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Example sentences for "when sufficiently"

  • The hams, when sufficiently smoked, must be kept in a cool place.

  • When sufficiently boiled, strain the cocoa from the nibs, mix it with equal proportions of milk, and sweeten with sugar.

  • Simmer in it for ten minutes a slice of onion.

  • Heat in a double-boiler until it begins to thicken, then take from the fire and add two more tablespoonfuls of butter.

  • When sufficiently cooked, strain the gravy, and when cold, remove the fat.

  • When sufficiently dried in the sun, the pulp may be cut into strips, and twisted into any fanciful shapes, bows, &c.

  • When sufficiently boiled to come off the bones easily, put it into a hot pan, remove the bones, and chop the meat with a sharp knife before the fire, together with the beef.

  • Or take it up when sufficiently boiled, scrape the under side, and cut off the rind: grate a crust of bread over it, and place it a few minutes before the fire to brown.

  • When sufficiently cool, put to it a crust of toasted bread dipped in thick yeast, and let the liquor ferment in the tub thirty six hours.

  • Stir them together over the fire till they boil; when sufficiently thickened, draw the loaves from the oven, open their tops, pour in the butter and sugar, and send them up with sugar strewed over them.

  • When sufficiently done, take them out on the dish they are to be served in, the stalk downwards.

  • When sufficiently cooked, the flesh can be detached from the bone, which will be in about 15 minutes for a small mackerel.

  • When sufficiently done, roll with a spoon and turn into the dish.

  • When done one side, turn it; when sufficiently done, pull out the thread; dish and serve with drawn butter and parsley.

  • When sufficiently dry, the capsules are placed upright in little cells, made in the table to receive them, and the liquid with which they are to be filled is then introduced by means of a small glass tube.

  • When sufficiently thick, the deposit is removed with care, washed and placed to dry.

  • Powder the coal thus obtained and add about thirty drops of oil of vitriol, and heat until vapours begin to rise; when sufficiently cool, add water, and boil for ten minutes.

  • Dissolves readily to a clear glass, which, when sufficiently saturated, is yellow white hot, and becomes colorless on cooling.

  • When sufficiently saturated, the glass may be rendered of an opaque yellow by an intermittent flame.

  • Dissolves readily to a clear colorless glass, which, when sufficiently saturated, may be rendered opaque with an intermittent flame, and with a larger addition of the acid becomes spontaneously enameline on cooling.

  • When sufficiently saturated, it may be rendered opaque with an intermittent flame, and with a still larger addition of the acid becomes so spontaneously on cooling.

  • Melt the first five substances together, and stir in the cantharides; when sufficiently cold, and well mixed, spread on waxed strips of linen.

  • When sufficiently dry, the leaves are separated from the stems, bound up in bundles, and these are formed into bales, or packed in hogsheads, for exportation.

  • It is here mixed with a little sulphuric acid to prevent the formation of ammonia, and being evaporated down in vacuo becomes converted, when sufficiently dry, into poudrette.

  • When sufficiently mellow to be eaten raw, they are usually so tart as to seem to require a light sprinkling of sugar to suit most tastes.

  • When sufficiently flavored, remove the onion with a skimmer, thicken the soup with two teaspoonfuls of browned flour, turn through the soup strainer and serve.

  • Each rice kernel, when sufficiently browned, should be of a yellowish brown, about the color of ripened wheat.

  • When sufficiently coloured, take out the bag, and give the icing a hard stirring or beating before you put it on.

  • When sufficiently cooked, take out the meat, and thicken the gravy with beaten yolk of egg, stirred in about three minutes before you take it from the fire.

  • When sufficiently raised, boiled them either in water or meat broth in the same manner as she prepared dumplings; made only of flour.

  • When sufficiently cooked, add one tablespoon of vinegar, pepper and salt to taste, cook one minute longer and serve on the same dish with the chops.

  • When sufficiently cooked, pour off the water, season to taste with salt and pepper, and add 1 tablespoonful of butter for each pint of kohlrabi cooked.

  • When sufficiently coated, sauté in shallow fat, browning first on one side and then on the other.

  • When sufficiently cooked, drain, and make a sauce of the other ingredients.

  • Rightly understood, resentment is preventive in its nature, and, when sufficiently deliberate, regards the infliction of suffering as a means rather than as an end.

  • Owing to its very nature, the moral consciousness, when sufficiently influenced by thought, regards the will as the only proper object of moral disapproval or praise, p.

  • When sufficiently agitated, it will have a dirty whitish appearance, and is then to be drawn off into another vessel, in which it is to be allowed to settle, and any scum that rises is to be carefully taken off.

  • When sufficiently condensed by the press, they are taken out, and despatched to their respective manufacturers in a state ready for sale.


  • The above list will hopefully provide you with a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "when sufficiently" 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:
    courage and; natural causation; when behold; when cold; when compared; when either; when informed; when presently; when pure; when required; when rightly; when served; when taken; when the door opened; when they; when they had come; when they saw him; when they were alone; when they were come; when turned; when using; when very; when viewed; when you; whence came; whole people