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Example sentences for "correspondents"

Lexicographically close words:
corresponded; correspondence; correspondences; correspondency; correspondent; corresponding; correspondingly; corresponds; corrida; corridor
  1. Without much injustice I might complain of your long silence, which between other correspondents than ourselves might seem to indicate some degree of forgetfulness, the too frequent consequences of absence and distance.

  2. Several of my correspondents say that he is certainly to have them immediately.

  3. DEAR MADAM, I am not sorry that the indiscretion of certain female correspondents should give the opportunity of sending you a very fair but not flattering picture of myself.

  4. The northern newspaper correspondents who travelled through the South in 1865 agreed that the old masters were treating the negroes well, and that the relations between the races were much more friendly than they had expected to find.

  5. The Times and the Herald had fair correspondents most of the time.

  6. There were several regular, reliable correspondents in north Alabama, for the New York, Boston, and Chicago papers.

  7. The Times, the Herald, and the World had good correspondents in the South, especially during Reconstruction.

  8. So much so, that some rabid newspaper correspondents complained because the West Pointers treated the southerners with too much consideration.

  9. The Federal officers who acted in a gentlemanly manner toward the non-combatants were accused by their rude fellows and by ruder newspaper correspondents of being "wound round the fingers of the rebel women," who had some object to gain.

  10. If the regular correspondents of the press had been excluded from the camps, there would no doubt have been surreptitious correspondence which would have found its way into print through private and roundabout channels.

  11. The relations of newspaper correspondents to general officers of the army became one of the crying scandals and notorious causes of intrigue and demoralization.

  12. And when we get up to the command we'll make them derned correspondents take turn about walkin', so she can ride a pony all the time.

  13. One of the Chicago correspondents was talking about you recently.

  14. The famous round robin of the correspondents had been sent to the United States by this time, taking severely to task the army censorship which prevented the real condition of affairs from reaching the deluded public.

  15. The lowering of cost for the transport of letters, instead of making friendly correspondents numerous, has made them few.

  16. Prompt correspondents save all the time that others waste in excuses.

  17. Many modern correspondents appreciate the convenience of the post-card, but their conscience, as that of well-bred people, cannot get over the fault of its publicity.

  18. All Byron's correspondents might be sure of getting a bit of the real Byron.

  19. Have these correspondents any right to expect me to work an hour for them?

  20. He is one of those perfect correspondents qui causent avec la plume.

  21. Some kind anonymous correspondents write to console us for offensive criticism by maintaining the truth of our assertions as supported by their own experience.

  22. Precisely similar is the testimony of private correspondents and of the public press so far as we have been able to learn, in all the other colonies where emancipation has taken place.

  23. Surplus balances with correspondents are most reliable, but they occasionally fail on account of the inability of correspondents to realize upon their call loans.

  24. Bankers' balances with their correspondents will, therefore, increase, and with them their ability to command cash in case of need.

  25. The latter resource will of course be available only when these other banks' balances with their correspondents are not exhausted.

  26. They act as correspondents as well as reserve agents for these other banks and trust companies, and in this capacity collect out-of-town checks and drafts and conduct checking accounts for them.

  27. Should the balances of all the banks of a town with their out-of-town correspondents be nearly or quite exhausted, shipments of cash to correspondents could not be avoided.

  28. Correspondents are under no obligation to make them.

  29. If a bank wishes to withdraw funds from its correspondents for home use, it may order cash shipped or it may, perhaps, be able to sell drafts for cash to other home banks.

  30. But several correspondents inform me that, without these directions, a conviction of the utility of baking bread at home is of no use to them.

  31. But several correspondents wishing to fall upon some means of rendering the practice beneficial to those who are unable to purchase brewing utensils, have recommended the lending of them, or letting out, round a neighbourhood.

  32. As for the Germans, they said bluntly that any correspondents found within their lines would be treated as spies--which meant being blindfolded and placed between a stone wall and a firing party.

  33. She explained that she brought the sleeping-bag because she understood that war correspondents always slept in the field.

  34. It finally got down to the question of which should be permitted to remain in the field--the war correspondents or the soldiers.

  35. The War Correspondents War correspondents regard war very much as a doctor regards sickness.

  36. A long procession of correspondents came to Antwerp and remained a day or so and then went away again without once getting beyond the city gates.

  37. The moment that the war broke out, therefore, a veritable army of British and American correspondents descended upon the Continent.

  38. While lunching with Sir Francis Villiers and the staff of the British Legation, two English correspondents approached and asked Mr. Churchill for an interview.

  39. There were many correspondents who merited from sheer hard work what I received as a result of extraordinary good fortune.

  40. British garrison and correspondents until a time when nearer and more exciting events engrossed the columns of the press, crowding out this affair, already become past history.

  41. This report is mentioned by two correspondents then at Estcourt,[23] as based upon despatches captured {p.

  42. Can your Dorsetshire correspondents inform me whether these letters exist?

  43. At first sight I fancied that a satisfactory answer could easily be given: but I found that I was mistaken, and I shall be very glad if any of your correspondents will favour me with a solution of the difficulty.

  44. I shall be much gratified if any of your correspondents can furnish me with a clue to its history, or to the name of its maker.

  45. We should be glad to hear any of our correspondents upon the subject.

  46. Books and Odd Volumes wanted Notices to Correspondents Advertisements WHAT BOOKS DID OTLOH WRITE?

  47. Can any of your correspondents favour me with the precise words of the original record, or explain the meaning of the term used?

  48. I should be glad if any of your correspondents would give their opinions on the subject.

  49. The Kellers, with correspondents all over the world, make twenty thousand francs per annum by charges for postage alone; accounts of expenses of protest pay for Mme.

  50. Not only did he work for his correspondents so industriously, but he also worked for others to whom they referred him.

  51. He did so by the help of correspondents at a distance.

  52. Some of his correspondents there offered their suggestions and advice.

  53. George Gordon, of the manse of Birnie, Elginshire, was one of his first correspondents respecting the Crustacea.

  54. He found numerous Star-fish, Zoophytes, Molluscs, and Sponges, which he sent to his naturalist correspondents to be named.

  55. It was further represented that Mr. Knox was thoroughly loyal, and the most scrupulously careful of all the army correspondents to write nothing which, by any possibility, could give information to the enemy.

  56. Tell them you are correspondents of some less obnoxious journal.

  57. When in-door diversions failed, the correspondents amused themselves by racing their horses, which were all fresh and excitable.

  58. By rare good fortune, all its correspondents escaped personal harm, while representatives of several other New York journals were waited upon by vigilance committees, driven out, and in some cases imprisoned.

  59. The war correspondents "smelled the battle from afar off.

  60. Some of the correspondents had treated him unjustly; and he had not learned the quiet patience and faith in the future which Grant exhibited under similar circumstances.

  61. General Halleck has expelled all the correspondents from the army, on the plea that he must exclude "unauthorized hangers-on," to keep spies out of his camps.

  62. One of the Tribune correspondents had not left the army since the Peninsular campaign, and, remaining constantly within the lines, his position had never been questioned.

  63. Several persons had been arrested as spies during the day, including two supposed correspondents of New York papers.

  64. The Crescent is exercised at the presence here of "correspondents of northern papers, who indite real falsehoods and lies as coolly as they would eat a dinner at the Saint Charles.

  65. This committee have their particular correspondents in the several towns, who, upon receiving any special information, are ready to spread it with dispatch among the inhabitants.

  66. This measure was soon communicated in letters from private individuals in England to their correspondents in Massachusetts.

  67. In those three hours, all the big and some of the little papers of the country had frantically wired their nearest correspondents to get busy.

  68. The correspondents who were pouring into Newport had reached the same conclusion as he and had forestalled him.

  69. A day later these local correspondents would be replaced by star reporters, special writers, feature writers, syndicate writers, novelists, and sob sisters.

  70. If so, I should feel much obliged to any of your correspondents who would favour me with the reference.

  71. Can any of your correspondents inform me where such an account is to be met with, as I have forgotten the name of the book in which I have seen it?

  72. Perhaps some of your correspondents could give me some information relative to the pedigree of Robert Johnson, Esq.

  73. Correspondents sending Lists of Books Wanted are requested to send their names.

  74. Can any of your correspondents tell me whether John Hartcliffe, D.

  75. Perhaps some of your correspondents could give information on this matter.

  76. Can any of your correspondents inform me where I can address a letter to, for Dr.

  77. Several of your correspondents finding a difficulty in making glass baths, I beg to communicate the way in which they may be very easily manufactured.

  78. Newspaper correspondents have been permitted to make a digest of the report.

  79. It was remarkable, that the writer must have been celebrated in his day for the excellence of his calligraphy, for I met with a letter or two from his correspondents in which there was a request for the recipe of the ink he used.

  80. Can any of your numerous correspondents kindly inform me what is the best scientific work on Horology?

  81. To supply the people of the country with news from the field, a veritable army of war correspondents was organized, a telegraphic service was organized and built up, plans were laid that developed into the Associated Press.

  82. Now hundreds of correspondents began to write stories of this great unknown.

  83. Most of the correspondents were widely separated lovers.

  84. But to all these workers must be added the work of the correspondents at the front, with the editors who consecrated the press to liberty.


  85. The above list will hopefully give you a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "correspondents" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this word.