That's why," said the old man, looking at Andrews fixedly, through his spectacles.
Music was seeping up through his mind as the water seeps into a hole dug in the sand of the seashore.
Through his doze he could hear men's voices talking in low crushed tones, as if they were afraid of speaking aloud.
As soon as he got out of the hospital he would desert; the determination formed suddenly in his mind, making the excited blood surge gloriously through his body.
And in finally yielding to Celia, he must have been guided by the idea of rallying to the new regime through his daughter, so as to have one foot firmly set at the Quirinal, without withdrawing the other from the Vatican.
His fortune, still estimated at several millions of francs, remained, as it were, in a state of stagnation, through his refusal to invest it in any of the enterprises of the century.
Suddenly all he had ever felt for her sweptthrough his being, and sullenness fled away.
Indirectly this vast struggle in which thousands of lives were being lost had come through his wife's disloyalty, however unintentional, or in whatever degree.
Through his life-work, through his ambition, through helping him as no one else could have done at the time of crisis, she had reached the farthest confines of his nature.
The king snatched the ribbon out of his hand, and examined it by drawing it through his fingers.
When she was in the palace, the lord of the chamber had to remain in the anteroom, and no one could approach the queen but through his mediation.
The one party controlled the king's ear through the queen; the other, through his favorite, Earl Douglas.
This book and that, through his aid, he had read thoroughly; and a score or so of propositions had been added to his stock in Euclid.
He did not know of what far deeper and better things he had, through his gentleness, his trust, his loving service, his absolute unselfishness, sown the seeds in his mind.
Gibbie knew every corner, and strange was the swift variety of thoughts and sensations that went filing through his mind.
The physician shook his head, gazing at me through his glasses.
With a grunt of fury the Indian shed his blanket and scrambled to his feet, and stood glaring at us through his paint.
I told him what I thought of him, and he shot at me through his pocket.
Through his father, Gonzalvo, who held an important position at court, he was connected by illegitimate descent with the royal family of Portugal.
Through his carelessness a bottle of choice perfume had lost its cork, and its contents had run, unperceived, over clothing and carriage cushions.
A member of an Arab princely family descended from Mohammed through his son-in-law Ali and daughter Fatima.
Through his birth in Strachan, Kincardine, he belonged to the same part of Scotland from which Kant's ancestors had come.
Here too, therefore, just as Goethe had discovered it through his way of observing the plant, we see Ideas with our very eyes.
To do things and then see what happens, is both the expression of this instinct and the basis of any creative return the child makes through his handling of the fairy tale.
Through his dramas, with a power of sympathy which has seemed universal, Shakespeare has given the adult world many types of character and conduct that are noble.
If the tale has this basis of truth the child will gain, through hishandling of it, a body of facts.
Then our hold on Banneker, through hisability to intimidate The Searchlight, depends on the life of a paretic.
The one at our suburban station chews tobacco and says 'Marm' through his nose.
Through his lids he felt the glare of lightning: the first flash of the storm.
Some of them she too had seen, through his mind; so close was the spiritual link between them.
The above list will hopefully provide you with a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "through his" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this group of words.