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Example sentences for "what has been said"

  • In spite of what has been said, it may be that a protest will still be raised by some on behalf of character.

  • That so clear a thinker as Mill should have overlooked this gives point to what has been said as to writers on Determinism having failed to squarely face the issue.

  • Coming from a writer of less standing I might, in view of what has been said elsewhere in this essay, have left the reply to the careful reader's understanding of the subject.

  • As an example of what has been said we may take a passage from John Stuart Mill.

  • What has been said of the physical point of view may be applied to the emotional.

  • The practical rules which may be given for the writing of Argument are chiefly recapitulations of what has been said.

  • We come here very close to Narration, and to what has been said of the description of physical things there is not much which need be added to cover the case of immaterial things.

  • We may here call attention to what has been said at page 62, respecting the use of box, No.

  • The latter difficulty is removed by a reference to what has been said on the subject of winter store, in the last section.

  • Much of what has been said in the preceding section is equally applicable in practice to the later periods of the summer.

  • What has been said is, if I mistake not, sufficient to decide the question we proposed to examine, concerning the ability of a pure spirit, such as we have described, to know geometry.

  • But, what has been said is, if I mistake not, sufficient to convince any one that shall yield a reasonable attention.

  • What has been said of the heroic may be applied to wit, so important an element in many kinds of poetry; he ignores it because he was without it totally.

  • What has been said is only in partial illustration of the plan and manner of Spenser's great poem: the student is invited and encouraged to make an analysis of the other portions himself.

  • I should hope, therefore, that the natural consequence of what has been said would be, to excite in you a desire of knowing the principles and conduct of the great masters of our art, and respect and veneration for them when known.

  • I should be sorry if what has been said should be understood to have any tendency to encourage that carelessness which leaves work in an unfinished state.

  • I answer that, It must needs be, according to what has been said before, that God loves more the better things.

  • If therefore evil is a being in things, it follows that evil is a thing, which is contrary to what has been said (A.

  • The answer to the objections will sufficiently appear from what has been said.

  • Now it is manifest, according to what has been said (Q.

  • What has been said may be seen in a kind of image and thus corroborated by the correspondence of the heart with love and of the lungs with the understanding (of which above).

  • Read with attention, I pray you, what has been said above (n.

  • As this is in no way consistent with reason, it follows that man's life is in its first principles in the brains, and in its derivatives in the body (according to what has been said above, n.

  • Tell me also, O foremost of speakers, what has been said to be the characteristics of that behaviour.

  • By Conclusion is meant the final determination, after this examination of what has been said on the subjects of religion, pleasure, wealth, and Emancipation, in respect of what is particularly is that has been said in the text.

  • This may be deemed a corroboration of what has been said above, as to the decline of Greek learning in Italy.

  • The manuscripts of Lionardo da Vinci, now at Paris, are the justification of what has been said in the text.

  • Of the Italian comedies little can be added to what has been said before; no comic writer of this period is comparable in reputation to Machiavel, Ariosto, or even Aretin.

  • What has been said is a mere sketch, and that only of a part of the interesting country into which we have been led; but my correspondent will be able to enter the paths that have been pointed out.

  • It may still be asked, where lies the particular relation of what has been said to these Volumes?

  • What has been said of sight and hearing may be applied to the other senses.

  • What has been said of the child, may be proved true also of adults, however clear and perfect their intellect.

  • What has been said of its production may be said of the attempt to consolidate it.

  • If we compare men with men, and pay attention to the character of genius, the most elevated point of human intelligence, we shall see the truth of what has been said of the scale of human beings, and the progress of science.

  • I will close this chapter by briefly summing up what has been said.

  • I would refer any who question the fitness of such exercises to what has been said on the subject at the 77th and following pages, and especially to the testimony of Dr.

  • What has been said in the preceding pages on the philosophy of respiration was first given to the public nearly ten years ago, in a report of the author's in the State of New York.

  • The necessity of this will be apparent by referring to what has been said on the laws of health in the third chapter of this work, at the 68th and following pages.

  • But in the light of what has been said, this statement needs but be made to prove its fallacy.

  • A certain detachment from modern conditions, and from modern frames of mind, is essential to an adequate appreciation of what has been said.

  • The evidence that may be adduced in favour of what has been said is vast, and covers a wide range.

  • There is hardly a qualified medical authority in the country who would deny the truth of what has been said, although many do not care to speak out in relation to religious matters.

  • Were society really enlightened and genuinely civilised, the truth of what has been said would be recognised as soon as stated.


  • The above list will hopefully provide you with a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "what has been said" 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:
    different class; what did; what ever; what evil; what happened; what kind; what kinds; what king; what land; what matter; what meanes; what more; what pertains; what place; what prompted; what reason; what respects; what right; what says; what seemeth; what then; what thinkest; what were; whatever cost; whatever happened; whatever kind