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Example sentences for "wider sense"

  • In a wider sense, anything said or done in return for some word, action, or suggestion of another may be called an answer.

  • Friendship includes acquaintance with some degree of intimacy, and ordinarily companionship, though in a wider sense friendship may exist between those who have never met, but know each other only by word and deed.

  • In a wider sense, an extensive group of birds including the ostriches, cassowaries, emus, moas, and allied birds incapable of flight.

  • In a wider sense, the skeleton includes the whole connective-tissue framework with the integument and its appendages.

  • If there is question of presumption and despair in a wider sense, these sins may be venial on account of smallness of matter; for they may be understood with reference to things other than salvation.

  • An individual of the sex which conceives and brings forth young, or (in a wider sense) which has an ovary and produces ova.

  • Belonging to the sex which conceives and gives birth to young, or (in a wider sense) which produces ova; not male.

  • The process of undergoing an effervescent change, as by the action of yeast; in a wider sense (Physiol.

  • In a wider sense, the word is often loosely applied to various small invertebrates.

  • Sometimes, as before observed, Politics appears to be used in a wider sense, to denote the theory of ideal social relations, whether conceived to be established through governmental coercion or otherwise.

  • The moralists who urge us to follow nature, whether human nature or Nature in a wider sense, we may, hence, regard as intuitionists of a sort.

  • But when we use perfection in a wider sense, we judge different types after the standard furnished by the distinctively human.

  • Sometimes the thought has been predominantly of human nature, and sometimes the appeal has been to nature in a wider sense.

  • Sometimes, in a wider sense, applied to running birds of the Ostrich family.

  • The word is frequently used in a wider sense.

  • The process of undergoing an effervescent change, as by the action of yeast; in a wider sense (Physiol.


  • The above list will hopefully provide you with a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "wider sense" 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:
    about one; behold the; breadth from; but they will not; cement and other construction; century before; certain races; could distinguish; economic forces; empty chair; foreign influences; given three; greyish brown; large bodies; other suitable; solo singing; until thou; welcome hame; well inhabited; wider range; wider sense; working hypothesis; you told