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Example sentences for "what follows"

  • What follows is taken from Mr. Huxley's article.

  • What follows is from notes most kindly supplied by the Hon.

  • What follows is from another letter to Dr.

  • The most important will be set forth in what follows.

  • The Pauline ideas about sin, law, and bondage are incorporated by Irenæus in what follows.

  • The substance of what follows appeared in an article published in the Economic Journal for September, 1909, and is reproduced by the kind permission of the Editor.

  • In what follows it is proposed first to make a detailed study of conditions in London, and then to present a general picture of the state of boy labour in other parts of the country.

  • In what follows I shall draw largely on my essay in "Studies of Boy Life.

  • What follows is much the same, and his whole book on the chief good everywhere abounds with the same opinions.

  • Here, and in what follows, I mean by hatred only hatred towards men.

  • I have laid a foundation, whereon may be raised many excellent conclusions of the highest utility and most necessary to be known, as will, in what follows, be partly made plain.

  • It will be convenient, in what follows, to exclude this wider meaning, and assume that b is not zero.

  • In what follows, I have given rather Klein's exposition of Riemann, than Riemann's own account.

  • But who are meant in the Word by "the rich" and who by "the poor" will be told in what follows.

  • As the angels of these two kingdoms will be fully treated of in what follows, particulars are here omitted.

  • Each of these will be treated of in what follows.

  • But in what manner the Divine goes forth from the Lord and fills heaven will be told in what follows.

  • Some explanation is necessary for the clear understanding of what follows.

  • This rapid sketch of the past was necessary, my dear son to arrive at what follows, for we wish now, if it be possible, to draw still closer the bonds that unite us.

  • Examine the first column of what follows: it is not a burlesque, but the beginning of a so-called play.

  • In what follows immediately, a skilful hand seems in column one to have cut details of column two which, though interesting in themselves, delay the essential movement of the scene and help to swell the whole play to undue proportions.

  • Undoubtedly the important word in what follows is "christenings," but Chasuble runs on into various other matters before Jack speaks.

  • What follows in this section is addressed to gardeners who have already read glowing reports about mulching.

  • What follows is not mere theory, not something I read about or saw others do.

  • What follows in this chapter are some strategies to guide the urban in becoming more water-wise.

  • Browning esteemed these papers highly and in what follows I appropriate, with some modifications, a passage from the first of them.

  • I shall myself, however, make use of some analogies in what follows, but shall not insist too strongly upon them.

  • The need for this is lessened, however, by the fact that much of what follows is part of the commonplaces of the history of philosophy,--albeit a repetition of it seems needed in a criticism of economic theory.

  • They are like the Titans [On this similarity rests the psychologic term “titanic,” used frequently by me in what follows.

  • What follows suggests a birth fantasy as these occur in dreams of being born.

  • Every one who knows anything of himself, and of his fellow-men, will acknowledge the wisdom of what follows.

  • What follows is justly thought and well said.


  • The above list will hopefully provide you with a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "what follows" 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:
    experiment stations; what amount; what applies; what constitutes; what effect; what evidence; what follows; what goes; what has; what made; what more; what not; what principle; what prompted; what remains; what say; what sort; what the traffic will; what was going forward; what way; what were; what wilt thou have; what word; whatever else; whatever happened; whatever happens