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Example sentences for "these should"

  • These should not be returned to Vamadeva.

  • These should never be discharged when there is no object (fit).

  • However, should there be unpaid calls, the cards to these should be left in person.

  • These should be very simply folded, and without starch, and are laid just beyond the plate toward the center of the table.

  • These should be reserved for the marriage gifts.

  • Invitations to these should be engraved on square cards or note sheets, and sent out two weeks previous to the reception day.

  • These should be compared, keeping clearly in mind the principles stated above.

  • These should, of course, be in harmony with the colour tones and general character of the picture.

  • These should be laid off with great care, the outline reproduced exactly on the opposite side, and the stock cut out.

  • These should be sought for and carefully removed or driven in, as they may seriously damage any bindings with which they come in contact.

  • These should be carefully mixed, breaking up all lumps, and then should be heated in a clean saucepan, and stirred all the time with a wooden or bone spoon.

  • These should also be so far revolute that the side view should exhibit a perfect semicircle in its outline, and the eye or prolific disc, in the centre should be entirely concealed.

  • These should be set below the surface, and the hole should be filled with hard beeswax before painting.

  • These should be cut so that they will finish about four inches square and one end left open so that they may be filled about three-fourths full of beans, peas or small pebbles.

  • These should be planed up square and smooth and the top edges chamfered 1/16", as shown.

  • These should be dipped in glue and pressed into place.

  • The corners of these should now be neatly bevelled off, so as to fit after the manner of a picture-frame.

  • Two of these should be one foot in length, and the remaining two eight inches.

  • These should be three-quarters of an inch square, and one foot in length.

  • Two of these should be ten and a half inches in length, and the other two six and a-half, and the ends should be perfectly smooth.

  • These should consist of young trees, or straight branches, about three inches in diameter, and should be of such a length as to reach a height of four or five feet when set in the ground, this being the required height of the pen.

  • These should be grown in shallow pans, either for suspending or placing on a shelf near the glass of the roof.

  • These should be potted in peat, Sphagnum-moss, and loam fibre in equal proportions, with a sprinkling of leaves, and fine broken crocks added.

  • It is suggested, however, that whenever possible such data as these should be asked in a way, and from a sufficient number of libraries, to warrant throwing the results into a form that will make them generally available.

  • These should be cataloged as books are and lists of them should be in the hands of school superintendents, supervisors, principals, and teachers.

  • In these should be assistant librarians who know the very best in literature for children and youth and who know also how to deal with children and how to make the rooms attractive.

  • These should be in various grades or degrees of fineness and three of each kind should be provided.

  • Both of these should be installed in the pilot's seat, one controlling the R.

  • These should be provided in the common sizes.

  • These should be kept in stout manila envelopes, slightly less in size than the width and height of the drawer, and with the names of subjects contained, and arranged in alphabetical order.

  • When it wears shoes, these should conform as much as possible to the shape of the foot.

  • These should be stood on end in a deep stewpan, leaving the tops about an inch above the water.

  • These should be cut up in a frying pan in which a fair amount of butter has been melted, and the knife should be used while they cook.

  • These should be placed in position and fastened to strip B with two-inch butts.

  • So these should go only in partly shaded places and under good soil conditions.

  • Suppose a dispute between two powerful princes, one claiming the possession of Asia and the other of Africa, to which of these should Egypt, I mean the country called Lower Egypt, appertain.

  • To these should be added its marine history; for we are in a certain sense amphibious, not exclusively connected with the land, but with the sea as well.

  • But such facts as these should ever be present to the mind of those who compose Geographies.

  • Surely it is strange that such absurdities as these should continue to be published!

  • The pages as written upon can be numbered, and this will relieve the mind of the indexer of fear that any of these should be lost.

  • These should be acknowledged by an acceptance, or declined, with a note of regret within one week.

  • These should be acknowledged immediately by a letter of acceptance, or declining with regret.

  • These should be answered immediately, and if declined, the ticket should be returned.

  • These should be sent a day or two before the ceremony, and if of silver should be marked with the child's name, initials, or monogram.

  • These should be made between three and half-past five, and if possible on regular at home days.


  • The above list will hopefully provide you with a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "these should" 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:
    ber die; brigade from; dictum simpliciter; dried beef; entire stranger; future things; knew must; little late; real gold; simple explanation; these animals; these are; these books; these cases; these countries; these islands; these little; these occasions; these pages; these people; these points; these terms; these the; these times; these were; these words