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Example sentences for "has its"

  • Has its source in a lake of the Menangkabau country.

  • Much of the lower parts of the country through which it has its course is overflowed during the rainy season, but not at two places, called by Captain Forrest Rambong and Jambong, near the mouth.

  • Anti-Christian sarcasm, like everything else, has its fashions, and other words of reproach and contumely have now taken the place of that.

  • Wesleyan Methodist, has its catechism or catechisms, but in addition to those already enumerated only a few need be mentioned.

  • The other large river of this region, the Aras, has its sources, not in the Caucasus range, but on the Armenian highlands a long way south-west of Ararat.

  • If feelings are of the right sort, it is because of their quality or content,--which is right only so far as it is intrinsically universal or has its source in the thinking mind.

  • But this immediacy is at the same time the corporeity of self-consciousness, in which as in its sign and tool the latter has its own sense of self, and its being for others, and the means for entering into relation with them.

  • Beautiful Art, like the religion peculiar to it, has its future in true religion.

  • Now this virtue, like courage or liberality, has its mean, its excess, and its defect.

  • A well-bound book, especially a book from a famous collection, has its price, even if its literary contents be of trifling value.

  • Labor, wide as the Earth, has its summit in Heaven.

  • To us, also, the upward journey of the soul through the Spheres is symbolical; but we are as little informed as they whence the soul comes, where it has its origin, and whither it goes after death.

  • Labor, wide as Earth, has its summit in Heaven, 342-l.

  • The ear, too, has its power of exaggerating.

  • According to Denis Montfort, one of those observers whose marvellous intuition sinks or raises them to the level of magicians, the poulp is almost endowed with the passions of man: it has its hatreds.

  • Under its waves of water which we see, it has its waves of force which are invisible.

  • More game is wounded and left to pine away and die than many have an idea of--a more cruel and unsportsmanlike system has never been thought of, and I much regret it has its votaries.

  • Under one aspect, so much of the action as is included in any single life and is there a linked sequence of mental states, has its unity in the personality of that individual.

  • In Chapter II it has been brought to notice that every problem, regardless of its type and scope, has its source in a perplexity created by an apparent difficulty inherent in a situation.

  • A corresponding maxim of the military profession, "It depends on the situation", has its root in recognition of the same fact, i.

  • In common with the word doctrine, it has its root in the Latin verb which means "to teach".

  • The Righteousness of God, forbidding and condemning and punishing sin, has its root in His Holiness, is one of its two elements--the devouring and destroying power of the consuming fire.

  • What is called temper, with its fruits of anger and strife, has its roots in the physical constitution, and is one among the sins of the flesh.

  • It is far deeper than any gladness which has its sources in the outer world, and it abides when joys have vanished, and all the song-birds of the spring are silent in the winter of the soul.

  • Every period, as every man, has its times of credulity, its firm conviction that it has found the one thing needful, and the shout of Eureka goes ever up.

  • But the promise, like all God's promises, has its well-defined conditions.

  • Without any rush of water it is not possible for any great depth of alluvial soil to have been formed, nor can the gold have been carried far from the reef, or reefs, in which it has its origin.

  • No doubt this, too, has its place in their performances.

  • It has a good cook, it has its specialities of cuisine, and it has a particularly good cellar of wines.

  • Like many similar seaside cafés abroad, it has its own parc au coquillages or shell-fish tanks, and you here get the world-renowned Bouillabaisse in perfection.

  • The rest of the sentence, following the comma that we place at "knit together," has its parallel in Colossians ii.

  • Man's life has its law, for it has its source, in the nature of the Eternal.

  • St Paul changes the =Heneken toutou= of the original to =Anti toutou=, which conveys the idea that marriage has its counterpart in the fact that we are members of Christ.

  • But there is another side to the Christian nature: it has its moods of exhilaration, as well as of caution and reflection; ardent emotion, eager speech and exultant song are things proper to a high religious life.


  • The above list will hopefully provide you with a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "has its" 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:
    good form; has already been observed; has already been remarked; has already been shown; has become; has been already mentioned; has been pointed out; has come; has done; has ever; has got; has had; has its; has left; has never; has taken; has written; hastened away; hasty meal; here have; occasional conformity; public life; reigned eleven; should leave; thou shalt surely die; until light