Caution! The site can't guarantee, that text has age permission. The site is not recommended, if you are less than 18 years old.
The site shows example sentences for English words. How the word or phrase could be used in a sentence?
" ... But even given changes in party in both the White House and Congress, the downward direction has been pronounced. People get distracted by the statutory rate. Remember, going into the tax legislation in 2017, how supporters nearly wept in their concerns over competition. An oppressive 35%! At least according to the political marketing. ... "
" ... Diane died a few years after telling me this story. When I shared it at her memorial service in Dallas, the many people who drank with her and learned from her wept. Yes, because they lost a friend, but also because that bottle of wine, whose story was told one more time, had one more gift left in it. ... "
" ... Er, yes. That’s true. Geralt’s voice seldom rises above a low growl—which is entirely the point. Would these critics prefer if Cavill’s Geralt acted completely out of character? Perhaps if he shouted a bunch, wept openly, made ribald jokes and burst out with loud guffaws while rubbing elbows with the townsfolk the critical reaction would be different. ... "
" ... For thousands of Brits, their dream escape to Spain is now ruined, or up in the air. Many are ... [+] already cancelling trips rather than face quarantine on return. The Spanish island of Mallorca as for the rest of the Balearic Islands was still gearing up for a big wave of British tourists, as the 14-day quarantine requirement is wept back in due to Spain's current spike in Covid-19. ... "
" ... Lausanne was usually the next stop after Paris—carriages were often dismantled to get them through the Alps—and few cities have such a long literary history. It was in Lausanne that Edward Gibbons, author of The History of the Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire, lived for five years as a youth and in 1783 to finish the last volume of that monumental work. His house—now a post office—became a requisite visit for tourists like the poets Percy Bysshe Shelley and Lord Byron, who wrote one of his most famous poems, “The Prisoner of Chillon” in Lausanne in 1816. Charles Dickens wrote parts of Dombey and Son(1846-1848) there, and in the next century T.S. Eliot, while under psychiatric care in Lausanne, composed most of his poem “The Waste Land,” with the line, “By the waters of Leman I sat down and wept …” ... "