Home
Idioms
Top 1000 Words
Top 5000 Words


Example sentences for "voluminous writer"

  • It has already been mentioned that Brother Lucas was a voluminous writer.

  • Like so many members of the Unity, Augusta was a voluminous writer, but some of his works have been lost, and many of the others have remained in MS.

  • Lomnicky is a voluminous writer, and, as already mentioned, found it advantageous to be so.

  • There is sufficient contemporary evidence to prove that Chelcicky was a voluminous writer, but many of his works have been lost, and up to the beginning of the present century they had all fallen into almost complete oblivion.

  • Marini was a voluminous writer, and was not only extolled in his own country above its classic authors, and in France, but the Spaniards held him in the highest esteem, and imitated and even surpassed him in his own eccentric career.

  • Goethe was a voluminous writer, and much devoted to the fine arts and the natural sciences, as is attested by his remarkable work on the theory of colors.

  • JAMES RALPH, a voluminous writer of poetry, politics and history, died.

  • He was a voluminous writer, and the extent and variety of his works evince the greatest industry, and a retentive and orderly mind.

  • He was a man of considerable talents and learning, and a voluminous writer in various branches of literature, but possessed of a most unhappy temper and disposition.

  • A man of extensive erudition and a voluminous writer, he was called Doctor universalis.

  • He was a voluminous writer on church law and also in the departments of moral and ascetical theology.

  • Melito of Sardis= was also a highly esteemed apologist, and a voluminous writer in many other departments of theological literature.

  • Anselm at Bec, was a voluminous writer and, with all his own love of the marvellous, a vigorous opponent of all the grosser absurdities of relic and saint worship.

  • Mrs. Harris has been a voluminous writer of stories and novels.

  • This author was a voluminous writer, and recognized as one of the ablest in the Conference.

  • Mrs. Conklin has been a voluminous writer of novels and stories, published by Robert Carter & Brothers and by the Presbyterian Board.

  • He was a voluminous writer of books on Christian ethics, and of histories, which now seem unscholarly and untrustworthy, but were valuable in their time in cultivating a popular interest in history.

  • He was, as it turned out, a voluminous writer; yet his books successively seem the accident of his situation.

  • Amort, who had the reputation of being the most learned man of his age, was a voluminous writer on every conceivable subject, from poetry to astronomy, from dogmatic theology to mysticism.

  • Mr. Scott, though not a voluminous writer, was the author of a considerable number of poems, all of which were of a highly intellectual character.

  • Mr. Jones is one of the most earnest and successful members of the Elkton Bar, and though not a voluminous writer, in early life contributed poetry to the columns of the Cecil Whig, of which the following poems are specimens.

  • He was a voluminous writer, and the author of a large number of fugitive poems, many of which are said to have been quite humorous and possessed of much literary merit.

  • Bodenstedt was a voluminous writer; his work includes poems, romances, novels, and dramas.

  • He was a voluminous writer, his works in the Lyons edition of 1688 filling seven folio volumes.

  • On the whole, Borrow was not a voluminous writer; but what he wrote tells.

  • A voluminous writer, but now best known by his Saints' Rest, and Call to the Unconverted.

  • A voluminous writer, best known by his Shepherd's Resolution and The Steadfast Shepherd.

  • A voluminous writer of miscellaneous works of slight merit.


  • The above list will hopefully provide you with a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "voluminous writer" 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:
    comparative study; desire them; down house; each line; fine blue; foreign affairs; had tried; lays hold; little joke; little stock; live steam; one knew; only wanted; opened fire; rapid glance; sacrifices were; spinal nerve; true unity; voluminous writer; when compared; will pray; would take too long