Dear Sir, In mine of January the 23rd, I acknowledged the receipt of your lettersfrom No.
Your stay there will be as long as its objects may require, only taking care to return to Lisbon by the time you may reasonably expect that our answers to your letters to be written from Lisbon, may reach that place.
Dear Sir, I am become very uneasy, lest you should have adopted some channel for the conveyance of your letters to me, which is unfaithful.
Before I had got through the most pressing matters which had been accumulating, a long illness came upon me, and put it out of my power for many weeks to acknowledge the receipt of your letters.
O, said he, the liberties you have taken with my character in your letters, sets us upon a par, at least in that respect.
Was it not sufficient, that I was insolently taken to task by you in your letters, but my retirements must be invaded?
I am going to answer two of your letters, without having the fear of Genoa(270) before my eyes.
The forests in your landscapes do not thrive like those in' your letters.
I have brought two of your letters hither to answer: in town there are so many idle people besides oneself, that one has not a minute's time; here I have whole evenings, after the labours of the day are ceased.
I am not surprised to find by your letters of 21st and 28th of February how much you have been alarmed for your brother.
Your letters, received to-night, have tended to beguile the time, and were at least a temporary relief.
In your letters, speak of Brooks and Ireson's attendance.
I must therefore desire you will direct your letters, with such intelligence as you may procure, to his excellency General Washington, who will be on the line of march with the army.
Your letters of the 16th and 23d came both by the last post.
I have lost some of your letters, and I make no doubt some of mine have met the same fate; for this reason I am discouraged trusting any more to the stage.
I see no affectation in your letters, no trifling, no frivolous contempt of plain, and weak admiration of showy persons and things.
Your letters, and the French newspapers, are the only messengers that come to me from the outer world beyond our moors; and very welcome messengers they are.
But you will find all your letters in the box by themselves.
I hope you will write soon, your letters give me great pleasure; you have made me so well acquainted with all your household, that I must hope for frequent accounts how you are all going on.
Your letters, my dear Sarah, are to me very, very precious ones.
But I have your word for it, too, and the returning elasticity of spirits which is manifested in your letters.
With the suppression of a few passages in your letters in regard to which I think you and I would not disagree, I should be glad of the publication.
In each of your letters to us, you will state the number of certain votes both for and against us, as well as the number of doubtful votes, with your opinion of the manner in which they will be cast.
Your letters, Lady Chetwynde, were the things which quelled and finally killed all kindly feelings.
In your letters to me this was still more evident.
In your letters I could read between the lines, and in your cold and constrained answers to your father's remarks about me I saw how strong was your aversion.
You may rely on it your letters reach me in safety.
I did not write to acknowledge the receipt of your Letters; because you did not express a wish that I should do so clearly till you wrote this last.
Why you ever ceased to sign your Name at the conclusion of your letters?
I do not pretend therefore to do more than acknowledge the receipt of your Letters; and thank you for your kindness.
I never heard anything so strange as Falconer's neglect of your letters; I am extremely glad you are cordial with him again, though it must have cost you an effort.
I am pleased to think, that after having read a few of your letters, I never once doubted the position you will ultimately hold amongst European Botanists.
Dear Sir, I have before me your letters of the 25th and 28th of June.
There are several of your letters, which on account of their length, the importance of their subjects, and the manner in which those subjects were treated, demanded of me more minute answers than my situation admitted of.
This must account for my not entering into a minute consideration of your letters, or of our own affairs.
Captain Capel brought me your letters, sent by the Thisbe, from Gibraltar.
And since I've left the San, I've looked forward to your letters to boost up my spirits.
SIR, On the day before yesterday Mr. Reynolds delivered to me your letters of the 8th and 9th inst, as also a despatch containing three letters addressed to me from Pillau, for which I beg to return you my best thanks.
I am in despair at the tone of your letters and at what I hear.
Your letters make up my daily pleasure, and my happy days are not often.
I am hoping that when I arrive to-night I shall get one of your letters.
Your letters are as cold as if you were fifty; we might have been married fifteen years.
The above list will hopefully provide you with a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "your letters" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this group of words.