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Example sentences for "then proceeds"

  • He then proceeds thus: "The same spirit that animated those philosophers who sent Galileo to the Inquisition animates all the philosophers of the present day without exception.

  • He then proceeds to more purely personal aspects and contingencies:-- What lies beyond it would be premature to describe as having been regularly treated or even opened to-day.

  • He then proceeds to mention his personal position:-- They are beginning to ask who is to succeed if Beaconsfield is displaced.

  • He then proceeds to the main subject of the Satire, viz.

  • He then proceeds to tell Madame Brillon that, everywhere from Paris to Versailles, everyone spoke of her with respect, and some with affection and even admiration; which was music to his ears.

  • He then proceeds to state very partially the business upon which the Committee of Circuit went, and without opening whose conduct we cannot fully bring before you this charge of bribery.

  • He then proceeds to confess his belief in the Apostles' and Nicene Creed, and the entire system of doctrine which he had so unequivocally declared in his Loci Communes, and the Epistle to the Romans.

  • He then proceeds to speak of the Grace of God and the free gifts, according to Romans v.

  • He then proceeds to speak of Councils, and of Auricular Confession, showing their want of foundation; and also, that he had sought peace.

  • Now he reaches the bridge that crosses the millpond, pauses for breath, then proceeds on.

  • Pale and agitated, she hesitates a moment, then proceeds to open it.

  • He then proceeds to lay down rules and cautions for making vows.

  • He then proceeds to declare more fully the nature of the Deity hitherto unknown.

  • He then proceeds to show how the prophets foretold the ingathering of the Gentiles, quoting a passage (Amos ix.

  • He then proceeds to apply this, by tracing the course of astronomy through the earlier astronomers up to Copernicus.

  • He then proceeds to speak of what may be done by the combined and more prosperous labours of others, in that strain of noble hope and confidence, which rises again and again, like a chorus, at intervals in every part of his writings.

  • He then proceeds to argue, from the testimony of philosophers themselves, that the authority of antiquity, and especially of Aristotle, is not infallible.

  • He then proceeds to illustrate his doctrine by exemplification of many particular names, which are alleged to manifest a propriety of signification in reference to the persons or matters to which they are applied.

  • He then proceeds to state what Plato's ulterior purpose was, but in such very vague language, that I hardly understand what he means, much less can I find it in the Antinomies themselves.

  • He then proceeds to conjecture, from the little which we know respecting Protagoras, what that Sophist must have laid down upon the origin of names; and he finishes by assuming the very point which he ought to have proved (p.

  • When he turns round there is of course no trace visible of what he has been about, and he then proceeds to read the name on the paper held by one of the audience.

  • He then proceeds to "force" three or more cards in an order previously agreed upon, and the holders thereupon ask of the assistant, as the performer has previously instructed them to do, what the names of the cards are.

  • He then proceeds to show the company that no threads or wires are anywhere about.

  • He then proceeds to state more particularly, that there is no tail, and that the thumb is shorter and thicker than the fingers.

  • He then proceeds to the description of the different parts of the human body, first treating of what anatomists call the great regions, and the exterior generally, and then passing to the internal organization.

  • He then proceeds to speak of teeth, which he says are possessed by all viviparous quadrupeds.

  • He then proceeds to state and analyze the powers and duties of legislators on the subject, with their respective limitations.

  • He then proceeds to describe a conversation held with her, in which Michelangelo Buonarroti took a part.

  • He then proceeds to tell how he compared Petrarch's Latin with his vulgar style in order to discover the correct rules of Italian versification.

  • He then proceeds to survey the progress of poetry from the most ancient times, and in so doing may be said to have written the first modern history of literature.

  • He then proceeds to treat of quantity and measure in French, of feet and verse, and of figures and poetic license.

  • He then proceeds to distinguish tragedy from comedy much in the same manner as Scaliger does six years later.


  • The above list will hopefully provide you with a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "then proceeds" 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:
    catch him; chief executive; great city; prolonged period; provision should; then add; then also; then bake; then bottle; then called; then desired; then draw; then glanced; then make; then nodded; then paused; then press; then remove from the; then rinse; then said; then says; then season; then stood; then the priest shall; then upon; what happened