of sin is the acknowledgment of the impotence of the sinner.

  • Like all knowledge a discovery, but the discovery of something there which could be discovered, hence, in that sense, a revelation.


  • The above list will hopefully provide you with a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "that sense" 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:
    came over; long before; must turn; pregnant woman; sodium phosphate; that account; that any; that book; that could; that country; that day; that direction; that end; that fellow; that has; that letter; that made; that may; that morning; that nation; that nature; that province; that respect; that room; that section; that this