But quickly mastering himself, he remarked: "Yes, it's true that I gamble.
It's true that I am now a winner to the tune of two hundred and eighty thousand francs.
It is true that Madame de Fondege had a handsome wardrobe with glass doors in her own room, but this was an article which the friend of the fashionable Baroness Trigault could not possibly dispense with.
It is true that of us two I showed myself the weaker.
It is true that he looked altogether unlike the servant in the red waist-coat.
It is true that it may be quite possible, in the first place, that Ravaillac had no accomplices; and in the second, that if he had any, they were in no way connected with the fire of 1618.
It istrue that he was looking at his cake more than at the pavement.
But this splendid moment lasted only for a short time; the Renaissance was not impartial; it did not content itself with building, it wished to destroy; it is true that it required the room.
It is true that it appears to be repugnant to you; and it is very natural, for you bourgeois are not accustomed to it.
Doubtless it will seem strange to many that the hand unaided by sight can feel action, sentiment, beauty in the cold marble; and yet it is true that I derive genuine pleasure from touching great works of art.
Nor is it true that, after I had learned these elements, I did the rest of the work myself.
It is true that it does its best to recover its reputation as soon as you have passed the threshold.
It is true that Aigues-Mortes does a little busi- ness; it sees certain bags of salt piled into barges which stand in a canal beside it, and which carry their cargo into actual places.
It is true that for a long time to come the castle of Blois was neither very safe nor very quiet; but its dangers came from within, from the evil passions of its inhabitants, and not from siege or in- vasion.
It is true that an advanced position on comity sometimes operates to the disadvantage of the denomination that espouses it.
It is true that some of the missionaries felt that the ring- leaders of the Boxers, including those in high official position who more or less secretly incited them to violence, should be punished.
It is true that once I felt very much inclined to go and touch the leaves of a flowery shrub which I saw at some distance, and had even moved two or three paces towards it; but, bethinking myself, I manfully resisted the temptation.
It is true that there's too much official and indirect power.
It is true that I have been per-ceptibly less hampered in private inquiries.
For ages looking up an eternal perspective it might be true that life is a learning to die.
It is true that I have failed more than once, but it is also true that my failures have been more magnificent than your waddle across the plain of life.
It istrue that I am the titular head of this organisation.
Still, it is true that I should like well enough to stay at Umbezi's kraal with Mameena, especially if Umbezi were away.
It is true that I entered the hut of Nandie and set the medicine there.
It cannot be true that there is nothing abiding in what we know.
It is true that there is a thing crudely called charity, which means charity to the deserving poor; but charity to the deserving is not charity at all, but justice.
It is true that there is a state of hope which belongs to bright prospects and the morning; but that is not the virtue of hope.
It is true that Thais is about to meet her blessed death.
It is true that, as long as we are what we are, we shall never find anything but our own thoughts in the thoughts of others, and that all of us are somewhat inclined to read books as I have read this one.
Then she says to herself, so that the others should not hear, that no one need ask her to drink or eat, if it is true that he is dead, in whose life she found her own.
It is true that a man fares ill among his relatives: I could drive a better bargain somewhere else, for you are trying to take me in.
So it is true that he was much incensed; but he cherishes within himself the hope that God and the Right will be on his side.
If it is true that he never came to Paris, and that another Jansoulet did everything they accuse him of, why did he not say so?
It is true," remarked the personage, speaking with the slightest possible movement of his mouth and continuing to take his wine in little sips, "it is true that we received the Nabob at Grandbois the other week.
It is true that he had urged her to marry Mallory; but now, in his lonesomeness and friendlessness, he felt almost as though she had been untrue to him.
It is true that I doubted you at first--I doubted everyone connected with the Halfmoon.
A thousand juries pronouncing him so could not make ittrue that he had killed Schneider.
Whether the motives assigned by this medical man to his professional brethren existed or not, it is true that Dr.
It is true that he had helped them to secure perhaps the finest country held by any Indian nation for a mere song.
It is true that a man of his type in a crisis becomes spiritually transformed and moves as one in a dream.
Little Crow declared he would be seen in the front of every battle, and it istrue that he was foremost in all the succeeding bloodshed, urging his warriors to spare none.
The above list will hopefully provide you with a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "true that" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this group of words.