This means that on this question the cabinet no longer represents the majority in the House.
By this means, instead of losing, you will turn your goods to advantage, and the merchants will gain by you.
By this means I hoped to penetrate into the presence of Meyerbeer's admirer, the unapproachable and terrible Minister of State.
Although I was fully aware that by this means he reckoned on conjuring a handsome profit out of my pocket into his own, yet on the advice of my friends I thought it best to comply with his request, albeit much against the grain.
By this means I certainly escaped the dreaded evil, but the effort exhausted me very much, and I longed for the return of the warm weather, when I should be relieved from the severities of this treatment.
Being by this means baptised, the soul of the creature has become Catholic.
By this means become an old orphan I, who speak, shall have no greater joy than to see burning, this demon, nourished with blood and gold.
By this means, and including what he had given me as above, I had at the end of my lying in about two hundred guineas by me, including also what was left of my own.
An extraordinary mutability has, by this means, been introduced into their legislation.
By this means he amassed to himself a considerable treasure, and, at the same time, secured the bordering Greeks from the incursions of the barbarians.
Many began now to hope well of their affairs, supposing the city, by this means, would be delivered at once, both of its want and discord.
By this means I shall be a good servant, in the precepts thou hast given by me.
No doubt, this means, for one thing, that all individuals shall be taught to be good fathers and mothers, good neighbors and members of communities, even more than they are taught the accomplishments of life.
This means that in society, as in the animal world, progress comes primarily through the elimination of unfit individuals.
This means that, on the one hand, the family life is a preventive of crime, and on the other that the socially abnormal classes who drift into crime are not apt to marry.
As men act on beliefs, this means that he would zig-zag through life to the detriment of all orderly development.
This means that we have in our minds some standard, perhaps consciously formulated, perhaps dimly apprehended, according to which we rate them.
This means that a new act of the social will may set itself in opposition to the social will already crystallized into custom.
This means that he cannot distinguish clearly between his material environment and his social.
But as regards the main question, whether constant races may be obtained by this means, the experiments cannot as yet supply a definite answer.
By this means it has been demonstrated that each developmental stage depends upon special external conditions, and in cases where our knowledge is sufficient, a particular stage may be obtained at will.
And so away to White Hall, and there did our usual attendance: and no word spoke before the Duke of York by Middleton at all; at which I was glad to my heart, because by this means I have time to draw up my answer to my mind.
But, says he, by this means it is better than to go to a lecture; for here my executors, that must part with this, will be sure to be well convinced of the invention before they do part with their money.
By this means he obtains for the Bronze Age an antiquity of between three and four thousand years, and for the Neolithic Age from five to seven thousand years.
It is sufficient to state that anatomists have made a careful study of the skulls of individuals of various nations, and instituted certain comparisons between them, and discoveries of great importance have been made by this means.
The Indians on our western plains convey intelligence by this meansat the present day.
By this means, without putting his feet to the ground, his Majesty, who was active, jumped from one horse to another.
Duc d'Orleans, and it was bythis means I paid for what I had done at La Ferme.
Orleans; and bythis means a reconciliation was established.
Christ was set forth to be a propitiatory sacrifice for sin; I will not say that his Father [who is perfectly sui juris] might be put by this means into a capacity of forgiving it.
But you proceed and say, 'Therefore was the death of Christ designed to procure our justification from all sins past, that we might be by this means provoked to become new creatures' (p.
Moreover, as long as the weather was clear they could, by this means, strike, at night at least, a course due east or west.
They could tell how far they had sailed only by 'dead reckoning'; this means that if their ship was going at such and such a speed, it was supposed to have made such and such a distance in a given time.
It is true that the Aztecs of Mexico, and the ancient Toltecs who preceded them, understood how to write in pictures, and that, by this means, they preserved some record of their rulers and of the great events of their past.
The above list will hopefully provide you with a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "this means" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this group of words.