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Example sentences for "what relates"

  • I know not any sort of men so apt as soldiers are, to reprimand those who presume to interfere in what relates to their trade.

  • That the proclamation in Rymer's Foedera against Jane Shore, for plotting with the marquis Dorset, not with lord Hastings, destroys all the credit of Sir Thomas More, as to what relates to the latter peer.

  • He does not seem to be more exact in what relates to the penance itself.

  • What relates to that unhappy fair one I shall examine at the end of this work.

  • In what relates to the salvation of a man's soul, he is infinitely more concerned than I can be; and to pretend to dictate to him in this particular is an infinite piece of impertinence and presumption.

  • This is more particularly the case in what relates to the fine arts, and will account for some phenomena of the national character.

  • There is no difficulty either in understanding or acquiring most kinds of property, but there is great difficulty in what relates to slaves.

  • Likewise, what relates to music has been, for the most part, completed.

  • The conduct of the Government in what relates to foreign powers is always an object of the highest importance to the nation.

  • The cognition, then, of God, in what relates to finite things, refers to their possible existence, and consequently involves the condition that they exist.

  • Fundamental Explanation of the Origin of the Obscurity of Ideas in what relates to Causality 479 XII.

  • What relates to water differs essentially in one respect from that which regards the air.

  • Be this as it may, we bear him no malice, and very conscientiously recommend his book to the mineralogical student, as a valuable and clear epitome of what relates to the behaviour of substances before the blowpipe.

  • Count Romanzoff, a Russian nobleman, is well known for his liberal and judicious encouragement of every thing which can promote useful knowledge, especially in what relates to the improvement and benefit of his country.

  • At present we shall confine our notice of this voyage to what relates to the more immediate object of this part of our work, the coast of North-west America.

  • In that of polished society, his desire to avoid the character of sordid, makes him conceal his regard for what relates merely to his preservation or his livelihood.

  • The freedom which they give in what relates to the supposed duties of kindness and friendship, serves only to engage the heart more entirely, where it is once possessed with affection.

  • It is only in what relates to himself, and in matters the most important and the most easily known, that he substitutes hypothesis instead of reality, and confounds the provinces of imagination and reason, of poetry and science.

  • Thus far there is no great novelty: the most interesting part of the chapter is what relates to Stammering.

  • We now pass to the other characteristics of the new system, which seem to lie chiefly in what relates to economy of time, rewards and punishments, the motives to exertion, and voluntary labour.

  • For the better understanding of what relates to the education of those young Indians, whom Xavier brought, it will be necessary to trace that matter from its original.

  • Be serviceable in all you can to the Malabar priests, in what relates to their spiritual advantage; take care that they confess themselves, and say mass, and give good examples, and write nothing against them to any person whatsoever.


  • The above list will hopefully provide you with a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "what relates" 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:
    been havin; evening party; purty good; well pleas; what avail; what causes; what class; what comes; what concerns; what could; what doth; what good; what had once been; what has brought thee; what matter; what might have been; what name; what pertains; what remained; what respect; what use; what wouldst; what you might call; whatever cost; whatever else; whatever their