Use england in a sentence
Sentences starting with england
- England and America; yes, we are kin. [5]
- England and the Transvaal will be at each other's throat before night. [11]
- England has blundered there, and she admits it freely. [9]
- England has to take a hand in the game now with a vengeance. [11]
- England never did submit to Rome, not even as France did, though the Gallic Church held out well. [4]
- England should have snatched Madagascar from the French clothes-line. [5]
- England sends a ship once in three or four years to give us soap and clothing, and things which we sorely need and gratefully receive; but she never troubles us; she lets us go our own way. [5]
- England continues to remain neutral. [5]
- England listened to reason, and recognized the Boer Republic--a government which has never been in any really awful danger since, until Jameson started after it with his 500 "raw young fellows. [5]
- England was no place, in those days, for fallen gentlemen. [9]
Sentences ending with england
- Let me introduce you to a young man who belongs to the Brahmin caste of New England. [6]
- How long do you remain in England? [11]
- And I'll warrant you cannot conceive the havoc and consternation their fulfilment would spread in England. [9]
- He had as yet made few literary acquaintances in England. [4]
- In the modern world, I can only think of the Pitts in England. [11]
- You had a world to work for in England. [11]
- You had your work in England. [11]
- The big parlor, with its photographs and stereoscope, and bits of shell and mineral, a piano and a melodeon, and a coveted old sideboard of mahogany, recalled rural New England. [4]
- And he says, why shouldn't you do it here, or why shouldn't you be the man who will guide it all in England? [11]
- The house in which Shakespeare was born is the Santa Casa of England. [6]
Short sentences using england
- To be minister--go to England. [4]
- Still New England survives. [4]
- In 1858 he revisited England. [6]
- Now look around on England. [5]
- What is this New England? [4]
- England proclaims strict neutrality. [5]
- England can do it. [11]
- In England or in Scotland? [5]
- What to do in England? [11]
- For Dorothy was in England. [9]
Sentences containing england two or more times
- After almost three years' experience, Winslow says, he can scarce distinguish New England from Old England, in respect of heat and cold, frost, snow, rain, winds, etc. [3]
- The wolfish Catherine writes to England for her lost Camisard, with much fool's talk about 'dark figures,' and 'conspirators,' 'churls,' and foes of 'soft peace'; and England takes the bait and sends to Sir Hugh Pawlett yonder. [11]
- In England as well as in France, as we have said, it was the period of the classic revival; but in England the energetic reality of the time was strong enough to break the classic fetters, and to use classic learning for modern purposes. [4]
- Those who seek vain pleasure in England take more pains to enjoy it than they would spend in New England to gain wealth, and yet have not half such sweet content. [4]
- It is true, then, that all our Fourths of July, and we have five of them, England gave to us, except that one that I have mentioned--the Emancipation Proclamation, and, lest we forget, let us all remember that we owe these things to England. [5]
- Is it true that in England, where a great proportion of the fiction we describe and loathe is produced; is it true that in our New England society there is nothing but frivolity, sordidness, decay of purity and faith, ignoble ambition and ignoble living? [4]
- They think that Russia and Germany are in England, and that England does not amount to much. [5]
- He saw our plain New England life with as honest New England eyes as ever looked at a huckleberry-bush or into a milking-pail. [6]
- After the seizure of the Transvaal and the suppression of the Boer government by England in 1877, the Boers fretted for three years, and made several appeals to England for a restoration of their liberties, but without result. [5]
- The country recalled New England, or what New England might be, if it were cultivated and adorned, and had good roads and no fences. [4]
More example sentences with the word england in them
- The real world, your world, England, Europe, would have no more use for all your skill and knowledge and power, because there would be a woman in the way. [11]
- He is of your own county, of your own village, is your neighbour, a man of whom all England should be proud. [11]
- I indorse all your chairman has said to you about the union of England and America. [5]
- Of course, or you wouldn't be talking the English language--though I've heard they talk it better in Boston than they do in England, and in Chicago they're making new English every day and improving on the patent. [11]
- I said that you would leave England within twenty-four hours, and that you would not return within three years. [11]
- And then again you seem as cold as your New England snow, you have no feeling, you are an Anglo-Saxon--a Puritan. [9]
- Now I wish you just to consider that he was right about that, and that he had his reasons for saying that England did not look upon our Revolution as a foreign war, but as a civil war fought by Englishmen. [5]
- Every one says you have done such splendid work for England, and that now you can have anything you want. [11]
- I knew that you had advertised a trip to Europe (why, the Lord only knows), so I went East and sailed for England on the Canadian Line. [9]
- Six months ago you had a prisoner here, captured on the New England border. [11]
- I said, "Don't you do it; you come to New England on a favorable spring day. [5]
- Now and then, yes, very often, out of some paradise, no doubt, strays into New England conditions of reticence and self-denial such a sweet spirit, to diffuse a breath of heaven in its atmosphere, and to wither like a rose ungathered. [4]
- In all the years Krool had been in England he had never been inside a place of worship or given any sign of that fanaticism which, all at once, he made manifest. [11]
- In England, thirteen years ago, my wife and I were stabbed to the heart with a cablegram which said, "Susy was mercifully released today. [5]
- In the following year Irving was again in England, visiting his sister in Birmingham, and tasting moderately the delights of London. [4]
- Mr. Chesterton, in writing about the American Revolution, observes that the real case for the colonists is that they felt that they could be something which England would not help them to be. [9]
- I wish she would write 12 old-time New England tales a year. [5]
- You and I would have fought for England and with the British troops, because we detest revolution. [11]
- My Western course would easily amount to $10,000, but I would rather make 2 or 3 thousand in New England than submit again to so much wearing travel. [5]
- The casual reader would certainly conclude that the Somers Isles were somehow due to the providence of John Smith, when in fact he never even heard that Gates and Smith were shipwrecked there till he had returned to England, sent home from Virginia. [4]
- I used the word "aromatic" in relation to the New England soil. [4]
- But Ian had won; England had won. [11]
- Barbara had witnessed with very different feelings from Dona Magdalena and her brother how the former regarded every false step of Don John, and especially that of his expedition to England, as a heavy misfortune, and as such bewailed it. [10]
- I will deal with them without presents; and if I had the gold of the Bank of England stored in the garrison there, they should not touch a piece of it. [9]
- He made friends with the correspondents, and got Millet's condition reported to England and all over the continent, and America, and everywhere. [5]
- I write it with pride, that at these suppers I was sometimes asked to speak; and, having been but lately to England, to give my opinion upon the state of affairs there. [9]
- Ladies answered back with historiettes that would almost have made Queen Margaret of Navarre or even the great Elizabeth of England hide behind a handkerchief, but nobody hid here, but only laughed --howled, you may say. [5]
- Smith professed himself willing to retire to England, but, seeing the new commission did not arrive, held on to his authority, and began to enforce it to save the whole colony from anarchy. [4]
- A big war will temporarily shut up the Suez Canal some day and the English ships will have to go to India around the Cape of Good Hope again; then England will have to have Bourbon and will take it. [5]
- England, France, Turkey, will land an army of occupation. [11]
- In England thee will forget, as thee should forget. [11]
- There is a whole family connection in New England, and that a very famous one, to many of whose members, in different generations, all the products of the dairy are the subjects of a congenital antipathy. [6]
- They were gentlemen who would go home to England or Germany and tell how many miles they had beaten the guide-book every day. [5]
- Mr. William Everett, who was then in England, bears strong testimony to the effect these letters produced. [6]
- We have men who ought to have been born in England, and who only find themselves really they go there. [4]
- Harvey in particular, who had come from England early in the century with my grandfather, spoke with bitterness of him. [9]
- His descent upon Whitehaven spread terror and consternation broadcast through England, and he was branded as a pirate and a traitor. [9]
- From the manuscript which lies before me I extract a single passage:-- "In the year 1775 we had many enemies and many friends in England, but our one benefactor was King George the Third. [6]
- Half the time, when it is packed as full as it can stick, you will see that New England weather sticking out beyond the edges and projecting around hundreds and hundreds of miles over the neighboring states. [5]
- At the period when Emerson reached manhood, Unitarianism was the dominating form of belief in the more highly educated classes of both of the two great New England centres, the town of Boston and the University at Cambridge. [6]
- At any rate, whatever the merits of their case, no one in England accused the Johannesburgers of foolhardy courage or impassioned daring. [11]
- So you see what we owe to England in the matter of liberties. [5]
- He doesn't know what the weather is going to be in New England. [5]
- Think how fast we've traveled; if we had gone straight east we would be long past England by this time. [5]
- In sooth, yesternight wert thou the Prince of Wales; to-day art thou my most gracious liege, Edward, King of England. [5]
- In the company were two Indians, Machumps and Namontack, whose acquaintance we have before made, returning from England, whither they had been sent by Captain Smith. [4]
- Spades and shovels were soon procured, and before the moon had set, the wild horse of the Pampas was at rest under the turf at the wayside, in the far village among the hills of New England. [6]
- Dublin and Ireland were shocked and thrilled; England imagined she had come upon one of the most violent episodes of Irish history. [11]
- If New England were not mostly rock, these winds would carry it off; but they would bring it all back again, as happens with the sandy portions. [4]
- As if there were no better use for a warrior and a poet in New England than to send him for the cows! [4]
- But our travelers were from New England, and they were not willing to be outdone in the matter of Sunday observances by such an out-of-the-way and nameless place as Baddeck. [4]
- I thought we were above the labour-trouble line, away up here in New England. [9]
- After this we went out on the lawn, where, at Lady William Compton's request, I recited one or two poems; the only time I did such a thing in England. [6]
- It hath served well in England. [11]
- In France as well as in England the name Sims is a household word, and if he chose he might be feted every day of the week. [9]
- But there are weighty matters 'twixt France and England, and De la Foret may turn the scale one way or another. [11]
- I wondered how we should feel in New England if such an outrage had been done to Boston, for instance, or little Concord! [9]
- It is time we should become a little more Americanized, and instead of feeding the paupers and laborers of England, feed our own; or else in a short time, by continuing our present policy, we shall all be rendered paupers ourselves. [7]
- And why should we have expected that the pick--if it was the pick--of our few and far-between racing stables should beat the pick of England and France? [6]
- Governor Dinwiddie, Mr. Washington (alas that, as I write the fragment chapters of my life, among the hills where Montrose my ancestor fought, George leads the colonists against the realm of England! [11]
- Anyhow, this work was wasting her life, and she would be much better back in England, living a civilised life, riding in the Row, and slumming a little, in the East End, perhaps, and presiding at meetings for the amelioration of the unameliorated. [11]
- The next one was still English, in New England, where they established that principle which remains with us to this day, and will continue to remain with us--no taxation without representation. [5]
- The gunner, too, was sick unto death, but "hope of trucking" kept him on his feet,--a Yankee, it should seem, when he first touched the shore of New England. [3]
- Yet there she was riding out of the old life, out of Hamley, and England, and all that had happened in Cairo, to meet him. [11]
- When the Saadat was in England there was a bad time in Egypt. [11]
- But all England was in a conspiracy to do everything possible to make my visit agreeable. [6]
- And swore he was discouraging one of the prettiest encounters that would take place in England for many a long day. [9]
- At last all was changed in England. [11]
- Miles Standish's sword was as far back as New England collections of armor carried us at that day. [6]
- Granting that there was anything dreadful in it, the daughter of a homely small farmer in England is not guarded and accompanied like a young lady on her journeys from one place to another. [4]
- One of them was a young member of Congress who had been making exhaustive studies of the situation in Italy, France and England, and the other one of our best-known writers, both bound for London. [9]
- He said he was a scion of a ducal house in England, and had been shipped to Canada for the house's relief, that he had fallen into trouble there, and was now being shipped to Australia. [5]
- The old captain was a flaming son of Mars, whose nose militia, war, general training, and New England rum had painted with the color of glory and disaster. [4]
- He said it warn't his notion of England; he thought England looked like America, and always had that idea. [5]
- Yet it looks warmer on the snow-peaks than in Berne, for summer sets in in Switzerland with a New England chill and rigor. [4]
- In the French war, when all the rest of us Royal Americans were squabbling with his Majesty's officers out of England, and cursing them at mess, they could never be got to fight with Jack, tho' he gave them ample provocation. [9]
- In his early wandering days, when tramping over New England, he used unexpectedly to turn up at Dr. Ledyard's, the principal's, remain for several weeks and disappear again. [9]
- Argall lost his voyage; his ship was revictualed and sent back to England, but one may be sure that this event was so represented as to increase the fostered dissatisfaction with Smith in London. [4]
- I could speak volumes about the inhuman perversity of the New England weather, but I will give but a single specimen. [5]
- In Sydney I visited a huge establishment where they kill and clean and solidly freeze a thousand sheep a day, for shipment to England. [5]
- The society of Vienna was at that time, and I believe is still, the absolute reverse of that of England, where all claims to distinction are recognized and welcomed. [6]
- The colony of Victoria itself looks small on the map--looks like a county, in fact--yet it is about as large as England, Scotland, and Wales combined. [5]
- Its full title very well describes the contents: "Advertisements for the Unexperienced Planters of New England, or anywhere. [4]
- Jack was a very good shot and a fair rider, and in the climate of England he might have taken first-rate rank in athletics. [4]
- Mr. Norton was very gentle in what he had to say, and almost delicate, and he said: "Mr. Clemens, I have been spending some time with Mr. Darwin in England, and I should like to tell you something connected with that visit. [5]
- He could not very clearly remember the tones of her voice, because after marriage, and before he had sent her to England, he had seen little or nothing of her. [11]
- He had not uttered one warm or human word concerning Claridge Pasha, and it was felt and said, that no pledge had been given to insure the relief of the man who had caught the imagination of England. [11]
- But see the use England makes of this material: in 1877, she took out of the ground 134,179,968 tons. [4]
- He'll stand by us, and by England. [11]
- Three hundred miles up they met New England, Empire, Keystone, and Jersey, hewing their way right and left. [7]
- Before we broke up for the evening the gentlemen plied me with questions concerning the state of affairs in England, and the temper of his Majesty and Parliament. [9]
- As is not unfrequent with versatile and inflammable people, he caught fire at the first spark of a new medical discovery, and no sooner got home to England than he began to spread the conflagration. [6]
- Fox had me under his especial care, and I was presented to young gentlemen who bore names that had been the boast of England through the centuries. [9]
- Janet possessed all unconsciously the New England reverence for learning, she was stirred by the sight of this distinguished-looking person who sat on the painted stage, fingering his glasses and talking to Antonelli. [9]
- June is an uncertain month, as everybody knows, and there were frosts in many parts of New England in the June of 1859. [6]
- One of these two was occupied by a prince of the royal blood of England, his Eminence the Cardinal of Winchester; the other by Cauchon, Bishop of Beauvais. [5]
- He thought "the two finest mannered literary men he met in England were Leigh Hunt and De Quincey. [6]
- One of Mark Twain's friends was Henniker-Heaton, the so-called "Father of Penny Postage" between England and America. [5]
- Tom examined the turnips and the lettuce with interest, and asked what they were, and if they were to be eaten; for it was only recently that men had begun to raise these things in England in place of importing them as luxuries from Holland. [5]
- Suppose it should turn out that by the death of somebody in England he is suddenly an earl--income, half a million dollars a year. [5]
This page helps answer: how do I use the word england in a sentence? How do you use england in a sentence? Can you give me a sentence for the word england? It contains example sentences with the word england, a sentence example for england, and england in sample sentence.