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Example sentences for "there has"

  • During the three or four last presidencies, and I believe back to the time of Jackson, there has been an organized system of dishonesty in the management of all beneficial places under the control of the government.

  • There has been an attempt to make the place too perfect.

  • But in America, and especially in Western America, there has been no such necessity and there is no such result.

  • There has been no Southern exit allowed, and the Southern appetite has been deprived of its food.

  • There has been a whining weakness in the complaints made by Americans against England, which has done more to lower them as a people in my judgment than any other part of their conduct during the present crisis.

  • Now, there has been no friendship between the Court of St. Petersburg and my family.

  • There has been an attempt to reconstruct society on a basis of material motives and calculations.

  • In this country,' said Sidonia, 'since the peace, there has been an attempt to advocate a reconstruction of society on a purely rational basis.

  • Against Ashkelon, and against the seashore, there has he appointed it.

  • They said, "There has been no prostitute here.

  • So great were the results obtained that there has been a remarkable increase in the wealth, stamina, stature and longevity of the people, as well as a gradual increase in the population.

  • There has seemed to be a great deal of disagreement among the medical authorities who have attempted to say when a woman should not have children.

  • There has been so much secrecy about the whole subject and so much dependence upon amateurish and nonprofessional advice that it is almost impossible for anyone to procure reliable information or to recognize it when given.

  • Unfortunately, there has been a very great tendency to make capital of various kinds out of dying men's speeches.

  • If there has, take him out, without making a noise!

  • There has been, of late, a deference approaching to tenderness, on the part of the boarders generally so far as he is concerned.

  • Seemingly, then, there is as great a future in the development of this fermentative industry as there has been in the past in the development of the fermentative industry associated with brewing and vinting.

  • There has been in the past not a little question as to whether bacteria should be rightly classed with plants or with animals.

  • Up to the present, however, there has been no application of such methods.

  • There has been a woman in this case--presumably.

  • Gunther so well that, although the jury brought in a verdict of murder by poison by some one unknown, there has been no mention of the name of anyone else.

  • There has been a great deal of talk about dark and muffled automobiles that have conveyed mysterious parties swiftly and silently across country.

  • There has been so much said about the position of men in Massachusetts that the travelers were glad of this evidence that husbands are beginning to be appreciated.

  • There has been a meeting of a woman's association for Ameliorating the Condition of somebody here at home.

  • There has been a great deal of discussion whether a boy should be trained in the classics or mathematics or sciences or modern languages.

  • There has been a lively time in our garden this summer; but it seems to me there is very little to show for it.

  • There has been an increase of about 3 per cent in the amount transported in American vessels over the amount of last year.

  • There has been no material change in our relations with the independent States of this hemisphere which were formerly under the dominion of Spain.

  • With the exception of the recent devastating fire which swept from the earth with a breath, as it were, millions of accumulated wealth in the city of Boston, there has been no overshadowing calamity within the year to record.

  • As yet, so far as I am aware, there has been no violation of our neutrality rights, which, as well as our duties in that respect, it shall be my endeavor to maintain and observe.

  • There has come a great blot upon your life, and is it not well that it should be covered as quickly as possible?

  • There has come a box," she said, "big enough to contain the resignations of all the traitors of the party.

  • There has been no previous quarrel, or offence?

  • There has lighted a plague upon all civilized countries, an outbreak fearful and severe: only by the great blessing of Providence, joined to drastic remedial measures on our part, can we cope with the evil.

  • But it is not properly punishment: no natural law has been really broken: there has been no guilt, and the suffering is not retributive and compensatory.

  • But only a despot here or there has attained to it.

  • There has prevailed a strong sense that the admission of women to the privileges of the higher learning (as to the Eleusianin mysteries) would be derogatory to the dignity of the learned craft.

  • There has been a cancelled page; I should like to know what gigantic blunder it contained.

  • There has been as much discussion on the other side of the Atlantic as on this.

  • There has been a plethora of reviews, and I am really quite sick of myself.

  • There has been of late a great deal of new discovery concerning the early Jews.

  • Says our head spook-hunter: There has been no belief that exercised so much power upon the poor as that in a future life.

  • There has been a conspiracy of a very artful and ingenious character.

  • There has been, however, a feeling that the thing, which would have been perfectly successful but for the conscience of a woman concerned, might be repeated with less tender consciences, and so the Companies be defrauded.

  • There has been a quarrel perhaps between you and my wife.

  • There has been no trouble at all," she wrote to her husband; "and there will not be any.


  • The above list will hopefully provide you with a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "there has" 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:
    always feel; dearest aunt; during the past year; electric machine; first reception; liberum arbitrium; not care; popular feeling; seems worth; society will; there any; there are; there isn; there lived; there might; there seemed; there she; there should; there they; there wasn; there were; there will; therefore the; thirds vote; true servant; white woman